logo
Listen Language Learn
thumb

TED Talks - Most Popular - Strange answers to the psychopath test

-
+
15
30

Is there a definitive line that divides crazy from sane? With a hair-raising delivery, Jon Ronson, author of The Psychopath Test, illuminates the gray areas between the two. (With live-mixed sound by Julian Treasure and animation by Evan Grant.)

The
story
starts:
I
was
at
a
friend's
house,
and
she
had
on
her
shelf
a
copy
of
the
DSM
manual,
which
is
the
manual
of
mental
disorders.
It
lists
every
known
mental
disorder.
And
it
used
to
be,
back
in
the
'50s,
a
very
slim
pamphlet.
And
then
it
got
bigger
and
bigger
and
bigger,
and
now
it's
886
pages
long.
And
it
lists
currently
374
mental
disorders.
So
I
was
leafing
through
it,
wondering
if
I
had
any
mental
disorders,
and
it
turns
out
I've
got
12.
(Laughter)
I've
got
generalized
anxiety
disorder,
which
is
a
given.
I've
got
nightmare
disorder,
which
is
categorized
if
you
have
recurrent
dreams
of
being
pursued
or
declared
a
failure,
and
all
my
dreams
involve
people
chasing
me
down
the
street
going,
"You're
a
failure!"
(Laughter)
I've
got
parent-child
relational
problems,
which
I
blame
my
parents
for.
(Laughter)
I'm
kidding.
I'm
not
kidding.
I'm
kidding.
And
I've
got
malingering.
And
I
think
it's
actually
quite
rare
to
have
both
malingering
and
generalized
anxiety
disorder,
because
malingering
tends
to
make
me
feel
very
anxious.
Anyway,
I
was
looking
through
this
book,
wondering
if
I
was
much
crazier
than
I
thought
I
was,
or
maybe
it's
not
a
good
idea
to
diagnose
yourself
with
a
mental
disorder
if
you're
not
a
trained
professional,
or
maybe
the
psychiatry
profession
has
a
kind
of
strange
desire
to
label
what's
essentially
normal
human
behavior
as
a
mental
disorder.
I
didn't
know
which
of
these
was
true,
but
I
thought
it
was
kind
of
interesting,
and
I
thought
maybe
I
should
meet
a
critic
of
psychiatry
to
get
their
view,
which
is
how
I
ended
up
having
lunch
with
the
Scientologists.
(Laughter)
It
was
a
man
called
Brian,
who
runs
a
crack
team
of
Scientologists
who
are
determined
to
destroy
psychiatry
wherever
it
lies.
They're
called
the
CCHR.
And
I
said
to
him,
"Can
you
prove
to
me
that
psychiatry
is
a
pseudo-science
that
can't
be
trusted?"
And
he
said,
"Yes,
we
can
prove
it
to
you."
And
I
said,
"How?"
And
he
said,
"We're
going
to
introduce
you
to
Tony."
And
I
said,
"Who's
Tony?"
And
he
said,
"Tony's
in
Broadmoor."
Now,
Broadmoor
is
Broadmoor
Hospital.
It
used
to
be
known
as
the
Broadmoor
Asylum
for
the
Criminally
Insane.
It's
where
they
send
the
serial
killers,
and
the
people
who
can't
help
themselves.
And
I
said
to
Brian,
"Well,
what
did
Tony
do?"
And
he
said,
"Hardly
anything.
He
beat
someone
up
or
something,
and
he
decided
to
fake
madness
to
get
out
of
a
prison
sentence.
But
he
faked
it
too
well,
and
now
he's
stuck
in
Broadmoor
and
nobody
will
believe
he's
sane.
Do
you
want
us
to
try
and
get
you
into
Broadmoor
to
meet
Tony?"
So
I
said,
"Yes,
please."
So
I
got
the
train
to
Broadmoor.
I
began
to
yawn
uncontrollably
around
Kempton
Park,
which
apparently
is
what
dogs
also
do
when
anxious,
they
yawn
uncontrollably.
And
we
got
to
Broadmoor.
And
I
got
taken
through
gate
after
gate
after
gate
after
gate
into
the
wellness
center,
which
is
where
you
get
to
meet
the
patients.
It
looks
like
a
giant
Hampton
Inn.
