By Dixon Kinqade
Introversion:
Tendency toward being wholly or predominantly concerned with and interested in one's own (mental) life. Tends to be low-key, deliberate, and relatively passive in social situations. Takes pleasure in solitary activities. Finds less reward in time spent with large groups of people, though may tend to enjoy interactions with close friends. Prefers to concentrate on a single activity at a time and likes to observe situations before engaging in participation.
Coping Strategy:
As a child, he lived in a culture, country, and time that was a combative environment, where weakness was punished, and people had to be strong to survive. As a result, he tends to lead with a strong and potent self-presentation and to hide or deny any vulnerability. Avoids close interpersonal relationships and demonstrates no interest in, need for, or any desire in gaining approval from others.
If you desire it, then as a matter of honor and etiquette, ask for it. If you are refused, then bargain for it. If you are still refused, then measure your desire for it against the consequences of taking further action. Consider the advantages and disadvantages of taking it by force or taking it by cunning. Decide which course of action is most likely to be successful and will cost you the least. If you are still willing to pay the price, then take that which you desire.
If you decide to take it by force and fail, then again consider its value. If you are still willing to pay the price, then take it by cunning.
Or
If you decide to take it by cunning and fail, then again consider its value. If you are still willing to pay the price, then take it by force.
Then
If you have failed yet again, then it is probably best to desist and retreat. If you are unable to desist and retreat, then analyze and discover the cause of your defeat. Develop a new strategy using what you have learned and begin again.
Major Traits:
Many are drawn to him by his air of mystery, his aura of wealth, power, and majesty. He is strong, powerful, commanding, energetic, and intense. Most of his attention goes to issues of power and control, to making things happen. He is possessed of an intense, authoritative, and sometimes explosive energy. He expresses anger more easily than other types of emotion.
His decisions and actions are almost always deliberate. He values wisdom and prudence very highly and rarely moves into action without a great deal of forethought, yet is always ready to confront (or more appropriately control) any situation that may arise.
In every situation, there is an opposing force. A rebel who stands for what he believes is right. Such a man is he. Defiantly standing outside the boundary of social order.
"It is true that I am a genius and a criminal, but that by no means makes me evil. There is right. There is wrong. Then, there is man‘s law. The law has little to do with right or wrong. You judge me by your law. That makes me a criminal, but not evil. When your laws are incorrect, it is my duty to disobey them. I do what is truly right." - Dr. Fu Hong Wu
Holy Idea: Truth
He seeks truth, according to reason and logic, even to an extreme, above and beyond accepted social norms. He may confuse objective reality or truth with his own personal reality or beliefs. He has a strong tendency to do what is right or correct and act in accordance to what is right or wrong. Not necessarily what society, custom, religion, or law defines as right, but what he believes to be right.
He adheres to no religion, has knowledge of them all, and recognizes its usefulness as an effective tool of manipulation.
Challenges:
He has a tendency to judge and criticize others. He inclines to be excessive, dominant, and fiercely protective of his possessions. He can at times have difficulty containing his energy and anger, be overly controlling, and be unwilling to accept his own vulnerabilities and limitations. He often refuses to acknowledge any authority other than his own.
Anger:
The primary source of his anger and the reason he has turned to criminal activity:
His anger is the result of the (childhood) frustration that comes from his working hard to do things right, while the rest of the world doesn't care about doing things right and did not appreciate the sacrifices and efforts he has made.
"Some men are born to life. Others have life thrust upon them. I did not ask to be born. I was not given a choice. Life was thrust upon me. So now, I am here and I resent it!" - Dr. Fu Hong Wu
His greatest weakness is the desire for vengeance. Arousing his anger is a sure way to incur all the wrath of hell. You want to meet the devil himself, just piss him off. The best way to do just that is to threaten his prized possessions, his freedom, and his business interests. He will not tolerate a personal threat of physical violence against him.
