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28 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Limbic Warfare and the Rise of American Fascism
Martha Stout's newest book, The Paranoia Switch, is a welcome addition to the new and growing science of ponerology: the study of the root causes and genesis of evil, on both the social and interpersonal levels.

A recurring theme of Stout's book is the similarity in essence (but not scope) of a battered spouse and a country, battered by terror and paranoia,...
Published on October 29, 2007 by Harrison Koehli

versus
19 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Not up to her first 2 books...
Compared to her 1st 2 books, which were fascinating, useful and encouraging, I found this one boring, of little practical use, and discouraging. Her first 2 were mostly her own thoughts and the words of her clients directly, this is more a collection of references to the statistics, surveys & papers of others.

The message I received from her first 2 books...
Published on October 5, 2007 by Robert W. Gorman


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28 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Limbic Warfare and the Rise of American Fascism, October 29, 2007
This review is from: The Paranoia Switch: How Terror Rewires Our Brains and Reshapes Our Behavior--and How We Can Reclaim Our Courage (Hardcover)
Martha Stout's newest book, The Paranoia Switch, is a welcome addition to the new and growing science of ponerology: the study of the root causes and genesis of evil, on both the social and interpersonal levels.

A recurring theme of Stout's book is the similarity in essence (but not scope) of a battered spouse and a country, battered by terror and paranoia, under the sway of a psychologically deviant leader. Stout not only lists the character traits to watch out for in leaders, but also the steps through which a society cycles between stages of limbic warfare.

Traumatic events, like terrorism, overload our limbic system. The heightened response of our amygdala, which registers the emotional significance of the event, leads to a decreased response in the hippocampus, which usually prioritizes information and allows the higher brain centers to create coherent memories.

So, traumatic events do not get integrated by the higher brain centers, but instead leave us with nonintegrated fragments of memory: isolated images and sensations. These memories can then be "triggered" by similar images. In this way, ruthless and conscienceless leaders can keep us in a state of vulnerable paranoia.

They stage or co-opt national catastrophes in order to "save" their public, in much the same way that an abuser will beat his wife, only to "save" her from everyone else around her. The logic is twisted, but the phenomenon of "battered wife syndrome" works remarkably well for human predators.

In a time of crisis, populations turn to authoritarian leaders, to their own detriment. Only a knowledge of terrorism's root purposes and causes can protect us from its effects. When fearmongers like the American government leaders (Republican and Democrat) exploit terror, the "terrorists" win. And often, the terrorists are the very people who exploit terror.
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20 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Another Wonderful Gift from the Author of THE SOCIOPATH NEXT DOOR, October 5, 2007
By 
D.H. (Bethesda, MD) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Paranoia Switch: How Terror Rewires Our Brains and Reshapes Our Behavior--and How We Can Reclaim Our Courage (Hardcover)
Every American should read THE PARANOIA SWITCH as soon as possible. It will change the way you think about yourself and the country you live in. The writing is extremely beautiful, as you would expect from a book by Martha Stout, and the pages fly by because they're fascinating and because of the stories, but that's not really why everyone should read it. You should read it because if we all did, we might really be able to get our country back. And also our "selves."
The book begins with descriptions of just how terrified and full of grief everyone was right after September 11, 2001. You think you know this already, but when you see the actual descriptions and numbers, it's mind-blowing. After this, there's a test you can give yourself in the privacy of your own home to see how anxious you yourself are right now.
Then there's a chapter on how terrorism really works, told from a psychologist's point of view. This is a brand new way for most of us to think about terrorism.
Most of the rest of the book is about the unethical "fear politics" that have gone on in the United States since the terrorist attack in 2001. Dr. Stout describes in layman's language how terror affects the brain itself, how psychological trauma places a "paranoia switch" in our brains which sits there invisibly until something or SOMEONE pushes it. Then she discusses the sort of politician (the "fear broker") who would stoop low enough to use our fears to increase his own power. She discusses several situations from American history where this has happened, the KKK for example, and Joseph McCarthy and the U.S. Senate hearings. It's eye opening to see all the similarities between those chapters in our history and what's happening right now and to relate all that to the study of the brain.
Then most important of all, the book gives a list of ten characteristics of politicians and leaders who are "fear brokers" so that we can learn to recognize them when we see them on our televisions or elsewhere. Did you know for example that fear politicians have a different way of using pronouns from the way "moral leaders" use pronouns? There are many, many other danger signs discussed in the book that you can actually learn to recognize.
I can imagine the difficult corner the author was in when she wrote THE SOCIOPATH NEXT DOOR, which is also a wonderful book. In that book she talks about how sociopaths (people who have no conscience) can reach very high levels in the society and in government, but I'm sure it wasn't possible for her to name names. Now in THE PARANOIA SWITCH, it's a lot clearer what she meant even though she doesn't use the same word (sociopath).
If all you're interested in is a book that talks about your personal life, your circle of friends, or help deciding if your boyfriend/girlfriend is nuts, then you're not someone who can fully appreciate THE PARANOIA SWITCH. If you want to read something new age about sending positive energy to the White House, then maybe get a different book. But if you want to read about bigger issues and REAL issues such as the real brain and the real condition of our government, please read THE PARANOIA SWITCH. To go along with the five stars, I'd like to give it a large banner that says IMPORTANT. MUST READ.
The author talks about courage in this book and tells good people how they can get their courage back. In my opinion, it took a lot of courage to write this book in the first place about the so-called leaders who are using our fear after 9/11 to try to control us. She takes the masks off some powerful people who definitely don't like to have their masks taken off. But it's only when we can see something clearly that we stand a chance of dealing with it. Many thanks to Dr. Stout.