It's
all
peach
and
pine
and
calming
colors.
And
the
only
bold
colors
are
the
reds
of
the
panic
buttons.
And
the
patients
started
drifting
in.
And
they
were
quite
overweight
and
wearing
sweatpants,
and
quite
docile-looking.
And
Brian
the
Scientologist
whispered
to
me,
"They're
medicated,"
which,
to
the
Scientologists,
is
like
the
worst
evil
in
the
world,
but
I'm
thinking
it's
probably
a
good
idea.
(Laughter)
And
then
Brian
said,
"Here's
Tony."
And
a
man
was
walking
in.
And
he
wasn't
overweight,
he
was
in
very
good
physical
shape.
And
he
wasn't
wearing
sweatpants,
he
was
wearing
a
pinstripe
suit.
And
he
had
his
arm
outstretched
like
someone
out
of
The
Apprentice.
He
looked
like
a
man
who
wanted
to
wear
an
outfit
that
would
convince
me
that
he
was
very
sane.
And
he
sat
down.
And
I
said,
"So
is
it
true
that
you
faked
your
way
in
here?"
And
he
said,
"Yep.
Yep.
Absolutely.
I
beat
someone
up
when
I
was
17.
And
I
was
in
prison
awaiting
trial,
and
my
cellmate
said
to
me,
'You
know
what
you
have
to
do?
Fake
madness.
Tell
them
you're
mad,
you'll
get
sent
to
some
cushy
hospital.
Nurses
will
bring
you
pizzas,
you'll
have
your
own
PlayStation.'"
I
said,
"Well,
how
did
you
do
it?"
He
said,
"Well,
I
asked
to
see
the
prison
psychiatrist.
And
I'd
just
seen
a
film
called
'Crash,'
in
which
people
get
sexual
pleasure
from
crashing
cars
into
walls.
So
I
said
to
the
psychiatrist,
'I
get
sexual
pleasure
from
crashing
cars
into
walls.'"
And
I
said,
"What
else?"
He
said,
"Oh,
yeah.
I
told
the
psychiatrist
that
I
wanted
to
watch
women
as
they
died,
because
it
would
make
me
feel
more
normal."
I
said,
"Where'd
you
get
that
from?"
He
said,
"Oh,
from
a
biography
of
Ted
Bundy
that
they
had
at
the
prison
library."
Anyway,
he
faked
madness
too
well,
he
said.
And
they
didn't
send
him
to
some
cushy
hospital.
They
sent
him
to
Broadmoor.
And
the
minute
he
got
there,
said
he
took
one
look
at
the
place,
asked
to
see
the
psychiatrist,
said,
"There's
been
a
terrible
misunderstanding.
I'm
not
mentally
ill."
I
said,
"How
long
have
you
been
here
for?"
He
said,
"Well,
if
I'd
just
done
my
time
in
prison
for
the
original
crime,
I'd
have
got
five
years.
I've
been
in
Broadmoor
for
12
years."
Tony
said
that
it's
a
lot
harder
to
convince
people
you're
sane
than
it
is
to
convince
them
you're
crazy.
He
said,
"I
thought
the
best
way
to
seem
normal
would
be
to
talk
to
people
normally
about
normal
things
like
football
or
what's
on
TV.
I
subscribe
to
New
Scientist,
and
recently
they
had
an
article
about
how
the
U.S.
Army
was
training
bumblebees
to
sniff
out
explosives.
So
I
said
to
a
nurse,
'Did
you
know
that
the
U.S.
Army
is
training
bumblebees
to
sniff
out
explosives?'
When
I
read
my
medical
notes,
I
saw
they'd
written:
'Believes
bees
can
sniff
out
explosives.'"
(Laughter)
He
said,
"You
know,
they're
always
looking
out
for
nonverbal
clues
to
my
mental
state.
But
how
do
you
sit
in
a
sane
way?
How
do
you
cross
your
legs
in
a
sane
way?
It's
just
impossible."
When
Tony
said
that
to
me,
I
thought
to
myself,
"Am
I
sitting
like
a
journalist?
Am
I
crossing
my
legs
like
a
journalist?"
He
said,
"You
know,
I've
got
the
Stockwell
Strangler
on
one
side
of
me,
and
I've
got
the
'Tiptoe
Through
the
Tulips'
rapist
on
the
other
side
of
me.
