The video effectively strips the prestige from high-power roles, exposing them as institutional havens for the clinically heartless. It serves as a sharp reminder that what society labels as "leadership" is often just ruthless manipulation rebranded for the elite.
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Where Do Psychopaths Work The Most?
Added:Which jobs have the most psychopaths?
>> Somewhere around 1 to 4% of the general population, but in some industries they represent over 20%. If you thought they'd be busy low managers, no, it's got to be like CEOs has the most streamers. Streamers probably has a pretty high rate of psychopaths. Sure.
Streamers maybe social media in general, but I think like CEOs, CIA. Yeah. Like a lot of like a lot of jobs that need like no empathy where you just like fire people, kill people, and not care. Like working in dark alleyways or cutting people up in basement or chainsawing pretty young girls so you'd be safe in your smelly little office cubicle.
You're wrong.
>> Blackjack dealers. Blackjack dealers.
Seven card 21.
Good luck next time. Redo, reshuffle the cards. You flip You flip a [ __ ] two queens. Two queens. Perfect pair. You didn't bet it. 20. I'll stand. You go.
They're flipping a six. They flipped six, five, 10, 21. Bet again. You got an ace, eight, 19. Stand. They flip a four or they have a four. They flip. They flip four. Three. Four. 11. Flip a five.
You go. Oh [ __ ] They got 16. Another five. 21. Sorry. Good. Better luck next time. Better luck next time. They're far more likely to be in corner offices on live TV or running for reelection.
Because while some careers reward empathy and compassion, others reward manipulation, power, and control. Let's quickly understand what a psychopath is and then dive into jobs that attract the most psychopath.
>> Making meme coins in the modern world.
Psychopaths aren't just like the villains in movies. More often than not, they're high functioning professionals living right next to us. Psychopathy is defined using the hair psychopathy checklist, and it splits psycho traits into two major categories. We've got interpersonal and emotional traits, and we've got behavioral traits. Psychopaths have a major lack of empathy, absolutely no remorse. They're pathological liars.
They're superficially charming, and they'll manipulate you in any way they can. They're also highly impulsive, thrillseeking, irresponsible, often highly ambitious, and chronic rule breakers. In practical terms, a psychopath can fully understand what they're doing is harmful. They just don't care. Neuroscience studies back this up, too, showing they're simply built different. Their amydala, which processes empathy and fear, runs on low power mode. You put that kind of person into the workplace, and what happens?
You suddenly have a predator in an environment built for cooperation. They play off. Well, they still they would still experience fear in some way, right? I never knew that psychopaths have a lower level of empathy and fear.
But could you have the reverse? Like, who's the guy that climbs those towers?
You know what I'm talking about. He free climbs towers in cities. What's that guy's name? Alex Hold. Is Alex Honold a psychopath? I don't know. Alex Hold is a thrill seeker that has a low level of fear, but that doesn't mean that he has low empathy. He might just have like a fear disorder.
>> It's politics like it's life or death.
They see colleagues as stepping stones and they climb the ladder fast because they'll do things normal people simply won't. As Professor Babiaak's research shows, certain careers act like magnets for psychopaths because they offer exactly what these people are looking.
>> Dude, I can't escape Anton Shagore. Any I I'm serious. Ever since I've watched No Country for Old Men, I see Anton Shagore every single day. Every single day I see Anton Shagor. is like the most popular figure in my day-to-day life.
>> Four, status, power, and the >> who is that? This guy. Anton Shagore is a character in No Country for Old Men.
He's a psychopath >> because they offer exactly what these people are looking for. Status, power, and the ability to control others. So, >> yeah, it's usually like higher power positions. That's why like CEOs are a higher percentage of psychopaths.
They're not 80%. It's just like there's a higher if if psychopaths are 1 to 4% of the population. That's what he was saying. Like CEOs might be 20 of uh 20% of CEOs are psychopaths. There's a higher concentration.
>> Are they?
>> Psychopaths thrive in systems that reward the worst parts of them. So give them status, power, competition, and the ability to manipulate people and they'll rise.
