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Victims

SelfDefense

Some people justify all their actions, inactions, and failures by considering themselves victims. Many people are "professional victims" who have little sense of identity outside of their victim hood. They tend to harbor hate for those whom they perceive as "not victims." Then to psychologically deal with this hate, they use defense mechanisms that enable them to harm others in socially acceptable ways, without accepting responsibility or suffering guilt, and without having to give up their status as "victims." They tend to hate people who are willing and able to prevent their own victimization. Actually, the people who are least likely feel like victims are those who have actually been victimized in the past. They refuse to let it happen again.

By claiming victim status, professional victims demand (and get) special treatment through quotas, affirmative action, reparations, and other preferential treatment programs. Professional victims have been indoctrinated to believe that there is no alternative to remaining a victim forever. Their leaders remind them constantly that they are mistreated in every imaginable way (most of them imaginary!), attribute every one of life's misfortunes to "racism" or "sexism" or "hate crimes", and dream up ever more complex schemes for special treatment and favors.

Victim hood is good business for organizations that foster victim status. As victims, the members depend upon the organization to protect them, and the organization in turn relies on its members for funding and political power. In the interest of self-preservation, these organizations work hard at preserving hatred and bigotry and at keeping their members defenseless–and therefore dependent.

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