So
I
tend
to
stay
in
my
room
a
lot
because
I
find
them
quite
frightening.
And
they
take
that
as
a
sign
of
madness.
They
say
it
proves
that
I'm
aloof
and
grandiose."
So,
only
in
Broadmoor
would
not
wanting
to
hang
out
with
serial
killers
be
a
sign
of
madness.
Anyway,
he
seemed
completely
normal
to
me,
but
what
did
I
know?
And
when
I
got
home
I
emailed
his
clinician,
Anthony
Maden.
I
said,
"What's
the
story?"
And
he
said,
"Yep.
We
accept
that
Tony
faked
madness
to
get
out
of
a
prison
sentence,
because
his
hallucinations
--
that
had
seemed
quite
cliche
to
begin
with
--
just
vanished
the
minute
he
got
to
Broadmoor.
However,
we
have
assessed
him,
and
we've
determined
that
what
he
is
is
a
psychopath."
And
in
fact,
faking
madness
is
exactly
the
kind
of
cunning
and
manipulative
act
of
a
psychopath.
It's
on
the
checklist:
cunning,
manipulative.
So,
faking
your
brain
going
wrong
is
evidence
that
your
brain
has
gone
wrong.
And
I
spoke
to
other
experts,
and
they
said
the
pinstripe
suit
--
classic
psychopath
--
speaks
to
items
one
and
two
on
the
checklist:
glibness,
superficial
charm
and
grandiose
sense
of
self-worth.
And
I
said,
"Well,
but
why
didn't
he
hang
out
with
the
other
patients?"
Classic
psychopath
--
it
speaks
to
grandiosity
and
also
lack
of
empathy.
So
all
the
things
that
had
seemed
most
normal
about
Tony
was
evidence,
according
to
his
clinician,
that
he
was
mad
in
this
new
way.
He
was
a
psychopath.
And
his
clinician
said
to
me,
"If
you
want
to
know
more
about
psychopaths,
you
can
go
on
a
psychopath-spotting
course
run
by
Robert
Hare,
who
invented
the
psychopath
checklist."
So
I
did.
I
went
on
a
psychopath-spotting
course,
and
I
am
now
a
certified
--
and
I
have
to
say,
extremely
adept
--
psychopath
spotter.
So,
here's
the
statistics:
One
in
a
hundred
regular
people
is
a
psychopath.
So
there's
1,500
people
in
his
room.
Fifteen
of
you
are
psychopaths.
Although
that
figure
rises
to
four
percent
of
CEOs
and
business
leaders,
so
I
think
there's
a
very
good
chance
there's
about
30
or
40
psychopaths
in
this
room.
It
could
be
carnage
by
the
end
of
the
night.
(Laughter)
Hare
said
the
reason
why
is
because
capitalism
at
its
most
ruthless
rewards
psychopathic
behavior
--
the
lack
of
empathy,
the
glibness,
cunning,
manipulative.
In
fact,
capitalism,
perhaps
at
its
most
remorseless,
is
a
physical
manifestation
of
psychopathy.
It's
like
a
form
of
psychopathy
that's
come
down
to
affect
us
all.
Hare
said,
"You
know
what?
Forget
about
some
guy
at
Broadmoor
who
may
or
may
not
have
faked
madness.
Who
cares?
That's
not
a
big
story.
The
big
story,"
he
said,
"is
corporate
psychopathy.
You
want
to
go
and
interview
yourself
some
corporate
psychopaths."
So
I
gave
it
a
try.
I
wrote
to
the
Enron
people.
I
said,
"Could
I
come
and
interview
you
in
prison,
to
find
out
it
you're
psychopaths?"
(Laughter)
And
they
didn't
reply.
(Laughter)
So
I
changed
tack.
I
emailed
"Chainsaw
Al"
Dunlap,
the
asset
stripper
from
the
1990s.
He
would
come
into
failing
businesses
and
close
down
30
percent
of
the
workforce,
just
turn
American
towns
into
ghost
towns.
And
I
emailed
him
and
I
said,
"I
believe
you
may
have
a
very
special
brain
anomaly
that
makes
you
...
special,
and
interested
in
the
predatory
spirit,
and
fearless.