>> Well, control and leadership as well.
Like I psychopaths are not inherently bad people if they control the bad aspects of their personalities, right?
Like that's one thing that needs to be said. Like when you think of the term psychopath, you think of like serial killers and [ __ ] American psycho.
Like the average psychopath is a pretty normal guy. Like he might be a [ __ ] CEO, but you're not in your head going, "He's a psychopath." You're going, "He's just kind of an [ __ ] rich guy." Like that's he's just like a dude on the street, you know? Like I think we're like mapping it up as these psychopaths need power and control. It's like, no, realistically they kind of just like control employees, push out other competition, step on people, lowball competition, right? Like they do dayto-day [ __ ] that like feeds that, but it's not like, oh, they need to [ __ ] they need to fire someone every day and [ __ ] stomp out small businesses to have feeling to the top. We're going to dive into the 10 careers where you can statistically find the most amount of psychopaths. These rankings come from psychologist Dr. Kevin Dutton. Number one, plumbers.
>> Just research into psychopathy in the work.
>> Just some random [ __ ] job. I I feel like if we're going through 10 of them, there's going to be one that I'm like, "Oh, really? Oh, really?" Ooh, police officers. Yeah, I didn't even think about that. Yeah, police officers, cops.
There's probably a higher percentage >> place. If you'd like to read about it, check out his book, The Wisdom of Psychopaths, or watch his podcast with Chris Williamson. Now, let's dive into the list. Do you want to take a guess at what number 10 is? 3 seconds. Ready?
>> Okay. Well, see, here's here's what I'm I'm pausing cuz number 10 like I think I could guess jobs that are on the list. I think CEO is number one, but like number 10's something that has like fractionally more psychopaths. Managers, not a CEO, a manager. A manager of a local McDonald's. He's a power- hungry psychopath. He loves He loves making you clock into your 9 to5. He He makes you He gives you the days that you don't want to work. He makes you come in.
>> You guessed it. Priests and rel.
That would have been the last guess.
That would have been the last guess, right? Priest.
>> Religious leaders. Just kidding. They're actually number eight on the list.
>> Oh, [ __ ] hell. What did I number eight is priests?
What? We'll be diving into them a little later. First up, we've got civil servants. More specifically, we're talking about those roles where they're like the fake police. Parking ticket officer, welfare case manager.
>> Just feing on that [ __ ] power, man.
Oh, you're [ __ ] 6 in too close to a fire hydrant. Take it. Take it.
>> Some fat, miserable bluehead [ __ ] at the DMV.
>> Whoa.
Whoa.
>> That kind of role. Why do psychopaths like these roles? Supposedly three reasons. One, rulebased power, so authority is baked into the job. Two, low transparency. Everything's hidden behind.
>> Side note, side conversation. That was a little crazy. I I saw somebody say that in my uh Walking Dead playthrough, I'm like overly sexist and I use the term [ __ ] too much. When I I call I when I use the term [ __ ] I don't mean women, right? I just say that I use the term [ __ ] in the same way that I use the term dick. Right? So it's like when I say that I don't want you to think, oh, I'm calling somebody a [ __ ] because they're woman. I'm just saying that you're being a [ __ ] right? You're being a [ __ ] You're being a dick.
Right? I use them interchangeably.
>> Bureaucratic curtains. And three, diffused responsibility. No single person is blameable. These guys get to inflict hardship while experiencing zero emotional discomfort.
>> We're all go [ __ ] They say somebody somebody says something crazy [ __ ] >> because policy provides the moral cover.
I'm not denying you.
>> I got to remind >> no single person is blameable. These guys get to inflict hardship while experiencing zero emotional discomfort because polic Oh, you're here for a new ID. Do you have your six points?
That's only five. Well, I drove 30 minutes to get your need certificate.
Sorry. He provides the moral >> adrenaline coursing through their body.
>> Cover. I'm not denying you healthare.
The system is denying you healthcare.
Dr. Kevin Dutton describes this category as everyday authoritarianism.