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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars High Praises, November 3, 2007
This review is from: The Paranoia Switch: How Terror Rewires Our Brains and Reshapes Our Behavior--and How We Can Reclaim Our Courage (Hardcover)
A month ago, I have obtained this new book by Martha Stout, Ph.D, while browsing a local bookstore and this book has just been released this month. It was an interesting timing because this book has addressed how the traumatized event of 9/11 affected the American minds and how these minds were 'locked' on fear. By using her psychological and neuro-psychological research on fear and terror, Martha Stout wrote a very insightful book. Her work brings the reader to understand the nature of fear and terror, and how it was done to one's mind. There are nine chapters in this book, but it is composed of four parts: a personal struggle with fear, the phenomenon of terrorism, protection against future fear, and a new hope. Throughout The Paranoia Switch, there is an understanding about how politician leaders used people's fear by looking what are terrorism, limbic wars, and fear brokers.

We often hear this word, "terrorism," daily in our lives. We hear it on the radio, watch it on the news, read it in the newspapers, and we would feel the fear when this word is mentioned everywhere we go. In her book, Stout defined terrorism as "violence committed with the primary goal of manipulating the minds of the surviving population" (p. 27). So, why has terrorism becomes massive on global scale? It is because our fears are what fuels terrorism and our leaders are using our fears for their own selfish reasons. It is important for one to know, from reading this book, that terrorism does not always work unless it affects our minds.

Stout pointed out that the United States was a 'habituated' country until that morning of September 11, 2001. It was not 'used' to being exposed to acts of terrorism as other countries have had done, and it has experienced a profound shock. United States has yet to develop a coping mechanism to 'short-circuit the paranoia switch.' So, instead, its paranoia switch is stuck and it is continuing to be 'stuck' as long as the U.S. politicians keep feeding the public's fear (p. 39).

Secondly, the Limbic Wars are described in the fifth chapter, which Stout has included the American examples of Ku Klux Klan, the World War II internment of Japanese-Americans, and McCarthyism. And, she has detailed the six stages of Limbic War, including group trauma, fear brokers, scapegoatism, cultural regression, recognition and backlash, and regret and forgetting (p. 109-114). Her discussion of the limbic system and limbic resonance are clearly understandable and so are their roles on fear.