Can
I
come
and
interview
you
about
your
special
brain
anomaly?"
And
he
said,
"Come
on
over!"
(Laughter)
So
I
went
to
Al
Dunlap's
grand
Florida
mansion.
It
was
filled
with
sculptures
of
predatory
animals.
There
were
lions
and
tigers
--
he
was
taking
me
through
the
garden
--
there
were
falcons
and
eagles,
he
was
saying,
"Over
there
you've
got
sharks
and
--"
he
was
saying
this
in
a
less
effeminate
way
--
"You've
got
more
sharks
and
you've
got
tigers."
It
was
like
Narnia.
(Laughter)
And
then
we
went
into
his
kitchen.
Now,
Al
Dunlap
would
be
brought
in
to
save
failing
companies,
he'd
close
down
30
percent
of
the
workforce.
And
he'd
quite
often
fire
people
with
a
joke.
Like,
for
instance,
one
famous
story
about
him,
somebody
came
up
to
him
and
said,
"I've
just
bought
myself
a
new
car."
And
he
said,
"Well,
you
may
have
a
new
car,
but
I'll
tell
you
what
you
don't
have
--
a
job."
So
in
his
kitchen
--
he
was
in
there
with
his
wife,
Judy,
and
his
bodyguard,
Sean
--
and
I
said,
"You
know
how
I
said
in
my
email
that
you
might
have
a
special
brain
anomaly
that
makes
you
special?"
He
said,
"Yeah,
it's
an
amazing
theory,
it's
like
Star
Trek.
You're
going
where
no
man
has
gone
before."
And
I
said,
"Well
--"
(Clears
throat)
(Laughter)
Some
psychologists
might
say
that
this
makes
you
--"
(Mumbles)
(Laughter)
And
he
said,
"What?"
And
I
said,
"A
psychopath."
And
I
said,
"I've
got
a
list
of
psychopathic
traits
in
my
pocket.
Can
I
go
through
them
with
you?"
And
he
looked
intrigued
despite
himself,
and
he
said,
"Okay,
go
on."
And
I
said,
"Okay.
Grandiose
sense
of
self-worth."
Which
I
have
to
say,
would
have
been
hard
for
him
to
deny,
because
he
was
standing
under
a
giant
oil
painting
of
himself.
(Laughter)
He
said,
"Well,
you've
got
to
believe
in
you!"
And
I
said,
"Manipulative."
He
said,
"That's
leadership."
(Laughter)
And
I
said,
"Shallow
affect,
an
inability
to
experience
a
range
of
emotions."
He
said,
"Who
wants
to
be
weighed
down
by
some
nonsense
emotions?"
So
he
was
going
down
the
psychopath
checklist,
basically
turning
it
into
"Who
Moved
My
Cheese?"
(Laughter)
But
I
did
notice
something
happening
to
me
the
day
I
was
with
Al
Dunlap.
Whenever
he
said
anything
to
me
that
was
kind
of
normal
--
like
he
said
"no"
to
juvenile
delinquency,
he
said
he
got
accepted
into
West
Point,
and
they
don't
let
delinquents
in
West
Point.
He
said
"no"
to
many
short-term
marital
relationships.
He's
only
ever
been
married
twice.
Admittedly,
his
first
wife
cited
in
her
divorce
papers
that
he
once
threatened
her
with
a
knife
and
said
he
always
wondered
what
human
flesh
tasted
like,
but
people
say
stupid
things
to
each
other
in
bad
marriages
in
the
heat
of
an
argument,
and
his
second
marriage
has
lasted
41
years.
So
whenever
he
said
anything
to
me
that
just
seemed
kind
of
non-psychopathic,
I
thought
to
myself,
well
I'm
not
going
to
put
that
in
my
book.
And
then
I
realized
that
becoming
a
psychopath
spotter
had
kind
of
turned
me
a
little
bit
psychopathic.
Because
I
was
desperate
to
shove
him
in
a
box
marked
"Psychopath."
I
was
desperate
to
define
him
by
his
maddest
edges.
And
I
realized,
my
God
--
this
is
what
I've
been
doing
for
20
years.
It's
what
all
journalists
do.
We
travel
across
the
world
with
our
notepads
in
our
hands,
and
we
wait
for
the
gems.
