Strange answers to the psychopath test
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0:00 - 0:04This story starts: I was at a friend's house,
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0:04 - 0:08and she had on her shelf a copy of the DSM manual,
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0:08 - 0:11which is the manual of mental disorders.
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0:11 - 0:13It lists every known mental disorder.
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0:13 - 0:17And it used to be, back in the '50s, a very slim pamphlet.
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0:17 - 0:20And then it got bigger and bigger and bigger,
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0:20 - 0:23and now it's 886 pages long.
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0:23 - 0:27And it lists currently 374 mental disorders.
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0:27 - 0:29So I was leafing through it,
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0:29 - 0:31wondering if I had any mental disorders,
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0:31 - 0:34and it turns out I've got 12.
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0:34 - 0:35(Laughter)
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0:35 - 0:37I've got generalized anxiety disorder,
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0:37 - 0:38which is a given.
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0:38 - 0:40I've got nightmare disorder,
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0:40 - 0:42which is categorized
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0:42 - 0:46if you have recurrent dreams of being pursued or declared a failure --
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0:46 - 0:50and all my dreams involve people chasing me down the street
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0:50 - 0:51going, "You're a failure."
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0:51 - 0:53(Laughter)
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0:53 - 0:56I've got parent-child relational problems,
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0:56 - 0:58which I blame my parents for.
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0:58 - 1:00(Laughter)
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1:00 - 1:03I'm kidding. I'm not kidding.
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1:03 - 1:04I'm kidding.
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1:04 - 1:06And I've got malingering.
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1:06 - 1:07And I think it's actually quite rare
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1:07 - 1:11to have both malingering and generalized anxiety disorder,
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1:11 - 1:13because malingering tends to make me feel very anxious.
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1:13 - 1:15Anyway I was looking through this book,
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1:15 - 1:18wondering if I was much crazier than I thought I was,
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1:18 - 1:21or maybe it's not a good idea to diagnose yourself with a mental disorder
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1:21 - 1:23if you're not a trained professional,
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1:23 - 1:28or maybe the psychiatry profession has a strange desire
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1:28 - 1:33to label what's essentially normal human behavior as a mental disorder.
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1:33 - 1:35I didn't know which of these things was true,
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1:35 - 1:37but I thought it was kind of interesting.
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1:37 - 1:40And I thought maybe I should meet a critic of psychiatry
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1:40 - 1:41to get their view.
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1:41 - 1:46Which is how I ended up having lunch with the Scientologists.
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1:46 - 1:47It was a man called Brian
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1:47 - 1:50who runs a crack team of Scientologists
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1:50 - 1:55who are determined to destroy psychiatry wherever it lies.
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1:55 - 1:56They're called the CCHR.
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1:56 - 1:59And I said to him, "Can you prove to me
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1:59 - 2:03that psychiatry is a pseudo-science that can't be trusted?"
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2:03 - 2:05And he said, "Yes, we can prove it to you."
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2:05 - 2:07And I said, "How?"
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2:07 - 2:10And he said, "We're going to introduce you to Tony."
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2:10 - 2:12And I said, "Who's Tony?"
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2:12 - 2:16And he said, "Tony's in Broadmoor."
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2:16 - 2:18Now Broadmoor is Broadmoor Hospital.
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2:18 - 2:23It used to be known as the Broadmoor Asylum for the Criminally Insane.
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2:23 - 2:26It's where they send the serial killers
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2:26 - 2:28and the people who can't help themselves.
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2:28 - 2:30And I said to Brian, "What did Tony do?"
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2:30 - 2:33And he said, "Hardly anything.
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2:33 - 2:36He beat someone up or something,
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2:36 - 2:42and he decided to fake madness to get out of a prison sentence.
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2:42 - 2:46But he faked it too well, and now he's stuck in Broadmoor
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2:46 - 2:49and nobody will believe he's sane.
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2:49 - 2:53Do you want us to try and get you into Broadmoor to meet Tony?"
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2:53 - 2:54So I said, "Yes, please."