For minor offenses such as demonstrating a lack of manners, lack of etiquette, lack of respect, or small matters of honor, he will see to it that you are informed of your transgression and re-educated.
For more serious offenses like disobeying his orders, betrayal, disloyalty, or interfering with his business interests, he'll simply have you killed. If he is feeling generous.
But try to take the food off his table, the shelter from above his head, the robe off his back, money out of his pocket, the servant from his home, the woman from his bed, or the innocent child from his care, and even the almighty hand of god himself will not be able to save you.
For such offenses, he won't kill you. That is far too merciful. Rather, he will destroy you.
He will take from you everything you love, everything you care for, and everything you have. Your entire world will come crashing down around you and you'll be helpless to stop it. Worst of all, he'll make you watch.
You'll know that his shadow has fallen upon you and it's by his hand that you suffer. No, he will not kill you, at least not physically, only psychologically and emotionally. He may physically torture you, but he'll make certain you survive. He wants you to live another day, so that you may suffer another day.
Envy:
Combine anger with his (childhood) envy of those who do not work hard and still have more and/or better than they deserve and you have an explanation of why he pursues criminal endeavors.
Avarice:
His avarice is the result of the need to provide for himself and the fear that resources are limited. His avarice manifests itself as the hoarding of resources, in an attempt to minimize their needs, in the face of a world that takes more than it gives. Thus isolating him from the world. This is the cause of his lust for power, control, and fortune.
Pride:
He has an appreciation for excellence, elegance, or beauty wherever he may find it, such as music, arts, speech, nature, and perhaps most of all, a particular fondness for the human female form. When he finds excellence or beauty, he desires to possess it, because to him such things are extremely rare and therefore precious.
Vanity:
What may seem like an ego-maniacal personality to others, he views as an unwavering and supreme self-confidence. His complete faith in himself is the result of profound self-knowledge combined with his unusually high intellect. He knows that in any situation, he will overcome to rise victorious. There is no question in his mind that he is superior to others, because he IS intellectually superior.
Virtue:
His virtue is innocence, not that he is innocent, but that he is sympathetic to those who are. While he is generally perceived as cruel, he will always take pity on the innocent. Typically, only children fall into his category of innocent.
His innocence is lost. He knows and resents that fact. He was not born evil, cruel, or criminal. He learned those things from the actions of other men. They were life lessons. Evil men and criminals thrive in the world. All others struggle or perish. Good men are trampled on by evil men. Good men suffer at the hands of evil men. One man's success always means another man's loss. He would rather win than suffer loss.
View of Self:
- Larger than the world - able to control or overcome whatever circumstances, situations, questions, problems, or obstacles set before him.
- Superior - intelligence, knowledge, and understanding.
- An Irresistible Force - able to shape the world around him, to bend people/circumstances by sheer will/determination/desire. An unconquerable spirit.
- Immovable - when pushed, threatened, or challenged, it only strengthens his resolve. The more you fight, the stronger he becomes. Once his mind is made up, no one will get him to change it.
View of Others: The opposite of self-view
- Inferior - others are of inferior intelligence, knowledge, and understanding.
- Weak - others are easily manipulated, coerced, malleable, controlled, shaped, and broken.
- Fearful - superstitious, religious, unable to cope with the harsh realities of life.
- Foolish - unwise, incapable of making prudent decisions, careless.
- Untrustworthy - self-destructive and fickle, carelessly make decisions that will take others down with them.
- At some point, every person you know will: lie to you, betray you, or leave you.
- Followers - people are sheep and sheep will always need a shepherd. He is that shepherd.
Values:
- Manners and etiquette - refined class
- Anger - a source of power for me, a source of weakness for you.
- Envy - excellent tool for manipulating others through their own envy.
- Greed - excellent tool for manipulating others, through their own greed.
- Gluttony - not in the sense of eating too much but, rather, of sampling all the best things the world has to offer.