And
the
gems
are
always
the
outermost
aspects
of
our
interviewee's
personality.
And
we
stitch
them
together
like
medieval
monks,
and
we
leave
the
normal
stuff
on
the
floor.
And
you
know,
this
is
a
country
that
over-diagnoses
certain
mental
disorders
hugely.
Childhood
bipolar
--
children
as
young
as
four
are
being
labeled
bipolar
because
they
have
temper
tantrums,
which
scores
them
high
on
the
bipolar
checklist.
When
I
got
back
to
London,
Tony
phoned
me.
He
said,
"Why
haven't
you
been
returning
my
calls?"
I
said,
"Well,
they
say
that
you're
a
psychopath."
And
he
said,
"I'm
not
a
psychopath."
He
said,
"You
know
what?
One
of
the
items
on
the
checklist
is
lack
of
remorse,
but
another
item
on
the
checklist
is
cunning,
manipulative.
So
when
you
say
you
feel
remorse
for
your
crime,
they
say,
'Typical
of
the
psychopath
to
cunningly
say
he
feels
remorse
when
he
doesn't.'
It's
like
witchcraft,
they
turn
everything
upside-down."
He
said,
"I've
got
a
tribunal
coming
up.
Will
you
come
to
it?"
So
I
said
okay.
So
I
went
to
his
tribunal.
And
after
14
years
in
Broadmoor,
they
let
him
go.
They
decided
that
he
shouldn't
be
held
indefinitely
because
he
scores
high
on
a
checklist
that
might
mean
that
he
would
have
a
greater
than
average
chance
of
recidivism.
So
they
let
him
go.
And
outside
in
the
corridor
he
said
to
me,
"You
know
what,
Jon?
Everyone's
a
bit
psychopathic."
He
said,
"You
are,
I
am.
Well,
obviously
I
am."
I
said,
"What
are
you
going
to
do
now?"
He
said,
"I'm
going
to
go
to
Belgium.
There's
a
woman
there
that
I
fancy.
But
she's
married,
so
I'm
going
to
have
to
get
her
split
up
from
her
husband."
(Laughter)
Anyway,
that
was
two
years
ago,
and
that's
where
my
book
ended.
And
for
the
last
20
months,
everything
was
fine.
Nothing
bad
happened.
He
was
living
with
a
girl
outside
London.
He
was,
according
to
Brian
the
Scientologist,
making
up
for
lost
time,
which
I
know
sounds
ominous,
but
isn't
necessarily
ominous.
Unfortunately,
after
20
months,
he
did
go
back
to
jail
for
a
month.
He
got
into
a
"fracas"
in
a
bar,
he
called
it.
Ended
up
going
to
jail
for
a
month,
which
I
know
is
bad,
but
at
least
a
month
implies
that
whatever
the
fracas
was,
it
wasn't
too
bad.
And
then
he
phoned
me.
And
you
know
what,
I
think
it's
right
that
Tony
is
out.
Because
you
shouldn't
define
people
by
their
maddest
edges.
And
what
Tony
is,
is
he's
a
semi-psychopath.
He's
a
gray
area
in
a
world
that
doesn't
like
gray
areas.
But
the
gray
areas
are
where
you
find
the
complexity.
It's
where
you
find
the
humanity,
and
it's
where
you
find
the
truth.
And
Tony
said
to
me,
"Jon,
could
I
buy
you
a
drink
in
a
bar?
I
just
want
to
thank
you
for
everything
you've
done
for
me."
And
I
didn't
go.
What
would
you
have
done?
Thank
you.