Thirdly, Fear Brokers are power-hungry individuals who use the public's fear to pursue their private agenda (p. 110). Chapter Eight of Paranoia Switch outlined the ten behavioral characteristics of fear brokers. Stout pointed out that it is critical for the reader to identify and to know how to deal with the fear brokers. One of her suggestions was when one sees a fear broker speaking on television, to say to yourself: "that person wants to control me with fear" (p. 167).

Stout places a strong emphasis on responsibility for oneself when it comes to fear. She encourages the reader to have courage to face one's fear by putting into action from knowing how fear was manifested in themselves and how it was being used. Politicians are using fear to keep people in check and under their control, but it does not have to be that way. In regards to nations, Stout has pointed out:

"If fear holds a democratic nation in thrall in the long term, causing the greater portion of its citizens to avoid thinking for themselves indefinitely, the best psychological prediction is that democracy will decline and eventually die." (p. 201)

She also stressed that by giving into fear, by letting it affect us, we are letting the the fear brokers (e.g., our authoritarian leaders) to control us. In a sense, we are letting them to control our paranoia switch.

By looking briefly at what are terrorism, limbic war and fear brokers from Martha Stout's The Paranoia Switch, there is an understanding about how politician leaders used public's fear to pursue their very own personal agenda. This book is most certainly insightful and essential. To understand how power-hungry and psychopathic leaders control the public's mind, Stout's Paranoia Switch will give you the answers. Stout's unique research has helped me to better understand the role of fear and terror in our lives. It is my humble opinion to recommend this book for the readers.

Respectfully, I give high praises to Martha Stout for her unique perspective and bringing her work to us.
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14 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Save your Mind...Read this book, November 9, 2007
By 
Laurie (Lake Wales, FL) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Paranoia Switch: How Terror Rewires Our Brains and Reshapes Our Behavior--and How We Can Reclaim Our Courage (Hardcover)
This book is a gift. The insight it brings cannot come at a better time. The truths spelled out so clearly in Martha Stout's most recent book need to be understood by us all, before it is too late.

The 'Paranoia Switch...' gives an understanding of the manipulations of our 'fear broker' politicians. How they perpetuate the fear of an imagined enemy to persuade us to follow their private agendas, while convincing us that it is for our own good, for our protection and to keep us safe from the enemy 'out there'.

She spells out how we can 'say NO to FEAR', say no to psychological manipulation and protect our God given ability for critical thought from the fearmongers of our government and the terrorists who exploit fear to the detriment of our well-being.

A guide book in how we can reclaim our courage.
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17 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Free your mind, and the rest will follow..., October 8, 2007
This review is from: The Paranoia Switch: How Terror Rewires Our Brains and Reshapes Our Behavior--and How We Can Reclaim Our Courage (Hardcover)
Building on two critically acclaimed books--The Sociopath Next Door, and The Myth of Sanity--THE PARANOIA SWITCH is Dr. Stout's latest groundbreaking look at the mental and emotional factors that drive people to do and feel the things they do.

Through her books, Dr. Stout provides fascinating insight into popular psychology, but it is important to remember that her theories are based on a stellar professional resume including over twenty-five years of teaching at Harvard Medical School and practicing clinical psychology.

The sixth anniversary of 9/11 has come and gone, but the memory of that horrible day lingers on in our brains. But does the memory linger on simply because of the severity of the mental trauma or because our leaders want us to remember it so they can more easily manipulate us?

According to THE PARANOIA SWITCH, the answer is a little of both.

The after effects of 9/11 are ingrained into our brains, and in fact, that trauma has changed our brains and semipermanently flipped on our own personal paranoia switches. But perhaps worst of all, the horror of that tragic day has been and will continue to be used by political fear brokers to control us and to bend us to their will.

Fight back! Free yourself!! Read THE PARANOIA SWITCH!!!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Terror Rewires Our Brains, October 15, 2008
This review is from: The Paranoia Switch: How Terror Rewires Our Brains and Reshapes Our Behavior--and How We Can Reclaim Our Courage (Hardcover)
From: www.BasilAndSpice.com
Author & Book Views On A Healthy Life!

