Society is obsessed with bullies. This obsession has also consumed our social science researchers, who are looked upon by society as the possessors of truth, the solvers of our problems.

But bullies don’t commit random shootings. They don’t commit . Bullies want control, power, dominance. Bullies need living victims.

Pay : everyone horrific rampage shooting and every suicide is committed by someone who feels like a victim. They feel discriminated against by society. They feel unjustly fired from their job. They feel unfairly by their spouse. They feel ridiculed by their schoolmates. You may counter, “But they are all mentally disturbed.” Yes, almost all of them are. But almost all mentally disturbed people feel like victims. When we feel victimized, we become mentally disturbed.

Even countries go to war because they feel victimized. How did Hitler get Europeans to exterminate Jews in World War II? Did he say, “Let’s go bully the Jews! It will be so much fun!” No. He said, “We’re the victims of the Jews!” And when we feel like victims, we are capable of doing the most atrocious acts and feel justified doing them. But it is not only Hitler. Even in our own country, how do our leaders get us to go to war against other countries? Do they say, “Let’s go bully that country!” No. They convince us that we’re victims of that country, or potential victims, and then we become eager to send our armies there to blow them up before they blow us up.

When we feel victimized, we are consumed with , hatred and . And that is when we become truly dangerous. What we do in revenge is usually infinitely worse than whatever was done to us.

Our obsession with bullies not only is failing to get to the root of why people commit horrific acts of violence. All of our anti-bully is actually promoting the problem. It encourages us to feel legitimized in our anger, hatred and desire for revenge against those we perceive as us.

If we wish to reduce violence, we need to stop focusing on the bully mentality and instead focus on the victim mentality. And we need to teach the public to stop thinking like victims. Only then will we begin reducing violence in society rather than unwittingly promoting it.

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