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2:54 - 2:57So I got the train to Broadmoor.
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2:57 - 3:01I began to yawn uncontrollably around Kempton Park,
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3:01 - 3:04which apparently is what dogs also do when anxious --
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3:04 - 3:06they yawn uncontrollably.
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3:06 - 3:07And we got to Broadmoor.
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3:07 - 3:12And I got taken through gate after gate after gate after gate
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3:12 - 3:13into the wellness center,
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3:13 - 3:15which is where you get to meet the patients.
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3:15 - 3:19It looks like a giant Hampton Inn.
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3:19 - 3:23It's all peach and pine and calming colors.
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3:23 - 3:28And the only bold colors are the reds of the panic buttons.
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3:28 - 3:31And the patients started drifting in.
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3:31 - 3:36And they were quite overweight and wearing sweatpants
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3:36 - 3:38and quite docile looking.
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3:38 - 3:40And Brian the Scientologist whispered to me,
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3:40 - 3:42"They're medicated,"
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3:42 - 3:45which to the Scientologists is like the worst evil in the world,
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3:45 - 3:48but I'm thinking it's probably a good idea.
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3:48 - 3:50(Laughter)
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3:50 - 3:52And then Brian said, "Here's Tony."
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3:52 - 3:54And a man was walking in.
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3:54 - 3:58And he wasn't overweight, he was in very good physical shape.
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3:58 - 4:00And he wasn't wearing sweatpants,
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4:00 - 4:03he was wearing a pinstriped suit.
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4:03 - 4:05And he had his arm outstretched
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4:05 - 4:07like someone out of The Apprentice.
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4:07 - 4:10He looked like a man who wanted to wear an outfit
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4:10 - 4:14that would convince me that he was very sane.
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4:14 - 4:16And he sat down.
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4:16 - 4:19And I said, "So is it true that you faked your way in here?"
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4:19 - 4:22And he said, "Yep. Yep. Absolutely. I beat someone up when I was 17.
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4:22 - 4:25And I was in prison awaiting trial,
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4:25 - 4:26and my cellmate said to me,
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4:26 - 4:28'You know what you have to do?
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4:28 - 4:29Fake madness.
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4:29 - 4:33Tell them you're mad. You'll get sent to some cushy hospital.
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4:33 - 4:35Nurses will bring you pizzas.
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4:35 - 4:37You'll have your own Playstation.'"
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4:37 - 4:39So I said, "Well how did you do it?"
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4:39 - 4:42He said, "I asked to see the prison psychiatrist.
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4:42 - 4:44And I'd just seen a film called 'Crash'
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4:44 - 4:48in which people get sexual pleasure from crashing cars into walls.
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4:48 - 4:49So I said to the psychiatrist,
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4:49 - 4:53'I get sexual pleasure from crashing cars into walls.'"
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4:53 - 4:55And I said, "What else?"
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4:55 - 4:57He said, "Oh, yeah. I told the psychiatrist
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4:57 - 5:01that I wanted to watch women as they died
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5:01 - 5:03because it would make me feel more normal."
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5:03 - 5:05And I said, "Where'd you get that from?"
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5:05 - 5:08He said, "Oh, from a biography of Ted Bundy
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5:08 - 5:09that they had at the prison library."
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5:09 - 5:14Anyway he faked madness too well, he said.
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5:14 - 5:16And they didn't send him to some cushy hospital.
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5:16 - 5:18They sent him to Broadmoor.
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5:18 - 5:20And the minute he got there,
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5:20 - 5:23he said he took one look at the place, asked to see the psychiatrist,
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5:23 - 5:24said, "There's been a terrible misunderstanding.
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5:24 - 5:27I'm not mentally ill."
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5:27 - 5:29I said, "How long have you been here for?"
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5:29 - 5:33He said, "Well, if I'd just done my time in prison for the original crime,
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5:33 - 5:35I'd have got five years.
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5:35 - 5:41I've been in Broadmoor for 12 years."
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5:41 - 5:45Tony said that it's a lot harder to convince people you're sane
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5:45 - 5:47than it is to convince them you're crazy.