People who >> No, the DMV the DMV is really a dystopia. The DMV is like gray. They have those shitty hospital lights. It's just like three TV screens with like B22. like you're playing bingo, but you're just sitting in a [ __ ] shitty plastic chair waiting for your name to be called.
>> Enjoy enforcing structure not because it helps society, but because it gives them dominance. In other words, psychopathy thrives in organizations where human suffering becomes just procedure.
Anyways, on to number nine, which might surprise you quite a bit. Chefs. Not only are they idiot sandwich >> head chefs. Yeah, Gordon Ramsay.
I think Gordon Ramsay puts it on for show though, but that's not that surprising. I feel like civil servants surprise me more than chefs. Yeah, that's not that crazy.
>> They are psychopaths.
>> My dad's a chef. Okay, but you got to keep in mind this video means the highest percentage of psychopaths. Just because your dad's a chef doesn't mean he's a psychopath. It just means there's like, oh, 8% of chefs are psychopaths, which is higher than the average population.
>> Ethic idiot sandwiches. Kitchen culture is brutal. High stress, long hours, sharp knives, and >> the bear >> fire everywhere. Chefs operate in an environment where perfection is expected and mistakes are punished instantly and aggressively. What kind of personality thrives in that kind of environment? The kind who doesn't crack under pressure.
Who can bark orders without caring who they offend? Someone who sees people as tools to get the dish out fast. I'm not saying Gordon Ramsay is a psychopath, but maybe his mentor Marco Pierre White might be.
>> No, I didn't make Gordon Ramsey cry. He made himself cry.
>> And now on to number eight. Priests and rel.
>> I didn't make him cry. He made himself cry. Wow. Holy term religious leaders.
In theory, these guys should be the most empathetic and compassionate in society, and a lot of them are. But research shows psychopathy often thrives wherever there's power without oversight, automatic trust, and access. Yeah. I mean, I didn't I wouldn't have expected to say priests and like priests and religious leaders. But it's not shocking that a small percent or a higher percentage of priests are psychopaths cuz it's like if you're a priest, you could use your power in the worst possible way. Like you have a following of people that like beckon to your call.
Like they literally follow you.
Obviously they follow God, but follow God through your word. Like they go to your church, they listen to you preach.
like you can mind their you can mind meld them to whatever you want >> as to vulnerable people and religious roles often provide all three. Kevin Dutton's pointed out that spiritual authority can often become psychological authority and some individuals exploit that. Honestly, if you want the perfect example of a crazy psychopath within religion, look no further than Kenneth Copeland.
>> Oh my god, that [ __ ] dude.
Well, the jet was so cheap I had to buy it. Don't you say that to me, you devil worshipper. Oh my god. It's like, dude, you own like [ __ ] nine mansions. What happened to being like frugal? You know what happened? It's like he literally preaches the exact opposite of what he practices. I That's the thing though.
It's like even though I'm not religious, I feel like me as a non-religious person and religious people all agree that like tea evangelists that just make millions of dollars and spend it on anything are like literally practicing the exact opposite of what they're saying. It's like so weird. Like, have you seen that one televangelist brag about his mansion on He was preaching and he was bragging about his mansion for like five minutes.
He's just like, "Yeah, I got like nine bedrooms." And he's like, "I tell I say it's like my humble abode." He like calls it some weird term. It's like the house of dreams. I'm like, "Why are you calling it that? IT'S SO WEIRD." COVID >> 19 >> net worth in the hundreds of millions of dollars. Straight up demonic eye.
>> That video so creepy and supposedly spends disaster relief funds on repairs to his own private jet.
>> It's easier for a camel to go through the eye of the needle than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God.
>> Well, see you in hell, Kenny boy. Now on to number seven. The idiots we have running our countries. Politicians.
Surprised?
>> No, not at all. I think that was like the most that's like the most obvious one.
>> Yeah, me neither. If you take the traits of a psychopath, manipulation, charm, deceit, total lack of empathy, power, status, and zero accountability, and then you build a job description around it, you'd end up with member of Parliament. My video about Congress, we touched on how a massive part of their job is campaigning. Well, campaigning is basically just straight up manipulation.