Book Review: The Paranoia Swithch (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2007) by Martha Stout, Ph.D.

Do you remember 9/11? Odds are you do. You probably recall exactly what you were doing and where you were when the news of the Twin Towers reached your ears. At the time, I was filling in for my child's elementary school teacher who was home sick. By background, I am a teacher; my concern of course was for the children. After having a quick conference in the hallway, and because details of the attacks were sketchy at 10 AM for those of us without access to current news, the fourth grade instructors decided not to explain what was happening to the pupils, and rather carry on as usual. The kids caught on though. They knew something was up as child after child was called down to the office for "early dismissal." By 1 PM the majority of the student body had been excused, and even I was told that I wasn't needed any longer. Where did we all go? Home--to our television sets.

Psychotherapist Martha Stout, Ph.D., author of The Paranoia Switch, writes that 9/11 officially traumatized nearly all of us. "9/11 grabbed us by the throat like nothing else. It changed us emotionally, behaviorally, spiritually. It caused people of conscience to fear for the future of the whole human world." After researching the issue, Dr. Stout found a Pew Research Center survey which stated that six out of ten men and eight out of ten women felt depressed. The New England Journal of Medicine summarized that within three to five days after the terror plot occurred, "44% of ordinary Americans reported at least one clinical symptom of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Symptoms of PTSD include shattered self-confidence, exaggerated startle responses, panic attacks, impaired concentration, nightmares, and dissociative reactions. Many of us, including our children, were affected because we saw the glued-to graphic television coverage either during the actual event or shortly thereafter, over and over. The traumatic event replayed itself continuously in our minds as well.

FEMA asserts that terrorism is used to create fear, get immediate publicity of a cause, and convince citizens that their government is powerless in the prevention of terror. We were frightfully afraid on 9-11. Dr. Stout writes, "Fear is more widely destructive than anything we can be afraid of. Fear makes us do things we would not otherwise do. And fear is contagious."

Has fear, brought on by the terror of 9/11 changed us, permanently? Some studies show that it has. The Endocrine Society released a report stating that women who were pregnant and present during the World Trade Center collapse passed on markers of PTSD to their babies. More recently, Archives of General Psychiatry published a 3-year national study following up the 9/11 attacks, showing that, "Acute stress responses to the 9/11 attacks were associated with a 53% increased incidence of cardiovascular ailments over the 3 subsequent years." Psychologically, we are still being challenged. The terror of 9/11 has rewired our brains.

Dr. Stout believes that, "...for whatever reason, we are hardwired to be most fearful of harm when it threatens to occur maliciously, at the hands of our fellow human beings, and this special variety of fear is the most contagious of all." Together we, as a nation, were scared. Together, we developed a paranoia of the unknown. Do you take a closer look at fellow passengers in the terminal or on the plane? Is international news and its relationship to the United States more of a priority now? Does a sounding alarm evoke a physical response from you? What flips your paranoia switch?

5 Stars
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Enlightening and Informative, Practical Tools for Self-Improvement, June 20, 2008
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This review is from: The Paranoia Switch: How Terror Rewires Our Brains and Reshapes Our Behavior--and How We Can Reclaim Our Courage (Hardcover)
This latest tome from one of my favorite writers gives some incredible insight on the topic of fear. Namely, how it is generated, transmitted, and how it can impact your behavior without you knowing. Dr Stout has over thirty years of practice working with survivors of trauma, and treating them, helping them along the road to recovery. She's pretty much seen it all; children, adults, memory loss, missing time, child abuse, incest, multiple-personalities, and her experience shows in her writing.

The Paranoia Switch deals exclusively with the politics of fear, and how fear-brokers use our own limbic systems against us. The limbic system is a part of the brain that deals with reading and transmitting human emotions. It allows us to comprehend, in a matter of microseconds, the feelings of another human being through body language, expressions, tone of voice and other subtle yet present markers. Stout writes:

Our limbic systems receive and transmit emotional information in wordless neurological "conversations," and within these exchanges, work hard to bring different brains together into similar emotional states.