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5:47 - 5:49He said, "I thought the best way to seem normal
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5:49 - 5:52would be to talk to people normally about normal things
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5:52 - 5:54like football or what's on TV.
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5:54 - 5:56I subscribe to New Scientist,
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5:56 - 5:58and recently it had an article
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5:58 - 6:02about how the U.S. Army was training bumblebees to sniff out explosives.
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6:02 - 6:03So I said to a nurse,
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6:03 - 6:06'Did you know that the U.S. army is training bumblebees
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6:06 - 6:08to sniff out explosives?'
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6:08 - 6:09When I read my medical notes,
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6:09 - 6:11I saw they'd written:
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6:11 - 6:15'Believes bees can sniff out explosives.'"
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6:15 - 6:17He said, "You know, they're always looking out
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6:17 - 6:20for non-verbal clues to my mental state.
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6:20 - 6:23But how do you sit in a sane way?
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6:23 - 6:26How do you cross your legs in a sane way?
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6:26 - 6:28It's just impossible."
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6:28 - 6:29And when Tony said that to me,
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6:29 - 6:32I thought to myself, "Am I sitting like a journalist?
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6:32 - 6:36Am I crossing my legs like a journalist?"
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6:36 - 6:41He said, "You know, I've got the Stockwell Strangler on one side of me
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6:41 - 6:45and I've got the 'Tiptoe Through the Tulips' rapist on the other side of me.
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6:45 - 6:48So I tend to stay in my room a lot because I find them quite frightening.
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6:48 - 6:51And they take that as a sign of madness.
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6:51 - 6:54They say it proves that I'm aloof and grandiose."
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6:54 - 6:58So only in Broadmoor would not wanting to hang out with serial killers
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6:58 - 7:00be a sign of madness.
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7:00 - 7:03Anyway he seemed completely normal to me -- but what did I know?
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7:03 - 7:07And when I got home I emailed his clinician, Anthony Maden.
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7:07 - 7:08I said, "What's the story?"
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7:08 - 7:13And he said, "Yep. We accept that Tony faked madness to get out of a prison sentence
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7:13 - 7:18because his hallucinations that had seemed quite cliché to begin with
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7:18 - 7:20just vanished the minute he got to Broadmoor.
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7:20 - 7:22However, we have assessed him.
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7:22 - 7:27And we have determined that what he is is a psychopath."
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7:27 - 7:29And in fact, faking madness
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7:29 - 7:33is exactly the kind of cunning and manipulative act of a psychopath.
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7:33 - 7:36It's on the checklist: cunning and manipulative.
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7:36 - 7:38So faking your brain going wrong
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7:38 - 7:41is evidence that your brain has gone wrong.
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7:41 - 7:42And I spoke to other experts,
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7:42 - 7:46and they said the pinstriped suit -- classic psychopath.
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7:46 - 7:48Speaks to items one and two on the checklist --
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7:48 - 7:53glibness, superficial charm and grandiose sense of self-worth.
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7:53 - 7:56And I said, "Well, what, he didn't want to hang out with the other patients?"
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7:56 - 8:00Classic psychopath -- it speaks to grandiosity and also lack of empathy.
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8:00 - 8:04So all the things that had seemed most normal about Tony
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8:04 - 8:07was evidence, according to his clinician,
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8:07 - 8:09that he was mad in this new way.
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8:09 - 8:11He was a psychopath.
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8:11 - 8:12And his clinician said to me,
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8:12 - 8:14"If you want to know more about psychopaths,
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8:14 - 8:17you can go on a psychopath spotting course
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8:17 - 8:21run by Robert Hare who invented the psychopath checklist."
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8:21 - 8:22So I did.
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8:22 - 8:24I went on a psychopath spotting course,
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8:24 - 8:28and I am now a certified --
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8:28 - 8:31and I have to say, extremely adept --
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8:31 - 8:33psychopath spotter.
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8:33 - 8:35So here's the statistics:
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8:35 - 8:40One in a hundred regular people is a psychopath.