You lie to win affection. You make promises.
>> Every politician, bro. I'm going to do this. They don't do that.
>> You'll never keep.
>> I'm going to do that. Are you tired of this? Yes. Well, I'll change it. They don't change it.
>> You convince people that you alone can fix the mess you helped create. Remember when Trump said he was going to release the Epstein files no matter what, and it was a massive part of his campaign?
How'd that one work out for us? In a 2014 study out of Oxford, nearly one in eight politicians displayed clinically significant psychopathic traits. In the general population, it's somewhere between one in a 100 to one in 25 in pol.
>> I feel like it's it's higher in politicians, but it's like a toss of a coin, man. It's like so hard. Like they're like using the thing again.
They're like mimics, right? Like a psychopath in in like a political area is just mimicking everyone else, but you have no idea whether or not they actually have emotions. Like they're just acting like they do.
>> Politics, it's one in eight.
>> Cuz there are like it's impossible to say all politicians are shitty cuz there are good politicians. I just think a lot of politicians that get into power end up being psychopaths because they're the most successful.
>> Perhaps power doesn't actually corrupt.
Maybe it attracts the already corrupted.
Now, on to number six. Media and TV personalities. Fake. Fake. Fake. Fake.
Fake. They're all playing characters.
And it Yeah, they're playing characters, but are they psychopaths? I don't know.
Like, I don't think uh Jimmy Fallon's a psychopath. I think if you look at like old videos of Jimmy Fallon, he's just like wholesome. I think now he's like annoyingly happy and it's like and you tell him about anything he's like, "Oh, really? Oh, really?" It rained the other day. Oh, wow.
Really? It's just like Okay, man. It's like that's He has the worst job ever. I will I like actually being Jimmy Fallon and having to act like you love every story and every person is just like un painstakingly shitty. Like I can't get over that. You watch a Jimmy Fallon interview. He's like, "Oh my god." So me and my friend went to McDonald's the other day. And how was it? You have me on my toes here. You have me on my toes here. Was it a great Was it great?
What'd you get? Oh, a Big Mac. Was it Was it the big arch? Did you like it?
It's just I Dude, I I just can't.
>> Works because they're so emotionally detached. They really couldn't give a [ __ ] See, when you're rewarded for attention rather than accuracy. Oh, do you think rappers would make the list? I don't know. I feel like you have to be like emotionally in touch to be a rapper like in some way. Even if you're demented, it's like you have emotions.
King Vaughn. Yeah, but King Von Yeah, but King Vaughn had emotions. I think he was like a very aggressive individual.
Ah, but psychopaths can be aggressive.
They just don't have empathy. Empathy becomes a major liability. Television rewards narcissism. Do I care more about the truth of the matter or about what will cause more outrage and get more clicks? Kevin Dutton said it best.
Psychopaths are social predators who charm, manipulate, and ruthlessly plow their way through life. So, naturally, when you put these people behind a camera, they don't debate, they hunt.
Take Jordan Peterson's interview with this [ __ ] whose name I couldn't be bothered learning. He went there under the guise of having a friendly, cordial discussion about his new book. She ends up trying to tear him a new [ __ ] very unsuccessfully, might I add, and saying to him minutes before going live, "This will be quite the war. Sick, twisted, attention-hungry people. The more outrage they cause, the more views. And the more views, the more validation for people who feel nothing inside."
Speaking of what's on the inside, number five is actually surgeons. The superheroes of the psychopaths. You need to realize throughout medical school, these guys are trained to no longer view the human body as a person's body. They need to view it more like a machine.
Different systems, different parts. I don't know. I could you say that like surgeons are surgeons psychopaths or Yeah, they probably have a higher level of psychopaths for sure. And it's also like a high level of, you know, success and money that comes with it. So, I get people going into that field for the monetary gain versus like, you know, caring about saving lives. But I also feel like some surgeons that aren't psychopaths might test higher on low empathy ratings just because they've become numb to the job. Like, if you've seen 500 people die on a [ __ ] operating table, like at some point it means nothing. Like, the weight becomes less. That's all the people who do this the best. The ones who can completely emotionally detach. Just think about what these guys do on a regular basis.