The neurological process that enables us to sense the emotions of other people is called limbic resonance



It gives us our fundamental ability to empathize, sympathize, and thus share in one another's emotional experience. This is not without it's downside however, without careful self-observation we can easily succumb to powerful emotions of others, such as fear, anger, and hate and allow those emotions to dominate our psyche even though they are coming from an outside source.

This is a powerful phenomenon in mother-child relationships, and very important for parents to be aware of since they can unknowingly transmit negative emotions, such as anxiety, to their children. Stout gives a very good example of this exact phenomenon.

She continues, demonstrating how this phenomenon can effect entire societies, and has effected ours in the recent past. Using Pearl Harbor and the Cold War, as well as 9-11 as examples, she gives point by point analysis of how each event traumatized us as a nation, and thus triggered an internal 'paranoia switch' which temporarily disables rational, critical thought and instead engages our more primitive survival instincts.

For example - how many of you knew Cat Stevens was deported from the United States on Sept 22nd, 2004? I missed it at the time. But was shocked when I discovered his chosen name, Yusuf Islam was listed on a government watch list. They diverted the plane, removed Yusuf, and put him on another back to London on the grounds of 'national security'. Yeah, you read that right: Cat Stevens was deported because he was a threat to national security.

She goes into a brilliant discussion of how our memories are formed, how they are given emotional context, and how we can understand future/present events given our stored history. She also explains how, during trauma, this system short-circuits due to an overload of emotional input and the event doesn't get properly stored. This allows future events that merely resemble the original trauma to suddenly bring back the intense emotional experience that overloaded the brain in the past. A common example she employs is the Vietnam Vet ducking for cover if he hears a firecracker or car backfiring.

She shows us our this 'paranoia switch' can be blamed for the internment of around 120,000 Japanese-Americans during WWII. McCarthyism is also a phenomenon directly related to our fear of 'commies in our midst', and even though McCarthy himself was exposed as an alcoholic with obvious issues with his sexuality, much damage was wrought from 1950-54 by people who actually believed the nonsense he spouted. People lost their jobs, their reputations, and their dignity because society at large was afraid of commies under the bed and willing to listen to a strong authority in order to protect themselves. Amazing how triggering survival instincts can cause a group of otherwise rational people to listen to a power-craving nut-job.

A Limbic War occurs when a group is traumatized and then individuals seek to use that trauma to push their own agendas. Stout lists the Six Stages of a Limbic War as guidelines for us to keep in mind. They're very enlightening so I'll include them here in brief.


1.)Group Trauma - A limbic war occurs after some form of national catastrophe. Most typically, this event is a war, or a single attack that is abrupt and brutal enough to generate nationwide fear. The disaster can conceivably be a natural one, but natural disasters are less apt to be starting points, since paranoia is less often induced by "acts of God" than by traumatic events brought on by our fellow human beings. Because traumatic memories remain in the brain as incoherent bits of image and sensation that together constitute a neurological trigger - a paranoia switch - the nation that has been traumatized is dangerously reactive to reminders or suggestions of ongoing threat, whether these cues by real, imagined, or contrived.

2.)Fear Brokers - One person or a handful of people use the public's fear to pursue a private agenda. These fear brokers are variously motivated. ...by far the most common motivators are ambition and a desire for power. Usually, regardless of their political affiliation or initial place in society, such individuals can be described as authoritarian, in the straightforward dictionary meaning of that word: "favoring blind submission to authority," or "favoring a concentration of power in a leader or an elite not constitutionally responsible to the people." Authoritarian fear brokers remind us, frequently and dramatically, of how much danger we are in, whether or not the remaining threat is significant or real.

3.) Scapegoatism - The fear-promoting leader can further heighten the population's anxiety and paranoia by contending that another group or race or people is to be blamed for the crisis.