- Patience - taking the time for a richer experience or to ensure victory
- Lust - in the sense of wanting more of what he finds stimulating, beyond a point at which most people would feel overwhelmed and stop.
- Pride - excellent tool for manipulating others, through their own pride
- Vanity - excellent tool for manipulating others through their own vanity.
- Deceit - as a tool for manipulating others
- Cruelty - Kindness is cruelty and cruelty is kindness. Tough love - spare the rod, spoil the child. Creates fear.
- Truth - though often subjective or relative to personal view of Truth (his truth)
- Justice - Let the punishment fit the crime, though often subjective or relative to a personal view of reality
- Intelligence - is cause for respect
- Wisdom - true understanding and comprehension make people and events predictable.
- Power - is freedom
- Control - power (over circumstances, over situations, over outcome, over self and others)
- Freedom - liberty and independence (of self)
- Success - (though often subjective or relative to personal view of reality)
- Honor - if you make a promise/vow, keep it or die. It's about integrity
- Possessions - not material things but assets and resources, people that belong to him, allies, consorts, servants, employees.
- And here is why:
- One must be able to differentiate between truth and deceit in order to obtain information.
- Information is knowledge.
- Understanding what to do with that knowledge is intelligence.
- Knowledge and intelligence are understanding.
- Understanding and experience are wisdom.
- Wisdom, intelligence, and the right information are power.
- Power is control.
- Control is the ability to force, manipulate, shape, or otherwise influence people, situations, or circumstances to produce a desired outcome.
- Strength is the ability to exercise control. The ability to successfully exercise control depends on the ability to employ truth and deceit.
- Control and strength are freedom.
- Freedom is the ability to fulfill desire
- Freedom and control are happiness
- Happiness is success.
- Success is the measure of happiness.
- Therefore, the amount of success you have is equal to how often you get what you want.
Strength:
"Do not ask for that which you can not take." - Dr. Fu Hong Wu
"It is the way of nature, survival of the fittest." - Dr. Fu Hong Wu
"Might makes right." - Dr. Fu Hong Wu
"The Divine Right of Kings" - Dr. Fu Hong Wu
"Violence is the solution." - Dr. Fu Hong Wu
"I do, because I can." - Dr. Fu Hong Wu
"If you want something, then take it, and you had best be prepared to hold on to it. If you are not strong enough to take and protect what you want, then you have no right to it. He who is the strongest always gets his way because he crushes anyone or anything that stands in his way.
History has proven nearly every sovereign power, every emperor, every king, every ruler obtained his position through force, by taking what was rightfully his. Nearly every nation and every empire is the direct result of dominance by force. If not by direct force, then by subversion, bribery, deceit, or secret alliance." - Dr. Fu Hong Wu
"Some people simply can not be reasoned with, bribed, influenced, flattered, blackmailed, or otherwise convinced to comply. Violence is the only thing such people understand." - Dr. Fu Hong Wu
"I do it, because I can! You just try to stop me... I dare you." - Dr. Fu Hong Wu
Not to say that his view of strength is limited merely to brute physical force, intellectual superiority is the key to overcoming an adversary who has superior force. It is simply a matter of strategy. If you can't beat 'em, then outsmart them. If you can't force compliance by direct physical force, then one must use other types of force, find other means of applying pressure to your opponent, forcing him to submit.
