Of all the psychos out there this guy is one of the most interesting to me. >not a loner, has friends and a fiance

Of all the psychos out there this guy is one of the most interesting to me

>not a loner, has friends and a fiance
>bright, in med school
>doesn't give off any red flags, totally gregarious and regular
>still murdered multiple women

How does that add up? He's not deficient in any way, many killers are kinda stupid (Gary Ridgeway had an IQ of 85) or are obviously skin crawly lizard people (Ted Bundy.)

Someone with his intellect should never have been capable of these acts and yet here we are. This is one you could never defend against or see coming, what gave him the ability to override the normal limits on behavior?

Imagine the anxiety of knowing there's police out there trying to catch you for murder, I'd be puking

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  1. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    >or are obviously skin crawly lizard people (Ted Bundy.)

    Ted's your basic b***h CEO or lawyer Narcissist. Very driven, very professional go-getter types. The only difference is that his background resulted in him having a fricked up sexuality where he could only get off through rape and murder of women. So people like that CAN be socially useful.

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      Bundy tried to be a lawyer, but when he went to school, he observed that the people around him a had some quality which he lacked. He surmised that he wouldn't be able to make the cut himself.

      • 2 months ago
        Anonymous

        I think his intellect was overstated, he apparently had bad grades in law school and I doubt he would have passed the bar exam but he never got that far

        • 2 months ago
          Anonymous

          The funny part about this is that his prison escape was not due to his own genius but to police ineptitude.

      • 2 months ago
        Anonymous

        I think his intellect was overstated, he apparently had bad grades in law school and I doubt he would have passed the bar exam but he never got that far

        There are a number of qualities important to becoming a lawyer that Bundy may have lacked, not necessarily intellect -- you don't need to be a genius to pass the bar. It's a tedious job requiring a lot of responsibility and conscientiousness, and determination.

  2. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    >med school means you're not crazy

    Lol

    Lmao

  3. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    He gives me the ick just by looking at him

  4. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    Doctors are state accredited psychopaths with a God complex.

    Normal people don't spend 10 years of their life in school and residency unless they're an extreme psychological outlier. Even the relatively benevolent ones get desensitized to trauma and death, it's the only way to make it through the day. They put on a facade of invincibility despite routinely forgetting things, misdiagnosing illnesses, and messing up surgeries all while binging on meth to get through 12h shifts.

    The whole profession developed from aristocrats who had nothing better to do but experiment on peasants and test out their crackpot theories. Read up on a few of the depraved procedures done in the name of 'science' like the guy who developed the frontal lobotomy.

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      yeah I bet plenty of docs and med schoolers are abusing all sorts of drugs.

      • 2 months ago
        Anonymous

        Were are all on stimulants and the surgeons take Propranolol to steady their hands during surgery/ not form ptsd from things going bad.

        • 2 months ago
          Anonymous

          I wouldn't be surprised if physicians had higher rates of benzodiazepine and alcohol use either for the stress.

          • 2 months ago
            Anonymous

            Benzos have such shitty withdrawals and can make anxiety worse I would hope not.
            I have heard some love Bupropion, its an anti depressent that for those who tolerate it well can act similar too a stimulant and as nootropic. I think it actually has been shown to improve memory and problem solving where as stimulants just help focus and confidence without actual increase in performance. Shit makes me suicidal and angry though

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      >Read up on a few of the depraved procedures done in the name of 'science' like the guy who developed the frontal lobotomy.
      Oh I have, I know about Walter Freeman, he was a bit of a maniac, he didn't believe in germ theory so he rarely washed his hands before surgery, and he would perform stunts in the operating room that would result in the deaths of his patients. He came from a family of esteemed doctors and surgeons who had treated presidents, he wanted glory, he became married to the idea of the lobotomy as the groundbreaking procedure that would make his name. I'd classify him as one of the most prolific serial killers ever

      I do see what you're saying about doctors

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous
      • 2 months ago
        Anonymous
    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      They just stop caring. Detachment causes their professional output to stabilize, sometimes they screw up but it's administration's job to predict and work around that. What you're describing is a catch-22, they only need to binge meth and be emotionless psychos if they naturally find the work disturbing and never get over it.

      • 2 months ago
        Anonymous

        Some of them stabilize, others go off the bend entirely like Op

        I blame the administration for the state of modern medicine, the whole system needs an overhaul. Half of its a relic of the 1800's the rest has been infected by big pharma and government waste.

        I dream of a day when 90% of admins and hospital staff can be replaced by an AI and doctors can actually focus on patients without overwork and having to pay $300k of student loans.

        • 2 months ago
          Anonymous

          I agree and love your thinking. I have a similar view mostly centered around improving care, namely, a hospital is a place of sickness and death that only exists because one building is best suited to house expensive equipment. With today's technology, we're almost ready to tear down the concept of the hospital stone by stone.

          • 2 months ago
            Anonymous

            Agreed, hospitals have grown extremely convoluted. No other business mixes so many types of activities in one facility.

            [...]
            An overhaul of this system is going to necessitate an overhaul of the broader culture. The reason for this is that the new frontier in health care involves patients taking on a lot of responsibility for themselves. Lifestyle as medicine. This isn't a new idea, but it has become badly muddied. Doctors give woefully outdated and incomplete information, and quacks give extraordinary promises to people who are desperate. But today, there's enough data and technology available to produce methods which produce reliable results. The role of the physician should be to thoroughly investigate the patient's organism, provide accurate diagnoses, then give exhaustively informed consent. Such a thing is alien to a hospital, but more tragically, such a thing is alien to your average patient.

            Allopathic interventions will always have a place for injuries, accidents, and congenital conditions, but when preventative medicine is not done, allopathy is hardly medicine at all.

