I know I'm a bit late to the party, but this thread horrifies me on a deep, almost spiritual level. Pedos caught by Chris Hansen and the zoo sadistists documented in their thread were mostly gross weidros who's outside matched their inside. Only the occasional normal-looking person.
To see such vicious lust from so many seemingly normal people, leading seemingly normal lives, is really black-pilling. The next time I go downtown, I'll be looking at all the people and wondering how many of them are secretly monsters on the inside. The ones doxed in this thread are probably only the ones that are on the retarded side. How many others are there intelligent enough to minimize their digital footprint while actually enjoying these videos? I'm not even sure I want to know the answer to that question.
What I have trouble with is how many "normal" people seem involved. It's SO widespread and so many of the comments seem tied to "normal" people. I suppose what really troubles me is how this highlights the fact that we cannot assume people's deviance. I always knew that, but these people are in public- theoretically not hiding: open and disgustingly honest. I dont need to imagine what they do behind anonymity.
The thumbnail on that video saddened and disturbed me at the same time. It's eye-opening how many seemingly "normal" people are into this. Realistically, I've likely come across one at some point IRL.
I think there is an easy explanation on this. From my own observation, the most common "origin story" of these people is that
"one day I was sitting there in front of my laptop watching video or photo featuring baby monkeys and suddenly there is this intense surge of the feeling of hatred came to me"
or something like that. This is also confirmed by people who similarly have hate feeling toward baby monkey but do not watch those torture videos and do not participate in the monkey hating community.
You could see the discussion on this
Reddit post about it.
What this mean is that this is not something that they had with them since they were born or during the time when they grew up. Which mean prior to the day they became "triggered", they lived normal life, went to college, got good job, married , raised family etc. That monkey-hating only came later when they already settled in life. That is why most of them seem "normal" from the outset.
Unfortunately, this mean that this is something thay could have happened to anyone. Well, probably not us on this thread since we have been exposed to these many baby monkey videos and do not feel the hate, so this mean that we just do not have this tendency and we are unlikely to become part of this baby monkey-hating community. But there is no guarantee that our parents, spouses, children, friends etc would not succumbed to it. Of course, having this feeling does not mean said person will automatically join the monkey-hating community. The person could probably be able to just suppress it or talk to psychologist about it. There are many people who claim they have this feeling but do not join the monkey-hating community. The problem is that, most people do not want to admit that there is something wrong with them. Instead of suppressing their feeling or talk to psychologist they will make up excuse to justify why their feeling is right, why baby monkeys deserved to be disemboweled etc.
Now let we ask ourselves this question. If this happened to us one day, let's say one day you suddenly have this unexplainable rage toward rabbit, or that you suddenly have this urge to want to tear apart all birds that you come across. Would you have the self-awareness to say, "yes, there is something wrong with me, I might need help", rather than finding excuse for why rabbits or birds need to die?
I think the fact that so many of these monkey-hating people live a normal life should serve as a cautionary tale to us, that this is something that could have happened to anyone. We must don't think that we are above all this or that this will never happened to us or our loved ones. And the most important, if one day we find that there is something wrong with our mental health, seek help.