"From man I learned confrontation, from woman I learned manipulation. Of the two, I much prefer manipulation." - Dr. Fu Hong Wu
:There are many devious methods by which one may either directly or indirectly encourage, trick, or force others to capitulate. Everyone has a weakness, a fear, a vice, a desire, some vulnerability that may be exploited. Get creative!" - Dr. Fu Hong Wu
"The ends always justify the means. It's about the destination, not the journey. The end result is of paramount importance, not the means or method by which one achieves that result. I take what I want by any means necessary. If you ask me for something and I give it to you, be grateful I did and don't ask how I got it."- Dr. Fu Hong Wu
"You'll catch more flies with honey than with piss and vinegar. Never use a fist when all that's required is a smile." He understands the wisdom of connecting with others, maintaining harmony, peace, and comfort, and avoiding conflict in order to cultivate a network of loyal, steadfast partners, friends, and alliances." - Dr. Fu Hong Wu
Devalues:
- Emotion
- Charity
- Protecting the weak
- Protecting the stupid
- Protecting aged
- Compassion
- Kindness
"Since then, I have learned much. I have learned to see beyond the illusion of duality. I have risen above such questions of good and evil, right or wrong, moral and immoral." - Dr. Fu Hong Wu
"Duality has confused man until his perceptions have become corrupt and perverse. In general, the views of civilized man are all backward. What he considers to be kindness is truly cruelty and what he considers cruelty is truly kindness. This is self-destructive." - Dr. Fu Hong Wu
"Charity and compassion are the greatest evil man can commit. Such things are detrimental to both he who gives and he who receives. Those who require charity or compassion are weak and inferior.
They are unable to take care of themselves. It is the law of nature that they suffer and perish for their inadequacy. It is the natural order of things.
The sick, the weak, the poor, and the stupid must perish. Only the strong deserve to survive, for they are the only ones capable of doing so. Men who offer charity and compassion enable the inferior to remain so.
Such men succeed only in creating and perpetuating the very problem they seek to solve. Additionally, they weaken themselves by expending resources in a losing battle. It is wasteful and foolish.
Such men will never be successful in this world. The weak, the sick, and the poor are such by their own making. Every man is what he has chosen to be. Your life is what it is because of the decisions you have made. Accept responsibility for that." - Dr. Fu Hong Wu
"Man puts entirely too much faith in law. Law is evil. The law does not protect you. Passing laws has never prevented criminals from breaking them. It only prevents men willing to obey those laws from reaping the benefits of breaking them. Every law that is passed removes a man's freedom. The more laws a nation has, the fewer freedoms its people have." - Dr. Fu Hong Wu
"Animals commit no evil because they have no concept of good and evil. Many argue that man is subject to different standards than animals, simply because of our greater capacity for conceptual thought and complex skills of communication. This is not true!
Nature has not established a separate law for man than for other animals. Do not forget, regardless of what you may think, man is an animal. Laws of nature can not be broken by man nor beast. They are the only true laws.
Man's law is not in accordance with nature. Man's law can be broken. Therefore, it is not a true law." - Dr. Fu Hong Wu
"All people are selfish. Everything they do is the result of selfish motives. Even seemingly altruistic acts are motivated by selfish ego. The desire to be seen by others as a humanitarian. At the very least, it is to satisfy their selfish desire to feel good about themselves for performing such an act. All is vanity." - Dr. Fu Hong Wu
"All people are thieves. Because their actions are always motivated by selfish desire, their greatest concern will always be themselves. No one, other than yourself, has your best interests at heart. People will steal your possessions, time, energy, love, happiness, and even your life if you let them." - Dr. Fu Hong Wu
"At some point, everyone you know will either lie to you, betray you, or leave you. Trust no one." - Dr. Fu Hong Wu
"There is no purpose or meaning in life except that which you invent for yourself. All is vain. There is no reward or punishment at the end of life's journey. Every man creates his own heaven or hell here and now. The only rewards in this life are success, money, and power. Everything else is merely a tool to be used in the acquisition of such." - Dr. Fu Hong Wu
"Everything on this earth is here for my benefit and pleasure." - Dr. Fu Hong Wu
"Over the years, I have witnessed history as it unfolded. I have seen the rise and fall of empires. I have watched the world change, but man, it seems, is much the same as he has always been. I have seen the best in man and the worst." - Dr. Fu Hong Wu
For all these are the mystique of the man who is "known by many names", but whom we all call… Dr. Fu Hong Wu.
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