4.) Cultural Regression - When there is a definite idea of whom to blame, the primitive lust for revenge can crystallize around it. And the idea of a self-righteous vendetta, once it is even whispered of, is a difficult thought for human beings to put away. With all the energy that great fear can generate, the designated out-group is persecuted, or interned, or attacked, and for a time, there is the gratifying sentiment that vengeance is being served.

Typically, encouraging an us-versus-them atmosphere impels a tidal wave of patriotism across the traumatized nation. The new fear-inspired emphasis on national fealty enables the authoritarian leader to divide the population psychologically into two groups: the patriots, who support his authority and his agenda, and the nonpatriots - the traitors, the conspiracy members, the subversives, the cowards - who do not.

Civil Rights are threatened. Humanitarian endeavors atrophy. The arts and literature lose their funding - and their daring. Protected now, intolerance comes out of its hiding places. The limbic war, the emotional manipulation of the people by their own leaders, is in full throttle.

5.) Recognition and Backlash - Of the McCarthy era, the playwright and accused subversive Arthur Miller has reflected, "Few of us can easily surrender our belief that society must somehow make sense. The thought that the state has lost its mind and is punishing so many innocent people is intolerable. And so the evidence has to be internally denied."

Fortunately, the evidence is not denied forever. Limbic wars come to an end, and their instigators are eventually deposed. In this stage, protests begin, small and uneasy at the beginning, growing larger and bolder as time goes on.

6.) Regret and Forgetting - As the original trauma-engendered fear begins to ease, often years later one, we have difficulty recalling why we allowed ourselves to be so easily co-opted into an authoritarian agenda. Many of us are left in a state of dissonance and guilt, and this uncomfortable condition promotes forgetting, a return to the internal denial noted by Arthur Miller. Thus, an experience that might have inoculated us against future problems is effectively lost to us, instead.



Her summary above is excellent and can be seen in virtually every trauma we as a society as suffered. Most appropriately, it can be used to describe the current national scene with the Neo-cons at the helm after the tragedy that was 9-11.

Stout continues, and demonstrates how a nation traumatized is similar to a battered-wife. She feels she needs protection (from the original trauma, perhaps child abuse) and so she seeks our a powerful defender (her husband/boyfriend) who will shield her from the evil world. The irony is that she only seeks out a new tormentor and he uses her paranoia switch, installed in childhood, to control her. Eventually, with help, these women can learn to protect themselves, and leave their abusers - however that is not always the case. Stout cites many incidents where women are killed by their husbands or boyfriends, and encourages us to take the message seriously and apply it to the national level.

The book continues with several anecdotes which are highly useful, but I cannot reproduce them here for lack of space. Given that the reader has already indulged me by reading this far, I'd like to wrap up this review with the Ten Traits of Fear Brokers left to us by Stout, briefly:



1.) Fear brokers speak to us of fear, dangerous people, and frightening situations. When addressing the public, he will raise subjects other than fear. These are often flattering topics, intended to showcase the people's superior bravery and nobility (that is to say, superior to those other groups of people). He may even use humor. But somewhere within virtually every address, there will be several references to danger, and to just how frightened people must not forget to be.

2.) Fear brokers are not limited by the facts; they use alarming "unfacts". Where terrorism is concerned, out-and-out lying may not be required. It is easy enough to fan public fears by giving alarming renditions of terrorist events that might happen in the future, and by speaking in imaginative detail about terrorist events that would have happened had they not been thwarted. When such "unfacts" are delivered dramatically, there is seldom any prosocial motive involved, only the intent to capture an audience and amplify fear.

3.) Fear brokers tend to accuse those who disagree with them of being unpatriotic and/or naive.

4.) Fear brokers look good. ...a scaremonger cannot afford to have shifty eyes or scary teeth, or any other seriously repellent feature... a broker of fear must be attractive. This is because, other factors being equal, and attractive person is perceived as smarter, more honest, and more trustworthy than an unattractive person.

Because we love the familiar, a fear broker who is not a natural head-turner can make himself attractive by looking as much like the people in his constituency as possible.