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8:40 - 8:44So there's 1,500 people in his room.
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8:44 - 8:50Fifteen of you are psychopaths.
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8:50 - 8:52Although that figure rises to four percent
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8:52 - 8:55of CEO's and business leaders.
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8:55 - 8:58So I think there's a very good chance
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8:58 - 9:03there's about 30 or 40 psychopaths in this room.
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9:03 - 9:05It could be carnage by the end of the night.
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9:05 - 9:09(Laughter) (Laughs)
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9:09 - 9:14Hare said the reason why is because capitalism at its most ruthless
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9:14 - 9:17rewards psychopathic behavior --
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9:17 - 9:22the lack of empathy, the glibness,
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9:22 - 9:24cunning, manipulative.
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9:24 - 9:27In fact, capitalism, perhaps at its most remorseless,
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9:27 - 9:32is a physical manifestation of psychopathy.
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9:32 - 9:33It's like a form of psychopathy
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9:33 - 9:38that's come down to affect us all.
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9:38 - 9:40And Hare said to me, "You know what? Forget about some guy at Broadmoor
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9:40 - 9:42who may or may not have faked madness.
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9:42 - 9:44Who cares? That's not a big story.
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9:44 - 9:46The big story," he said, "is corporate psychopathy.
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9:46 - 9:51You want to go and interview yourself some corporate psychopaths."
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9:51 - 9:54So I gave it a try. I wrote to the Enron people.
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9:54 - 9:56I said, "Could I come and interview you in prison
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9:56 - 9:58to find out it you're psychopaths?"
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9:58 - 10:02And they didn't reply.
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10:02 - 10:04So I changed tack.
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10:04 - 10:08I emailed "Chainsaw Al" Dunlap,
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10:08 - 10:11the asset stripper from the 1990s.
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10:11 - 10:16He would come into failing businesses and close down 30 percent of the workforce,
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10:16 - 10:19just turn American towns into ghost towns.
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10:19 - 10:20And I emailed him and I said,
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10:20 - 10:22"I believe you may have a very special brain anomaly
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10:22 - 10:25that makes you special
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10:25 - 10:29and interested in the predatory spirit and fearless.
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10:29 - 10:31Can I come and interview you
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10:31 - 10:33about your special brain anomaly?"
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10:33 - 10:36And he said, "Come on over."
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10:36 - 10:39So I went to Al Dunlap's grand Florida mansion
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10:39 - 10:44that was filled with sculptures of predatory animals.
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10:44 - 10:47There were lions and tigers.
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10:47 - 10:48He was taking me through the garden.
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10:48 - 10:51There were falcons and eagles.
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10:51 - 10:52He was saying to me, "Over there you've got sharks."
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10:52 - 10:55He was saying this in a less effeminate way.
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10:55 - 11:01"You've got more sharks and you've got tigers."
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11:01 - 11:03It was like Narnia.
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11:03 - 11:06(Laughter)
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11:06 - 11:09And then we went into his kitchen.
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11:09 - 11:13Now Al Dunlap would be brought in to save failing companies.
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11:13 - 11:15He'd close down 30 percent of the workforce.
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11:15 - 11:18And he'd quite often fire people with a joke.
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11:18 - 11:21For instance, one famous story about him,
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11:21 - 11:24somebody came up to him and said, "I've just bought myself a new car."
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11:24 - 11:26And he said, "You may have a new car,
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11:26 - 11:32but I'll tell you what you don't have, a job."
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11:32 - 11:35So in his kitchen -- he was standing there with his wife, Judy,
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11:35 - 11:38and his bodyguard Shawn -- and I said, "You know how I said in my email
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11:38 - 11:41that you might have a special brain anomaly that makes you special?"
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11:41 - 11:43He said, "Yeah, it's an amazing theory.
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11:43 - 11:46It's like Star Trek. You're going where no man has gone before."
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11:46 - 11:54And I said, "Well, some psychologists might say
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11:54 - 11:57that this makes you ... " (Mumbles)
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11:57 - 11:59(Laughter)
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11:59 - 12:00And he said, "What?"