            Unfortunately patients have an expectation that they can show up and be 'cured' of literally anything. Especially the older ones seem to think that they will get assigned a personal doctor that works solely for them and assign 100% of resources to their care. Then of course they get triaged and ignored because they are a 'bad patient' who doesn't put any effort into their health.

            Kind of like taxes, how the healthcare system works should really be taught in school. And it should be a lifelong relationship that doesn't just end after you get vaccinated as a kid. But I realize this will never happen for a variety of reasons.

            • 2 months ago
              Anonymous

              >Unfortunately patients have an expectation that they can show up and be 'cured' of literally anything
              I see people take pills for anything, and they'll take as many as a doctor prescribes.

              >And it should be a lifelong relationship that doesn't just end after you get vaccinated as a kid
              I ended up severing my relationship with it entirely because it was so useless to me. I'm much better off for it.

              • 2 months ago
                Anonymous

                > I ended up severing my relationship with it entirely because it was so useless to me. I'm much better off for it.

                This is a good idea up until you need an MRI or a prescription that's only available through a Dr

              • 2 months ago
                Anonymous

                I am fortunate enough that I do not need either and am likely not going to need either, but not everybody is so lucky.

        • 2 months ago
          Anonymous

          I agree and love your thinking. I have a similar view mostly centered around improving care, namely, a hospital is a place of sickness and death that only exists because one building is best suited to house expensive equipment. With today's technology, we're almost ready to tear down the concept of the hospital stone by stone.

          An overhaul of this system is going to necessitate an overhaul of the broader culture. The reason for this is that the new frontier in health care involves patients taking on a lot of responsibility for themselves. Lifestyle as medicine. This isn't a new idea, but it has become badly muddied. Doctors give woefully outdated and incomplete information, and quacks give extraordinary promises to people who are desperate. But today, there's enough data and technology available to produce methods which produce reliable results. The role of the physician should be to thoroughly investigate the patient's organism, provide accurate diagnoses, then give exhaustively informed consent. Such a thing is alien to a hospital, but more tragically, such a thing is alien to your average patient.

          Allopathic interventions will always have a place for injuries, accidents, and congenital conditions, but when preventative medicine is not done, allopathy is hardly medicine at all.

          • 2 months ago
            Anonymous

            >then give exhaustively informed consent
            then exhaustively give information so their patients can truly and competently consent*

        • 2 months ago
          Anonymous

          The administration has to go, they are the entirety of the increasing healthcare cost both in private payer and single payer systems. Something like 9% of medical cost is the result of salaries for Doctors, nurses and techs. If you cut cost just to the people doing medicine and the supplies you need it would be like 30% of what we spend now.

          [...]
          An overhaul of this system is going to necessitate an overhaul of the broader culture. The reason for this is that the new frontier in health care involves patients taking on a lot of responsibility for themselves. Lifestyle as medicine. This isn't a new idea, but it has become badly muddied. Doctors give woefully outdated and incomplete information, and quacks give extraordinary promises to people who are desperate. But today, there's enough data and technology available to produce methods which produce reliable results. The role of the physician should be to thoroughly investigate the patient's organism, provide accurate diagnoses, then give exhaustively informed consent. Such a thing is alien to a hospital, but more tragically, such a thing is alien to your average patient.

          Allopathic interventions will always have a place for injuries, accidents, and congenital conditions, but when preventative medicine is not done, allopathy is hardly medicine at all.

          Won't happen the government keeps cutting reimbursement to pediatricians and family medicine. They in theory should have the deepest breadth and most exposure to everything but due to salaries that barely cover loan payment you just get the people who are burnt out.

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      >Doctors are state accredited psychopaths with a God complex.
      kys

      • 2 months ago
        Anonymous

        sycophants are as bad as the abusers

        • 2 months ago
          Anonymous

          No, he is right, you are jealous that normal people can be happy while your only source of happiness is legally killing people

          asuming you are both American. even if all the immigration and education issues were solved, your country is still full of people like who need to believe what you need to believe, and don't need stupid shit like evidence, knowledge, expertise, etc.
          I used to think warnings of collapse were premature, but this is getting to be like a prequel to Idiocracy.

          • 2 months ago
            Anonymous

            >your country is still full of people like who need to believe what you need to believe
            what did you mean by this?

      • 2 months ago
        Anonymous

        No, he is right, you are jealous that normal people can be happy while your only source of happiness is legally killing people

      • 2 months ago
        Anonymous

        lol ur late for a flat earth thread bud

        no u

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      lol ur late for a flat earth thread bud

  5. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    >How does that add up?
    he's white

  6. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    a doctor doing a study on the brain of psychopaths by scanning them discovered their brain activity was different from normal brains
    he also discovered he was a psychopath
    they're not always drawn to violence but many are drawn to jobs that give them power and authority
    doctor is of course in the list

  7. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    There are a lot of very bright people who go into medicine because they want to do the highest good or have some passion for helping others. Hell, there are some not so bright people who go to and graduate from med school for the same reason. It also attracts sociopaths who are interested in power and/or prestige. Yes, a lot of serial killers are below average intelligence but that does not mean that anyone with a higher than average intellect would be incapable of cruelty and violence. Intelligence sociopaths might be motivated to such a thing just to prove their own perceived superiority.

  8. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    intelligence doesn't have much to do with it, some people just have a compulsion to kill and lack the basic human empathy that prevents others from being able to easily hurt people. there are lots of theories about why this happens.

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      Cannibalism has been quite common in homosexual sapiens sapiens, it was common place in africa and polynesia especially. I think humans have a prey drive, and for cannibals that includes people.

  9. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    Med school seems a productive use for you less impulsive psychopaths and ADHDers

  10. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    Killing c**ts is good
    You got pics of the dead c**ts?

  11. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    He did cos he could. Spoorloos

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