The Psychological Roots of Sexual Hate Crime
Psychological projection is an unconscious mechanism through which unacceptable thoughts, feelings and desires are denied in oneself and attributed to others. In other words, what a person is, inwardly, when suppressed, will inevitably be seen outwardly, in other people. This then causes feelings of resentment, which can lead to hate crime.
The kind of thoughts and desires that I’m referring to aren’t considered unacceptable, by an individual, because they are inherently wrong or unnatural, necessarily. What determines this, more than anything else, is a person’s social conditioning, or programming. In fact, one could even say that a person is essentially a product of their social programming; the word ‘person’ coming from the word ‘persona’, meaning mask.
A socially conditioned person, then (comprising the 90%), is somebody who has lost touch with his or her innate sense of right and wrong (which amounts to little more than the golden rule), and has adopted, instead, a highly complex and complicated “counterfeit conscience,” consisting of local, endlessly shifting, and often counter-productive and counter-intuitive rules and regulations. All of which constitute the “moral compass” of the masses, which few see any reason — or have any real capacity — to question; even though many of these rules and regulations will be out of alignment with — or even antithetical to — natural and healthy human feelings and tendencies (thereby making such feelings and tendencies seem unacceptable to the individual who harbours them).
“When we find certain unacceptable feelings, thoughts or behaviours in ourselves that we refuse to acknowledge, and see someone with that specific trait, we will feel resentment, hatred and anger towards them. [Whereas] a person with a strong “self concept” (the knowledge of who one is) makes one feel good about who they are.” — Eternalised (YT).
A well-known example of the above quote would be the man who unconsciously denies and represses his homosexuality, thereby causing him to become homophobic. Whereas that same man, were he to eventually accept himself as he is, would very likely speak with pride about his homosexuality. In other words, whilst homosexuality may conflict with a person’s social or religious conscience (programming), leading to suppression, and projection, it doesn’t necessarily conflict with one’s innate conscience.
But what about more widespread and socially acceptable forms of hate, and hate crime, such as “paedophobia?” Is the same mechanism in play here too?
Whilst it’s natural to feel a sense of anger when hearing about sexual crimes against children, it’s worth remembering that a crime, in one country, is a consensual relationship, or interaction, in another. That is to say, it is the law, in many cases, which has “created” the crime, in the first place, through a strict and arbitrary definition of what a child is. And whilst keeping the age of consent artificially high doesn’t help to prevent child sex abuse from occurring, what it does do, and has done, in combination with mainstream media fear-mongering, is generate such a profound distortion, and misperception, of human sexuality, that modern society could easily be said to be suffering from a form of mass psychosis.
Certainly, anyone reaching adulthood, who has been persuaded to believe that their feelings of love and attraction, toward younger teenagers, amounts to sexual perversion, implying a potential in themselves for “child abuse” … Well, this not only amounts to the gaslighting of an individual, by the collective, but is precisely the kind of situation that will lead to the phenomenon described herein (and has done).
The climate of fear and hatred that exists today, as a result of this issue, is unprecedented. Only a tiny minority of people can actually see and comprehend what’s happening. And, of those, few are willing to speak out about it, lest they become victims of hate themselves. It is courage that’s needed, therefore, rather than silence, if we are to resolve this Gordian knot, and help society to integrate, rather than deny, its collective shadow.
Thanks for listening.