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12:00 - 12:02And I said, "A psychopath."
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12:02 - 12:07And I said, "I've got a list of psychopathic traits in my pocket.
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12:07 - 12:09Can I go through them with you?"
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12:09 - 12:12And he looked intrigued despite himself,
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12:12 - 12:13and he said, "Okay, go on."
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12:13 - 12:16And I said, "Okay. Grandiose sense of self-worth."
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12:16 - 12:19Which, I have to say, would have been hard for him to deny
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12:19 - 12:22because he was standing underneath a giant oil painting of himself.
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12:22 - 12:27(Laughter)
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12:27 - 12:30He said, "Well, you've got to believe in you!"
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12:30 - 12:33And I said, "Manipulative."
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12:33 - 12:36He said, "That's leadership."
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12:36 - 12:38And I said, "Shallow affect:
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12:38 - 12:40an inability to experience a range of emotions."
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12:40 - 12:43He said, "Who wants to be weighed down by some nonsense emotions?"
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12:43 - 12:46So he was going down the psychopathic checklist,
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12:46 - 12:49basically turning it into "Who Moved My Cheese?"
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12:49 - 12:53(Laughter)
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12:53 - 12:56But I did notice something happening to me the day I was with Al Dunlap.
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12:56 - 12:58Whenever he said anything to me that was kind of normal --
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12:58 - 13:02like he said no to juvenile delinquency.
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13:02 - 13:03He said he got accepted into West Point,
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13:03 - 13:06and they don't let delinquents in West Point.
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13:06 - 13:09He said no to many short-term marital relationships.
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13:09 - 13:11He's only ever been married twice.
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13:11 - 13:14Admittedly, his first wife cited in her divorce papers
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13:14 - 13:16that he once threatened her with a knife
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13:16 - 13:19and said he always wondered what human flesh tasted like,
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13:19 - 13:23but people say stupid things to each other in bad marriages in the heat of an argument
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13:23 - 13:26and his second marriage has lasted 41 years.
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13:26 - 13:29So whenever he said anything to me that just seemed kind of non-psychopathic,
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13:29 - 13:33I thought to myself, well I'm not going to put that in my book.
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13:33 - 13:37And then I realized that becoming a psychopath spotter
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13:37 - 13:40had turned me a little bit psychopathic.
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13:40 - 13:45Because I was desperate to shove him in a box marked psychopath.
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13:45 - 13:50I was desperate to define him by his maddest edges.
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13:50 - 13:53And I realized, oh my God. This is what I've been doing for 20 years.
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13:53 - 13:55It's what all journalists do.
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13:55 - 13:59We travel across the world with our notepads in our hands,
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13:59 - 14:00and we wait for the gems.
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14:00 - 14:05And the gems are always the outermost aspects
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14:05 - 14:07of our interviewee's personality.
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14:07 - 14:10And we stitch them together like medieval monks.
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14:10 - 14:14And we leave the normal stuff on the floor.
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14:14 - 14:21And this is a country that over-diagnoses certain mental disorders hugely.
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14:21 - 14:24Childhood bipolar -- children as young as four
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14:24 - 14:26are being labeled bipolar
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14:26 - 14:29because they have temper tantrums,
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14:29 - 14:33which scores them high on their bipolar checklist.
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14:33 - 14:37When I got back to London, Tony phoned me.
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14:37 - 14:40He said, "Why haven't you been returning my calls?"
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14:40 - 14:44I said, "Well they say that you're a psychopath."
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14:44 - 14:46And he said, "I'm not a psychopath."
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14:46 - 14:49He said, "You know what, one of the items on the checklist is lack of remorse,
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14:49 - 14:52but another item on the checklist is cunning, manipulative.
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14:52 - 14:55So when you say you feel remorse for your crime,
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14:55 - 14:57they say, 'Typical of the psychopath
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14:57 - 15:00to cunningly say he feels remorse when he doesn't.'
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15:00 - 15:03It's like witchcraft. They turn everything upside-down."