Slicing through skin, cutting through bone, operating on young children. And when it's all over, no crying, no celebrating, just moving on to the next patient. And one of the major attractions for those with psychopathic traits, you're basically playing God.
Mix intelligence, status, and control over life and death. You're practically writing a love letter to psychopathy. As Kevin Dutton notes, "Psychopaths aren't all killers. Some of them are saviors.
They just so happen to save you."
>> Dude, I can't imagine having to do like open heart surgery. Man, I kind of feel like it might actually be better you have a psychopath doing that. Like somebody that's just so robotic. Like I couldn't have some because it's like lower heart rate, not as stressed out, better, you know? versus a guy that's like, "Oh, [ __ ] What if this kid dies?"
You know, like they just need to be like, you can't have your thoughts need to be fully just on the operation rather than like, oh, this is so sad, you know?
Like, oh god, what if I mess up? Like, you can't get you you got to just be in the zone.
>> With the same level of empathy they'd use to fix a car. But hey, >> I'd be scared to epipin myself. No, I could epi pin myself. I think I could do like if I Okay, I'm not saying I think I could do surgery. I think if I had to be a surgeon, I'd be able to do like knee surgery. I have knee surgery next Thursday. Some [ __ ] like that. But like I couldn't do like brain surgery.
Something that could kill you. [ __ ] no.
Thank god for surgeons. One group of psychos I definitely don't thank God for sales people. Psychopaths love sales.
It's the perfect storm of manipulation, charm, and reward. They mirror your tone, your body language, your beliefs, all to build trust they don't actually feel. It's just a game to them. They read you like a player at a poker table.
They find your weakness. They exploit it, and they smile with a [ __ ] eatating grin while doing it. And once they close the deal, that dopamine hit isn't from helping you, it's from beating you. And the scary part is they're good. Really good. They're expert social. Some of them are Well, yeah. No, I think psychopaths are probably good salesmen.
You ever see like a really shitty You ever talk to a really shitty salesman before at like a car dealership or some [ __ ] You're just like, "Yeah, this ain't this ain't for you, man." Could even be like a store, like a regular like whatever they're working on commission. Not a car necessarily, but like you're at like a supplement store or somewhere where they're like pitching you something and you're like, "Man, this is not for you. You got to you are way too [ __ ] awkward." You could tell when they're good at it when they're like, "Hey, how you doing?" I and they like kind of force it onto you in a sense where it's like, "Hey, do you want help with any?" No, it's just like, "Hey, I see what are you here for?" "Oh, protein. What kind of protein are you looking for?" Actually, I I was just wondering um like what are your like goals in this? And they just start like, you know, getting they open the door to that conversation.
>> Chameleons, they know.
>> Insurance salesmen, >> those guys those guys are psychopaths.
>> Fake it till they make it. They combine their superficial charm with zero guilt or empathy and the result is Jordan Belelfootlike salespeople willing to say or do anything for their commission.
Number three on the list are the people at least partly responsible for how >> one of these is C I think probably number one CEOs >> up western society has become in modern times media executives and journalists.
If sales people manipulate individuals, these pricks manipulate entire populations. The news industry used to be about truth. Now it's about >> Twitter account holders >> engagement. And engagement doesn't come from accuracy. It comes from outrage.
Psychopaths love outrage. Remember, psychopaths have no empathy, no remorse, no guilt. They're pathological liars and they can be crazy ambitious. So, in a world where attention is currency, they're willing to say or do anything to control propaganda pages. Like if you if you work for like a news media outlet that just spews [ __ ] >> your attention behind every breaking story is someone doing psychological calculus. How do we make people angry enough to click, scared enough to share, outraged enough to stay tuned? These people don't report the news anymore.
