I use to let real crime and haunting house videos run on youtube while working from home.
One day I heard some strange in crime documentary.
in short..
Guy had a dog.
Girl had a dog.
They become GF/BF and moved together so did the dogs. Every one got along well, dogs too.
One day Guy stage girls murder and kill her. While he was in process of killing, which happened to be very violent, with blood, comeing out of the girl all over the place…
Guy’s dog attacked girls dog, and almost, in wolf style, Took pieces of meat out of Girl’s dogs body. Not to eat but to kill.
1-even living together dogs knew who they belonged too.
2-when they saw blood and realized ,its violence/kill time they engaged with each other to kill.
I find this same thing goes on during the war situation, other wise normal people, engage in genocides. And in worst possible ways.
Can a remote war, from where no news come , create such situation for local people.
So their fighter/criminals become just unbelievably vicious ???
PS: I am just trying to understand psychology behind.
So I had friends who saw pretty bad stuff in eastern Europe, and I heard storied from 1947.
It always bother me how neighbor could turn on each other and so much brutality.
Finally I found a book on amazon addressing same subject. I have not received the book yet.
But I would like to post some of the reviews.
"Excellent for Teaching and Self-Exploration June 16 2005Robert Waller has written an exceptional explanation of how every human is tempted and entrapped by situations, people, attitudes and personality traits that leads one to commit evil. It is these small acts of evil that can build, distract and cumulate in the horrors we see on the news and respond “not me!”
"
“He also writes about specific case examples at the end of each chapter in order to further articulate his feelings. Anyway, Waller seems to believe very strongly in one “ultimate influence” in order to explain our behavior–evolutionary biology/psychology precede and precipitate his other three “proximate influences,” which are social construction of cruelty, cultural construction of worldview, and psychological construction of “the other.””
“Mr. Waller undertakes a difficult topic – how it is that ordinary, moral, “law-abiding” human beings can change into perpetrators of genocide. The idea that something like this could happen to any one of us is frightening, indeed, but the best way to protect ourselves is to understand the process. Waller explains this clearly and helps us to understand that the Nazis and other genocidal groups were not insane or monstrous - they were normal people who had undergone a transformation which could occur to anyone in the “right” (i.e., “wrong”) circumstances.”
Also read Khawateen Digest of March 2012. It had a similar story, though in place of kuttas, there were two cute bunnies, and in place of the murder, there was eating of carrots