(Applause)
Check out more TED Talks - Most Popular

See below for the full transcript

The story starts: I was at a friend's house, and she had on her shelf a copy of the DSM manual, which is the manual of mental disorders. It lists every known mental disorder. And it used to be, back in the '50s, a very slim pamphlet. And then it got bigger and bigger and bigger, and now it's 886 pages long. And it lists currently 374 mental disorders. So I was leafing through it, wondering if I had any mental disorders, and it turns out I've got 12. (Laughter) I've got generalized anxiety disorder, which is a given. I've got nightmare disorder, which is categorized if you have recurrent dreams of being pursued or declared a failure, and all my dreams involve people chasing me down the street going, "You're a failure!" (Laughter) I've got parent-child relational problems, which I blame my parents for. (Laughter) I'm kidding. I'm not kidding. I'm kidding. And I've got malingering. And I think it's actually quite rare to have both malingering and generalized anxiety disorder, because malingering tends to make me feel very anxious. Anyway, I was looking through this book, wondering if I was much crazier than I thought I was, or maybe it's not a good idea to diagnose yourself with a mental disorder if you're not a trained professional, or maybe the psychiatry profession has a kind of strange desire to label what's essentially normal human behavior as a mental disorder. I didn't know which of these was true, but I thought it was kind of interesting, and I thought maybe I should meet a critic of psychiatry to get their view, which is how I ended up having lunch with the Scientologists. (Laughter) It was a man called Brian, who runs a crack team of Scientologists who are determined to destroy psychiatry wherever it lies. They're called the CCHR. And I said to him, "Can you prove to me that psychiatry is a pseudo-science that can't be trusted?" And he said, "Yes, we can prove it to you." And I said, "How?" And he said, "We're going to introduce you to Tony." And I said, "Who's Tony?" And he said, "Tony's in Broadmoor." Now, Broadmoor is Broadmoor Hospital. It used to be known as the Broadmoor Asylum for the Criminally Insane. It's where they send the serial killers, and the people who can't help themselves. And I said to Brian, "Well, what did Tony do?" And he said, "Hardly anything. He beat someone up or something, and he decided to fake madness to get out of a prison sentence. But he faked it too well, and now he's stuck in Broadmoor and nobody will believe he's sane. Do you want us to try and get you into Broadmoor to meet Tony?" So I said, "Yes, please." So I got the train to Broadmoor. I began to yawn uncontrollably around Kempton Park, which apparently is what dogs also do when anxious, they yawn uncontrollably. And we got to Broadmoor. And I got taken through gate after gate after gate after gate into the wellness center, which is where you get to meet the patients. It looks like a giant Hampton Inn. It's all peach and pine and calming colors. And the only bold colors are the reds of the panic buttons. And the patients started drifting in. And they were quite overweight and wearing sweatpants, and quite docile-looking. And Brian the Scientologist whispered to me, "They're medicated," which, to the Scientologists, is like the worst evil in the world, but I'm thinking it's probably a good idea. (Laughter) And then Brian said, "Here's Tony." And a man was walking in. And he wasn't overweight, he was in very good physical shape. And he wasn't wearing sweatpants, he was wearing a pinstripe suit. And he had his arm outstretched like someone out of The Apprentice. He looked like a man who wanted to wear an outfit that would convince me that he was very sane. And he sat down. And I said, "So is it true that you faked your way in here?" And he said, "Yep. Yep. Absolutely. I beat someone up when I was 17. And I was in prison awaiting trial, and my cellmate said to me, 'You know what you have to do? Fake madness. Tell them you're mad, you'll get sent to some cushy hospital. Nurses will bring you pizzas, you'll have your own PlayStation.'" I said, "Well, how did you do it?" He said, "Well, I asked to see the prison psychiatrist. And I'd just seen a film called 'Crash,' in which people get sexual pleasure from crashing cars into walls. So I said to the psychiatrist, 'I get sexual pleasure from crashing cars into walls.'" And I said, "What else?" He said, "Oh, yeah. I told the psychiatrist that I wanted to watch women as they died, because it would make me feel more normal." I said, "Where'd you get that from?" He said, "Oh, from a biography of Ted Bundy that they had at the prison library." Anyway, he faked madness too well, he said. And they didn't send him to some cushy hospital. They sent him to Broadmoor. And the minute he got there, said he took one look at the place, asked to see the psychiatrist, said, "There's been a terrible misunderstanding. I'm not mentally ill." I said, "How long have you been here for?" He said, "Well, if I'd just done my time in prison for the original crime, I'd have got five years. I've been in Broadmoor for 12 