They engineer it. And psychos love this kind of ecosystem because they don't have to pretend about caring for who gets hurt, who's defamed, or who loses everything. They're social predators who manipulate without remorse. Number two is lawyers. If there was ever a profession built to reward someone thought about that, yeah, that makes perfect sense. Like a defense lawyer. My client My client didn't kill this person. Uh, he literally did. Oh, it's it's on a security CCTV. Uh, well, that's not him.
>> It's this one. You get paid to argue, manipulate emotions, and twist the truth until it fits your client's version of reality. And Kevin Dutton's research supports it. Lawyers have one of the highest rates of psychopathy in the world. They put their work >> your criminal defense lawyer >> work under the guise of the pursuit of justice. And yet they'll gladly defend murderers, rapists, and child molesters.
Now, yes, I understand.
>> Well, yeah. No, he's going to say, yeah, there's a chance that they're innocent.
So, it's like not all of them are, but it's just like some cases that they take where it's like, dude, this guy's [ __ ] >> In the argument, I'd rather defend a guilty person than have an innocent person sit in jail. I understand that everyone deserves legal representation to the best of their ability, but how >> No, I'm not blaming them for doing it, but I do understand why psychopaths are higher in that field. How do some lawyers sleep at night knowing they've just defended a legitimate monster? Like genuinely, how does the dream team >> that or you could say the you could say the flip where there's a lawyer that's prosecuting a guy that's like more seemingly innocent and then they get him put away.
>> Who defended OJ sit there knowing their client is guilty as [ __ ] and then just push that aside to get him acquitted.
Pursuit of justice my ass. It's the pursuit of winning. There's the thrill of deception, the allure of power and prestige and permission to manipulate as long as you do it with >> Yeah, I I have no idea what that [ __ ] clip was, bro. That had nothing to do.
Was that Speed? Who was that? That was like a WWE guy getting like [ __ ] twerked on >> in the rules. And who wrote those rules?
Other goddamn lawyers. Psychopaths write the rules for how psychopaths can defend.
>> That was Bucker T. I couldn't see his face.
Couldn't see his face. It was just all ass. and other psychopaths. Amazing.
Anyways, before diving into number one, we've got a little bonus career where quite a few psychopaths are found. Want to take a guess? We'll say it together on three.
>> CEO.
>> One, two, three. POLICE OFFICERS. NOW >> WHAT? IT'S NOT. OH, WAIT. CUZ IS DOES CEO count as a job? I don't know if CEO is like a like CEO is just like you're a company owner of what? Cops are number one. Depending on which list you read, this one sometimes ranks even higher than lawyers, which ain't exactly surprising. See, the job attracts people who crave structure, hierarchy, and control. But for some, that control turns into pain.
>> Oh, this isn't top one. This is a bonus.
>> Greed. This one sometimes ranks even higher than lawyers, which ain't exactly surprising. See, the job attracts people who crave structure, hierarchy, and control. But for some, that control turns into power, and that power becomes pleasure. The badge gives authority. The uniform gives legitimacy and the gun gives fear. Now, before the comment section turns into a war zone, no, not every cop is a psychopath. Many genuinely want to serve and protect, and thank God for them. I don't even want to imagine what society would be like without police. But here's the uncomfortable truth. If you have psychopathic traits, being a cop gives you a socially sanctioned way to act them out. You can intimidate, command, and control, and still be applauded for it. Kevin Dutton calls it the mask of morality when psychopathic behavior hides behind a noble mission. Speaking of which, that mask, especially in today's day and age, is often worn so much by the guys at number one on the list, CEOs.
>> Okay, I was going to say it has to be.
>> To me, this one's straightforward as hell. You really think Peter Teal is a normal human being? Then you've got those fake altruistic >> Oh, well, no, Peter Teal knows about the Antichrist, so yeah, he has to be.
>> I'm just a good guy. CEOs like Sam Olman. This guy's a 40-some year old tech founder from Silicon Valley. And yet he goes on the Joe Rogan experience and acts like he doesn't know what kind of effect Coke has on people.
>> Is that something Coke makes people want to do? Seems to me like it just makes people like angry and chaotic.
