Violentologophilia

Violentologophilia is a symptom that is characteristic of severe psychopathy.
It consists of the pathological affinity for the words "violence" and "violent",
and the desire to disruptivly propagate those words in a deceptiv manner
which falsely portrays other people's motivs, actions, and/or character,
as being motivated by a desire for "violence",
when in fact their motiv and character is something else,
and the action is only incidentally violent.
A person who exhibits violentologophilia is called a violentologophile.
Violentologophilia is part of the broad class of psychopathic behaviors
that is false-portrayal behavior.

Many violentologophiles use inherently truth-disrupting two-word phrases
which end in the word "violence".
Such phrases include, but are probably not limited to,
"gun violence", "political violence", "gang violence",
"domestic violence", and "sexual violence".
All of such terms serve to falsely-portray an entire broad category of actions
and people as being invariably motivated by a desire for "violence".

Violentologophilia motivates many psychopaths to become journalists,
and/or to attain positions of power within news-media organizations,
or to become prominent politicians or political leaders,
and especially presidential candidates and presidents,
so as to greatly satisfy that desire by being disruptive toward whole populations.
Consequently, news-media organizations and governments are often
infested with such psychopaths.

Due to the general authority-seeking tendency of psychopaths,
violentologophilic psychopaths are also more common among
judges, prosecutors, and law-enforcement leaders.
A prime example of that is the violentologophilic psychopath James Comey,
who is a former director of the FBI.

Violentologophilic psychopathy in the media is demonstrated most prominently by the U.S.'s
news-networks NBC News, and its main anchor Tom Llamas, ABC News, and its main anchor
David Muir, and its morning anchors Perry Russom and Gio Benitez,
and the ABC News contributer John Cohen, the CBS News co-anchor John Dickerson,
the BBC anchor Steve Lai, the France 24 correspondent Noga Tarnopolsky, and more generally,
by the PBS news-broadcasts that are contracted from France 24 and BBC
(which are semi-separate U.S.-affiliates of the Britain-based and France-based networks,
which must conform to PBS).
The most severely psychopathic of these is John Cohen, who seems to say
the word "violence" as every other word out of his mouth.

There are also a variety of ABC News correspondents and substitute-anchors
who seem to exhibit violentologophilic psychopathy, based upon their wording.
However, those correspondents and substitute-anchors must conform to the
rules that their unseen bosses impose upon them, so they are therefore
more-likely simply following the orders of their unseen psychopathic bosses.

Those news-networks perpetrate that truth-disrupting behavior in a variety of ways,
namely via displayed written words in topic-titels, displayed written words in news-tickers,
words that are spoken by anchors and reporters, and words that are spoken by
cherry-picked violentologophilic guest-speakers.

Violentologophilic psychopathy among prominent politicians is demonstrated by
the current (2025) president Donald Trump, the former presidents George W Bush
and Barack Obama, the most-recent democratic-party presidential nominee Kamala Harris,
the british prime minister Keir Starmer, the current U.S. vice-president J.D. Vance,
the U.S. house minority-leader Hakeem Jeffries,
the legislator and former presidential candidate Amy Klobuchar,
the prominent state-governor Josh Shapiro, the state-governor Spencer Cox,
and the late political leader Charlie Kirk.

As with all positive psychopathic symptoms, violentologophilia can be conditioned-against
via stimulation-probing the brain so as to locate the locus of that desire,
and then using associative brain-stimulation with the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex,
which is the suffering center.