Friday, 24 October 2025

Little part of longer transcript.

Please watch the video at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wD3b_eOZB2c 11:22

The Sign of a Psychopath Everyone Misses | Chase Hughes

Marc The Beginning

I've done research on this for 30,000
hours in real life. If anyone tells you
they're like, "Here's the way to spot a
psychopath," they're full of it. Babies
that are born in the winter are more
likely to have 99%. We would be
inaccurate.

The mistake you make in
dealing with sociopaths is views a human
being the same as throwing away a paper
cup. When you're dealing with a
psychopath, if you just get these two
right, you see a psychopath, he's
looking in his bathroom mirror going
like this.

Can a psychopath be saved?
There's no way out.
What's the most fascinating or chilling
case that you remember that you
analyzed?

Aaron Caffy. I've studied psychopathy
for a long time, but I never felt it
until that video where you could just
feel that that's not a human being
almost like there's no human in there.
That's a wild creature that views a
human being the same as throwing away a
paper cup.

The horrifying truth is that
you can't spot a psychopath until after
they've done something like that. You
could have the 50 best behavior
profilers in the world, the top 50, and
99% we would be inaccurate in predicting
who is a psychopath and who's not.

They're so hard to spot. I teach a
course for women on how to spot
narcissists on a first date, and that's
a lot easier where if you ask them about
an ex relationship, everything is
someone else's fault.

They're always the
victim. Narcissists will never have
friends that are local. They're always
out of town. I've got my friends are in
another city. They have a hard time
maintaining relationships. So, you'll
see a lot of that and that's like the
number one trend.

You'll see very
similar things with psychopaths. And
psychopaths are attracted to large
cities. In my analysis, I think that
cities are not just attracting
psychopaths. I think that cities are
helping to manufacture them.

Let's talk
about one thing that'll make sense right
away. You've heard of the bystander
effect. What this means is if I'm in a
big city like New York or something like
that and I get hurt and I'm laid on the
ground and I'm wounded and I'm begging
for help, the more people that are
around me, the less likely I am to get
help.

Like people will take pictures,
they'll take videos, they all assume
that somebody else is going to call 911,
but they'll stand there and watch. So if
I took this behavior in isolation and I
told you a story about a person watching
another person get stabbed and they
stand there and watch.

They watch in
interest, you would call that person a
psychopath. When you get into a large
city, that behavior is common. That is
the bystander effect is the behavior of
psychopaths. So, us not relying on
reputation. And we're not in a tribe
anymore, our brains are not wired to
handle millions of people.

They're wired
to handle a tribe of about 150. So, when
we get to a big city, we have no
capacity for empathy for that many
people. So, it gets shut off. Our brains
say, "I can't do that." And empathy goes
away. People are bad drivers because
there's no reputation.

You're never
going to see those people again. I don't
have to rely on reputation. That means I
don't care what other people think. So
more psychopathy. I think psychopathy is
a spectrum. 

And some people view it as a
diagnosis of you have to hit this
checklist of all these things to be a
psychopath. You can get close, right?
Which means that there's a line. There's
some kind of a spectrum there.

Sociopaths have no concern for human
feelings. Psychopaths have no concern 
for human life. 

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