years." Tony said that it's a lot harder to convince people you're sane than it is to convince them you're crazy. He said, "I thought the best way to seem normal would be to talk to people normally about normal things like football or what's on TV. I subscribe to New Scientist, and recently they had an article about how the U.S. Army was training bumblebees to sniff out explosives. So I said to a nurse, 'Did you know that the U.S. Army is training bumblebees to sniff out explosives?' When I read my medical notes, I saw they'd written: 'Believes bees can sniff out explosives.'" (Laughter) He said, "You know, they're always looking out for nonverbal clues to my mental state. But how do you sit in a sane way? How do you cross your legs in a sane way? It's just impossible." When Tony said that to me, I thought to myself, "Am I sitting like a journalist? Am I crossing my legs like a journalist?" He said, "You know, I've got the Stockwell Strangler on one side of me, and I've got the 'Tiptoe Through the Tulips' rapist on the other side of me. So I tend to stay in my room a lot because I find them quite frightening. And they take that as a sign of madness. They say it proves that I'm aloof and grandiose." So, only in Broadmoor would not wanting to hang out with serial killers be a sign of madness. Anyway, he seemed completely normal to me, but what did I know? And when I got home I emailed his clinician, Anthony Maden. I said, "What's the story?" And he said, "Yep. We accept that Tony faked madness to get out of a prison sentence, because his hallucinations -- that had seemed quite cliche to begin with -- just vanished the minute he got to Broadmoor. However, we have assessed him, and we've determined that what he is is a psychopath." And in fact, faking madness is exactly the kind of cunning and manipulative act of a psychopath. It's on the checklist: cunning, manipulative. So, faking your brain going wrong is evidence that your brain has gone wrong. And I spoke to other experts, and they said the pinstripe suit -- classic psychopath -- speaks to items one and two on the checklist: glibness, superficial charm and grandiose sense of self-worth. And I said, "Well, but why didn't he hang out with the other patients?" Classic psychopath -- it speaks to grandiosity and also lack of empathy. So all the things that had seemed most normal about Tony was evidence, according to his clinician, that he was mad in this new way. He was a psychopath. And his clinician said to me, "If you want to know more about psychopaths, you can go on a psychopath-spotting course run by Robert Hare, who invented the psychopath checklist." So I did. I went on a psychopath-spotting course, and I am now a certified -- and I have to say, extremely adept -- psychopath spotter. So, here's the statistics: One in a hundred regular people is a psychopath. So there's 1,500 people in his room. Fifteen of you are psychopaths. Although that figure rises to four percent of CEOs and business leaders, so I think there's a very good chance there's about 30 or 40 psychopaths in this room. It could be carnage by the end of the night. (Laughter) Hare said the reason why is because capitalism at its most ruthless rewards psychopathic behavior -- the lack of empathy, the glibness, cunning, manipulative. In fact, capitalism, perhaps at its most remorseless, is a physical manifestation of psychopathy. It's like a form of psychopathy that's come down to affect us all. Hare said, "You know what? Forget about some guy at Broadmoor who may or may not have faked madness. Who cares? That's not a big story. The big story," he said, "is corporate psychopathy. You want to go and interview yourself some corporate psychopaths." So I gave it a try. I wrote to the Enron people. I said, "Could I come and interview you in prison, to find out it you're psychopaths?" (Laughter) And they didn't reply. (Laughter) So I changed tack. I emailed "Chainsaw Al" Dunlap, the asset stripper from the 1990s. He would come into failing businesses and close down 30 percent of the workforce, just turn American towns into ghost towns. And I emailed him and I said, "I believe you may have a very special brain anomaly that makes you ... special, and interested in the predatory spirit, and fearless. Can I come and interview you about your special brain anomaly?" And he said, "Come on over!" (Laughter) So I went to Al Dunlap's grand Florida mansion. It was filled with sculptures of predatory animals. There were lions and tigers -- he was taking me through the garden -- there were falcons and eagles, he was saying, "Over there you've got sharks and --" he was saying this in a less effeminate way -- "You've got more sharks and you've got tigers." It was like Narnia. (Laughter) And then we went into his kitchen. Now, Al Dunlap would be brought in to save failing companies, he'd close down 30 percent of the workforce. And he'd quite often fire people with a joke. Like, for instance, one famous story about him, somebody came up to him and said, "I've just bought myself a new car." And he said, "Well, you may have a new car, but I'll tell you what you don't have -- a job." So in his kitchen -- he was in there with his wife, Judy, and