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15:03 - 15:06He said, "I've got a tribunal coming up.
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15:06 - 15:08Will you come to it?"
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15:08 - 15:10So I said okay.
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15:10 - 15:13So I went to his tribunal.
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15:13 - 15:18And after 14 years in Broadmoor, they let him go.
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15:18 - 15:21They decided that he shouldn't be held indefinitely
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15:21 - 15:24because he scores high on a checklist
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15:24 - 15:29that might mean that he would have a greater than average chance of recidivism.
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15:29 - 15:31So they let him go.
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15:31 - 15:33And outside in the corridor he said to me,
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15:33 - 15:34"You know what, Jon?
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15:34 - 15:37Everyone's a bit psychopathic."
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15:37 - 15:41He said, "You are. I am. Well obviously I am."
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15:41 - 15:43I said, "What are you going to do now?"
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15:43 - 15:46He said, "I'm going to go to Belgium
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15:46 - 15:48because there's a woman there that I fancy.
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15:48 - 15:51But she's married, so I'm going to have to get her split up from her husband."
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15:51 - 15:56(Laughter)
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15:56 - 15:59Anyway, that was two years ago,
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15:59 - 16:01and that's where my book ended.
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16:01 - 16:05And for the last 20 months everything was fine.
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16:05 - 16:07Nothing bad happened.
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16:07 - 16:09He was living with a girl outside London.
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16:09 - 16:11He was, according to Brian the Scientologist,
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16:11 - 16:15making up for lost time -- which I know sounds ominous,
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16:15 - 16:16but isn't necessarily ominous.
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16:16 - 16:19Unfortunately, after 20 months,
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16:19 - 16:21he did go back to jail for a month.
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16:21 - 16:26He got into a fracas in a bar, he called it --
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16:26 - 16:28ended up going to jail for a month,
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16:28 - 16:29which I know is bad,
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16:29 - 16:32but at least a month implies that whatever the fracas was,
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16:32 - 16:35it wasn't too bad.
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16:35 - 16:38And then he phoned me.
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16:38 - 16:42And you know what, I think it's right that Tony is out.
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16:42 - 16:46Because you shouldn't define people by their maddest edges.
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16:46 - 16:50And what Tony is, is he's a semi-psychopath.
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16:50 - 16:55He's a gray area in a world that doesn't like gray areas.
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16:55 - 17:00But the gray areas are where you find the complexity,
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17:00 - 17:03it's where you find the humanity
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17:03 - 17:06and it's where you find the truth.
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17:06 - 17:08And Tony said to me,
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17:08 - 17:12"Jon, could I buy you a drink in a bar?
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17:12 - 17:15I just want to thank you for everything you've done for me."
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17:15 - 17:21And I didn't go. What would you have done?
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17:21 - 17:22Thank you.
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17:22 - 17:39(Applause)
- Title:
- Strange answers to the psychopath test
- Speaker:
- Jon Ronson
- Description:
-
Is there a definitive line that divides crazy from sane? With a hair-raising delivery, Jon Ronson, author of The Psychopath Test, illuminates the gray areas between the two. (With live-mixed sound by Julian Treasure and animation by Evan Grant.)
- Video Language:
- English
- Team:
closed TED
- Project:
- TEDTalks
- Duration:
- 18:01
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Camille Martínez edited English subtitles for Strange answers to the psychopath test | |
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Krystian Aparta edited English subtitles for Strange answers to the psychopath test | |
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Krystian Aparta commented on English subtitles for Strange answers to the psychopath test | |
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Morton Bast edited English subtitles for Strange answers to the psychopath test | |
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Yilun Zhou accepted English subtitles for Strange answers to the psychopath test | |
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Yilun Zhou edited English subtitles for Strange answers to the psychopath test | |
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Barbara Dolenčić commented on English subtitles for Strange answers to the psychopath test | |
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Barbara Dolenčić edited English subtitles for Strange answers to the psychopath test |
Krystian Aparta
The English transcript was updated on 5/4/2015.