“These cycles of violence keep happening, and they’re like warning signs that we ignore. That’s why I was fascinated with books on genocide, and how this stuff keeps happening. It’s my biggest fear. It terrifies me, so I’m fascinated by it.”— Trey Edward Shults, theverge.com
“At many levels of human interaction there is the opportunity to conflate discomfort with a threat, to mistake internal anxiety for exterior danger, and in turn to escalate rather than resolve.”— Sarah Schulman, amazon.com
“He looked at a normative, everyday confict, and responded with extreme cruelty. He looked at the regular, even banal, expression of difference and saw a threat.”— Sarah Schulman, amazon.com
“This is why we have mass public attacks now rather than serial attackers. They know they’ll get caught so they try and go big on one.”— RampersandY, reddit.com
“You don't have any control over it. You try and put it away, but that doesn't work. I mean, it's not accepted by society. But it's like an alcohol or a drug person. You know, they're going to blame it on the drugs or alcohol. They are going to say they couldn't control it.”— Dennis Rader, amazon.com
“No one suddenly becomes a child abuser... or anything else. There is always evolutionary behavior, a pattern of thought and act.”— Mark Olshaker, John E. Douglas, amazon.com
“It’s important to keep in mind here that insanity is a legal concept, not a medical or psychiatric term. It doesn’t mean someone is or is not “sick.” It has to do with whether that person is or is not responsible for his or her actions.”— John E. Douglas, Mark Olshaker, amazon.com
“The stories and legends that have filtered down about witches and werewolves and vampires may have been a way of explaining outrages so hideous that no one in the small and close-knit towns of Europe and early America could comprehend the perversities we now take for granted. Monsters had to be supe…”— John E. Douglas, Mark Olshaker, amazon.com
“Now, despite impressive advances in science and technology, despite the advent of the computer age, despite many more police officers with far better and more sophisticated training and resources, the murder rate has been going up and the solution rate has been going down. More and more crimes are b…”— John E. Douglas, Mark Olshaker, amazon.com
“You could not look at his record and say: “See, it was inevitable that he would turn out like this.” In fact, it was incomprehensible.”— Ann Rule, amazon.com
“I had always prided myself on my ability to detect aberrance in other humans, both because I had that innate skill and through experience and training. And I have berated myself silently for a long time because I saw nothing threatening or disturbing in Ted’s façade. He was very kind to me, solicito…”— Ann Rule, amazon.com
“One who suffers from a personality disorder knows the difference between right and wrong—but it doesn’t matter because he is special and he deserves to have and do what he wants.”— Ann Rule, amazon.com
“Many detectives believe that the male, too, operates under a pseudo-menstrual cycle, that there are times when the perverse drives of marginally normal men become obsessive and they are driven out to rape or kill.”— Ann Rule, amazon.com
“We are a long way from that better world, in part because so many seemingly well-intentioned people buy into the precepts of rape culture. So many people want to believe there are only a few bad men.”— Roxane Gay, nytimes.com
“Most men are not criminals, of course, but a huge majority of criminals are men. Men make up 93 percent of the American prison population, and young men die from accidents and violence at up to six times the rate of young women. The cause is not just poor socialization, however: Male violence is a p…”— Sebastian Junger, nationalreview.com
“A 2015 report in Human Ethology Bulletin, for example, found a strong correlation between a woman’s self-reported vulnerability and her sexual preference for aggressive men.”— Sebastian Junger, nationalreview.com