5.) Fear brokers behave like archetypal parents. They can make us feel the attitudinal equivalent of being patted on the back by a kind authority who tells us that he knows what we have been through, and that he is proud of us for being brave. The scaremonger can act comfortably omnipotent ... and that we must always rely on him. He demands we trust him. If he is a sociopath or, if he is delusional, he may even imply that he is in direct communication with God, who approves of his ambitions and plans.

6.) Fear brokers shame us over sex. A fear politician wishes to be viewed as the moral and literal rule maker where sexuality in concerned. Unlike a good parent, he shames us, and then tries to use that shame to exert control.

Of course, issues pertaining in some way to sexuality - sexual preference, same-sex marriage, birth control, abortion, certain types of medical research - are often discussed politically. The fear politician uses them manipulatively, as a distraction tactic. Matters of sexual morality are inherently divisive and highly emotional, and tend to divert us completely from whatever we had been thinking or discussing before.

7.)In a seeming contradiction, fear brokers praise us for being moral and heroic. In various ways, she or he tells us over and again that we, and only we, can take on anything, succeed at anything, and endure anything, in the service of what we know to be right.

Flattery always involves an intent to manipulate. Straight-forward, moral leaders almost never use extreme flattery. Listen for what are essentially come-on lines, and know that a person with no hidden agenda would not be speaking them.

8.) Fear brokers project personal infallibility. When you are evaluating a fear politician, look for moments when that individual is asked the direct question Do you feel you made a mistake? Invariably, the fear politician's answer will be reducible to one word: No.

9.) Fear brokers are secretive, and certain that other people, too, are keeping dangerous secrets. In general, paranoia is all about secrecy, one's own secrecy and that suspected of other people. The leader who advances cultural paranoia - who, as history demonstrates, may be moderately to seriously paranoid himself - is typically driven to collect information about other people, while at the same time withholding information about himself and his activities.

10.) Fear brokers use language that pulls for primitive affect. For centuries, the word evil, in all the various languages of the world, has been on the lips of fear brokers and also war makers. It is an overwhelmingly powerful tool. In addition to conjuring fear, the concept of good vs evil has the advantages of

reassuring the people that they are on the side of good;
creating a division between "us" and "them" that has no gray areas;
and casting as evil all doubters and dissenters.

Another concept with ancient links to fear is that of revenge. Whether or not the word itself is used, a typical fear broker will communicate the primitively appealing notion that the people should have revenge, and also that they will have revenge, provided they are loyal to him. He may induce still more primitive emotionality by introducing the notion of cowardice. Via a series of nonrational twists, the enemies are cowards, and therefore being cowardly is not just shameful - being cowardly means a person is one of the enemies.



To conclude, Stout gives us several useful facts. Most importantly, is that the odds of us being harmed by terrorists are virtually nill. Much less then our odds of getting cancer, heart disease, or dieing in a car accident. Comparatively it seems almost silly to worry about terrorism, and in point of fact, doing so lets the terrorists accomplish their goal.

She also gives us a few short, poignant clues as to how we can recover our lost sense of safety. One of these includes writing out our 'worst case scenario' in as much detail as we can. Then, we symbolically tear it up and toss it in the garbage, or burn it, allowing us to discard those notions and reclaim our courage.

Overall her book is stunning. It allowed one, such as myself, to understand in scientific terms, why and how our nation has become the caricature it is today. How a noble, and idealistic race of people became paralyzed and twisted by their own biology, and thus it helped alleviate much of my frustration and anti-American angst. It's also a tome of healing, and can help pretty much anyone, who's on the question for knowledge, gain insight and understanding about our world, and why it is the way it is.
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19 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Not up to her first 2 books..., October 5, 2007
This review is from: The Paranoia Switch: How Terror Rewires Our Brains and Reshapes Our Behavior--and How We Can Reclaim Our Courage (Hardcover)
Compared to her 1st 2 books, which were fascinating, useful and encouraging, I found this one boring, of little practical use, and discouraging. Her first 2 were mostly her own thoughts and the words of her clients directly, this is more a collection of references to the statistics, surveys & papers of others.

