I actually saw something recently, a criminal psychologist my bird watches on YouTube called emma Kenny (her vids are actually quite good) who goes over solved cases saying that many people from a few professions like surgeons, fighter pilots and other high risk jobs i cant remember now, share many of the same psychological traits as serial killers. In terms of thier behaviours and habits. And apparently that is pretty much common knowledge amongst her peers in her field. This is her
They call it the ‘Murder’ gene. Apparently murderers and top performers/elite sports people posses it. It’s what makes you go to the limits of your chosen path…be it sport or crime.
I've put it on and seen her face and remember seeing her on other tv crime documentaries. She's very good.
She is yes, and im not into that kinda murder thing too heavy but ill sit through her vids no worries when her has the Remote
Going back to the Battle of Britain the fighter pilots who became aces were the ones with the killer instinct, they got close enough to see the pilots they were shooting down and didn't care if bailed out and survived because they were the enemy
I can understand that being a big factor, and quite a fair few other factors as well, including conditioning of war bringing out those characteristics more in a person.
That is true but there is a difference in being a soldier in battle where it is kill one be killed (basic human reactions) and being a sniper who has a close up look as he hits his target or the commandos who were killing enemy troops by creeping up on them and killing at close quarters We are all capable of it but it does come easier to some than it does to most What worries me most about knife crime is that they are killing kids their own age at a time in life when we were having a first kiss and fumble with a girlfriend or having a first drink without our parents knowing
We're saying similar things but I think it requires a "perfect storm" where a person's genetic make-up, their life experience and the environment they're in come together to bring out the type of individual you described above. Even something as simple as adrenalin in that cockpit will have played its part in it. But on its own it's not enough to bring it out in other fighter pilots.
Badly The funny thing about kamakazee pilots was that every japanese pilot heading off to do it was under the impression it was a successful tactic. The truth was it was an absolutely disastrous strategy, but because nobody ever came back nobody had any idea of this and they continued with it. True story.
Really, you sure about that? The objectives of kamikazes' still exist today. Terrorists with backpacks is a form of kamikaze and their precision in the 21st Century is more effective than that of the Japanese, and normally come with very devastating effects to their intended targets. I'd say it was a very successful tactic.
Like with the Japanese kamakazee pilots towards the end of WW2, all forms of terrorism are a failed act of desperation... even those carried out in helicopter gunships by those trying to subdue an inconvenient population As is torture btw.
They were indoctrinated with the belief that their Emperor was an actual god and if they died for him they and their families would enter heaven During training they were only taught take of and aiming at a target, not trained how to land a plane or dogfight They were half cut on saki when they took off so they were like footballer supporters challenged to a rumble at an away match They did win in one way as they along with the soldiers defending Okinawa convinced the yanks that invading Japan would be too costly in lives so they dropped the atomic bombs instead
You completely missed where I was going with this. Try again, and think of the horrors of the Manchester Arena?