>> That fake naivity.
>> Yeah, they always act dumb. Why do they always act dumb? Whenever they do an interview, it's like they try to act really stupid to seem like they're more like humble than they are. Like every It's That's like billionaires in general. They'll like hop on something.
They'll be like, "Oh no, like what what is?" But not they won't be like dumb in the sense of like, "Oh, how much is milk?" They'll be like, "Oh, really? I don't understand. What is that?" Like the very basic concept everybody knows about. What do you mean? Oh, cocaine makes you more excited and like and like hyper. Oh, I've I've never done that.
>> That's ex, >> bro. You're worth a billion dollars. You You're telling me you've never snorted coke before, buddy? Get out of here, pal. You're probably one of the only people that could get access straight to the [ __ ] source. No fentanyl and that [ __ ] I know you do it.
>> Exactly what psychopaths do. They disarm >> did literally dead ass. Like if you're if you're a billionaire, you're like one of the only people that could get access to like 1970s cocaine. Like you're you could [ __ ] go to Pablo Escobar himself and get him to give you some [ __ ] straight out of the [ __ ] straight out of the mill.
>> You with sincerity they don't actually feel. It's all just a show to them.
Studies have found that one in five corporate leaders show strong psychopathic traits.
>> He's in jail. Pablo Escobar's dead.
You're talking about um Oh my god, what is his name? Not Elmano. Elmento's also dead. Who's the guy in like a Colorado prison? El Chapo. Sorry, I was trying to look him up. Wae Guzman.
>> The same ratio as in prisons. Business at the highest level is war without bullets. You win by outsmarting, undercutting, or straight up swallowing the competition. And if you can do that without getting emotionally attached to people or consequences, you're rewarded with millions or even billions of dollars. The appeal to psychopaths is obvious. They're calm under pressure, can put on the fake charm when need be, they're utterly ruthless in negotiations, and they can fire a thousand person department without giving it a second thought. And don't think you finance bros are off the hook.
When psychologists collected this data, hedge fund managers and investment bankers were grouped in with the corporate execs. superficial charm, inflated egos, no remorse, and manipulation to achieve their own ends.
You're all little Patrick Baitman's on the inside. So, yeah, we like to think evil looks obvious. The serial killer, the dictator, the monster lurking in the dark. In reality, they're running. I The finance guy I talk to, bro, I love him, but every I don't know if I don't think he's a psychopath, but he's like cut and clean, bro. I talk to him. He'll be he'll ask me about like how my business is going like social media in general and he'll just be like, "Oh, really?
That's so interesting."
Like like 30 times in a convers Oh, really? Oh, really? That's so interesting. Tell me more. And I'll be like, "Yo, there's no way you're actually caring about this."
>> Companies, hosting talk shows, writing laws.
>> Oh, really? Oh, really? Every time in that exact tone >> and cutting people up in >> I love him, though. He's so interesting.
And when he says that, I like I giggle every time.
>> Order to save their lives. Again, not everyone in these careers is a psych.
>> Oh, really? That's fascinating.
>> Psychopath, obviously. But I've got almost 100K subscribers now. The statistics say around 1 to 4,000 of you are straight up psychos. I still love you all. Thanks for watching. Please remember to like, comment, and subscribe. And I'll Let's read the comments. How to make how people make money is the name of the channel. I asked my cousin suggest some career options for me and she said jerk. Wait, what? For me and that jerk sent me this video. Oh my god, I almost misread that.
I almost misread that. Skipping words.
Not great. That's why I hang with engineers or blue collars in general.
They just want to fix stuff. Bros acting. Bro's acting like every person in any category of that job is immediately a psychopath. It's like just a higher percentage. Politicians, medical field, it's full of them.
Psychopaths are bred to run major corporations. sheer lack of empathy that's required to lay off 5,000 people to a small town factory, go home later, sleep like a baby. Yeah, it's just shitty companies need to be like like it's shitty companies are ran that way.
But it's like big tier companies. You need a guy that's just like, "Yeah, I'll do that.
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