The message I received from her first 2 books were of the power of a person's spirit to as she says "chose to live - not just to not die, not just to survive, but to live." This volume seems to focus more on bare survival. The metaphor of a mechanical switch, seemed impersonal, cold & passive, especially if someone else can throw it! Her words rather than going from abstract to concrete went the other way. She mentions empathy many times but always calls it 'limbic resonance'. Spirit seems overwhelmed by physical brain structures.

Check it out yourself, read through the Index to see what topics she covers, how much, and using what words.

Finally, her list of clues in "The Sociopath Next Door" has enabled me to spot these secretive people in my daily life. It reminds me strongly of the clues in Marie-France Hirigoyen's book 'Stalking the Soul', useful on a daily basis. Here, her "10 Behavioral Characteristics of Fear Brokers" I found more vague, and the 'Fear Brokers' seemed not to be the people behind the 9/11 attacks, but people in our own government, a political rather than a psychological agenda.

While I have recommended her 1st 2 books to many friends and colleagues, I cannot recommend this one.
Bob
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Switched on, October 25, 2008
This review is from: The Paranoia Switch: How Terror Rewires Our Brains and Reshapes Our Behavior--and How We Can Reclaim Our Courage (Hardcover)
I think the real pleasure in reading this writer comes from hearing what you already know articulated so clearly. In The Paranoia Switch she really crystallised the idea that if our fear of terrorism is about fear of death, there are many threats to life more likely to happen to us - cancer, car crashes, heart disease. In fact, she says, Americans are more likely to be hit by space debris than die in a terrorist attack!?

Here in the UK, the statistic is probably similar, so when we consider the relative cost/threat index - healthy free school meals to avert obesity and poor nutrition would probably save more lives than introducing ID cards to prevent terrorism. But where is the gain for the global military industrial complex in analysis like that?

The Paranoia Switch has a clear ally in Naomi Klein's recent offering The Shock Doctrine. Both books focus on the impact of trauma from national and global events on the individual and societal psyche. And both call on the population to be alert to it happening again.

Klein teaches her readers how to spot self-serving profiteers capitalising on a shell shocked populations at times of crisis, while Stout warns us against the fear-mongers similarly out for their own ends. It isn't hard to conclude that both women are talking about the same people and they share the view that our only defence is to spot them and resist.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Paranoia Switch, October 8, 2008
This review is from: The Paranoia Switch: How Terror Rewires Our Brains and Reshapes Our Behavior--and How We Can Reclaim Our Courage (Hardcover)
I am becoming a devotee of Martha Stout's thoroughly readable popular psychology books and it is despite myself that I ploughed through The Paranoia Switch in not much more than 24-hours. I wish I'd had better control because now I've finished it and the joy is passed and it will take so much longer for Stout to write a new one that it did for me to read the last.

I think the real pleasure in reading this writer comes from hearing what you already know articulated so clearly. She really crystallised the idea that if our fear of terrorism is about fear of death, there are many threats to life more likely to happen to us - cancer, car crashes, heart disease. In fact, she says, Americans are more likely to be hit by space debris than die in a terrorist attack!?

Here in the UK, the statistic is probably similar, so when we consider the relative cost/threat index - healthy free school meals to avert obesity and poor nutrition would probably save more lives than introducing ID cards to prevent terrorism. But where is the gain and glamour for the global military industrial complex in analysis like that?

The Paranoia Switch has a clear ally in Naomi Klein's recent offering The Shock Doctrine. Both books focus on the impact of trauma from national and global events on the individual and societal psyche. And both call on the population to be alert to it happening again.

Klein teaches her readers how to spot self-serving profiteers capitalising on a shell shocked populations at times of crisis, while Stout warns us against the fear-mongers similarly out for their own ends. It isn't hard to conclude that both women are talking about the same people and they share the view that our only defence is to spot them and resist.
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