his bodyguard, Sean -- and I said, "You know how I said in my email that you might have a special brain anomaly that makes you special?" He said, "Yeah, it's an amazing theory, it's like Star Trek. You're going where no man has gone before." And I said, "Well --" (Clears throat) (Laughter) Some psychologists might say that this makes you --" (Mumbles) (Laughter) And he said, "What?" And I said, "A psychopath." And I said, "I've got a list of psychopathic traits in my pocket. Can I go through them with you?" And he looked intrigued despite himself, and he said, "Okay, go on." And I said, "Okay. Grandiose sense of self-worth." Which I have to say, would have been hard for him to deny, because he was standing under a giant oil painting of himself. (Laughter) He said, "Well, you've got to believe in you!" And I said, "Manipulative." He said, "That's leadership." (Laughter) And I said, "Shallow affect, an inability to experience a range of emotions." He said, "Who wants to be weighed down by some nonsense emotions?" So he was going down the psychopath checklist, basically turning it into "Who Moved My Cheese?" (Laughter) But I did notice something happening to me the day I was with Al Dunlap. Whenever he said anything to me that was kind of normal -- like he said "no" to juvenile delinquency, he said he got accepted into West Point, and they don't let delinquents in West Point. He said "no" to many short-term marital relationships. He's only ever been married twice. Admittedly, his first wife cited in her divorce papers that he once threatened her with a knife and said he always wondered what human flesh tasted like, but people say stupid things to each other in bad marriages in the heat of an argument, and his second marriage has lasted 41 years. So whenever he said anything to me that just seemed kind of non-psychopathic, I thought to myself, well I'm not going to put that in my book. And then I realized that becoming a psychopath spotter had kind of turned me a little bit psychopathic. Because I was desperate to shove him in a box marked "Psychopath." I was desperate to define him by his maddest edges. And I realized, my God -- this is what I've been doing for 20 years. It's what all journalists do. We travel across the world with our notepads in our hands, and we wait for the gems. And the gems are always the outermost aspects of our interviewee's personality. And we stitch them together like medieval monks, and we leave the normal stuff on the floor. And you know, this is a country that over-diagnoses certain mental disorders hugely. Childhood bipolar -- children as young as four are being labeled bipolar because they have temper tantrums, which scores them high on the bipolar checklist. When I got back to London, Tony phoned me. He said, "Why haven't you been returning my calls?" I said, "Well, they say that you're a psychopath." And he said, "I'm not a psychopath." He said, "You know what? One of the items on the checklist is lack of remorse, but another item on the checklist is cunning, manipulative. So when you say you feel remorse for your crime, they say, 'Typical of the psychopath to cunningly say he feels remorse when he doesn't.' It's like witchcraft, they turn everything upside-down." He said, "I've got a tribunal coming up. Will you come to it?" So I said okay. So I went to his tribunal. And after 14 years in Broadmoor, they let him go. They decided that he shouldn't be held indefinitely because he scores high on a checklist that might mean that he would have a greater than average chance of recidivism. So they let him go. And outside in the corridor he said to me, "You know what, Jon? Everyone's a bit psychopathic." He said, "You are, I am. Well, obviously I am." I said, "What are you going to do now?" He said, "I'm going to go to Belgium. There's a woman there that I fancy. But she's married, so I'm going to have to get her split up from her husband." (Laughter) Anyway, that was two years ago, and that's where my book ended. And for the last 20 months, everything was fine. Nothing bad happened. He was living with a girl outside London. He was, according to Brian the Scientologist, making up for lost time, which I know sounds ominous, but isn't necessarily ominous. Unfortunately, after 20 months, he did go back to jail for a month. He got into a "fracas" in a bar, he called it. Ended up going to jail for a month, which I know is bad, but at least a month implies that whatever the fracas was, it wasn't too bad. And then he phoned me. And you know what, I think it's right that Tony is out. Because you shouldn't define people by their maddest edges. And what Tony is, is he's a semi-psychopath. He's a gray area in a world that doesn't like gray areas. But the gray areas are where you find the complexity. It's where you find the humanity, and it's where you find the truth. And Tony said to me, "Jon, could I buy you a drink in a bar? I just want to thank you for everything you've done for me." And I didn't go. What would you have done? Thank you. (Applause)

Translation Word Bank
AdBlock detected!

Your Add Blocker will interfere with the Google Translator. Please disable it for a better experience.

dismiss