When you house something in your brain that you know is wrong, that your higher functioning brain knows is wrong it will come out in conversation but never in the form of an admission.
Notice how boogie is always mentioning pedophilia? He is talking about it more than we are mentioning it. He uses it to gain pity points by constantly talking about how people are accusing him. I really don't have the time to gather the videos but his tweets + his tik tok shirtless videos with preteen girls COMBINED with this EDP guys videos and tweets + a user named The budday ok tiktok combined to an exposed video might scare boogie enough to get him to stop doing that shit. grown 47+ year old men have no business making duets while shirtless on any platform.
Seriously he is totally grooming and he may never fully act on his impulse towards preteen and teen girls because he has been a masturbator and looker his whole life.
He has trained his brain that LOOKING and Jacking off to porn , images, chicks IRL is more pleasurable than putting forth the work to obtain a natural orgasm with a women. Not to mention his previous weight making that impossible.
We have seen men lose mass amounts of weight they have had since high school Their brains did not develop normal social interactions with females due to rejection from females due to their size or in some cases abuse from their mothers making the normal transition from mother being the main female in their life to an unrelated women. In boogies case it was both.
This really is an angle I wish that Tom youtuber would have focused on given his background in psychology. The signs are there guys, the behaviors boogie exhibits is all there. Yet its only being mentioned on kiwifarms. Perhaps this is something someone can look into more qualified than me.
I was afraid of double posting. Sorry in advance for the tldr... I FEEL THIS IS SOMETHING THAT is important to add to the discussion of boogies recent and past behaviors.
In the Mind of the Sexual Offender
Abusive people, including sexual offenders, typically think they are unique, really so different from other people that they do not have to follow the same rules everyone else does. Rather than being unique, abusers and sexual offenders have a lot in common with one another, including their patterns of thinking and behaving. Some of their characteristics are:
Excuse Making
Instead of accepting responsibility for his actions, the sexual offender tries to justify his behavior. For example, “I was molested as a child” or “I was drunk when I did it” or “When she said no, I thought she meant yes.”
Blaming
The sexual offender shifts responsibility for his actions from himself to others, a shift that allows him to blame the other person for “causing” his behavior. For example, “She was acting provocatively.”
Redefining
In a variation on the tactic of blaming, the sexual offender redefines the situation so that the problem lies not with him but with the outside world in general. For example, “It is society’s fault.”
Success Fantasies
The sexual offender believes he would be rich, famous, or extremely successful in some other terms if only people were not holding him back. He uses this belief to justify his assault. The sexual offender also puts other people down verbally in order to make himself feel superior.
Lying
The sexual offender uses lies to control the information available and therefore to control the situation. The sexual offender also may use lying to keep other people, including his victim, off-balance psychologically. For example, he tries to appear truthful when he’s lying, he tries to look deceitful even when he’s telling the truth, and sometimes he reveals himself in an obvious lie.
Assuming
Sexual offenders often assume they know what others are thinking or feeling. Their assumption allows them to justify their behavior because they “know” what the other person would think or do in a given situation. For example, “I could tell she wanted me to do it.”
Above The Rules
As mentioned earlier, a sexual offender generally believes he is better than other people and so does not have to follow the rules that ordinary people do. That attitude is typical of convicted criminals, too. Each inmate in a jail typically believes that while all the other inmates are criminals, he himself is not. A sexual offender shows “above the rules” thinking when he says, for example, “I don’t need counseling. Nobody knows as much about my life as I do. I can stop anytime I want to.”
Making Fools Of Others
The sexual offender combines tactics to manipulate others. The tactics include lying, upsetting the other person just to watch his or her reactions, and encouraging fights between or among others. Or, he may try to charm the person he wants to manipulate, pretending a lot of interest or concern for that person in order to get on her or his good side.
Fragmentation
The sexual offender usually keeps his assaultive behavior separate from the rest of his life, physically and psychologically. An example of physical separation is the abuser’s sexually assaulting family members but not people outside the family. An example of psychological separation is the offender attending church Sunday morning and sexually assaulting his victim Sunday night. He sees no inconsistency in his behavior and feels justified in it.
Minimizing
The sexual offender ducks responsibility for his actions by trying to make them seem unimportant. For example: “It was no big deal” or “She wanted it anyway.”
Anger
Sexual offenders are not actually angrier than other people. Anger is a tool offenders use. They deliberately appear to be angry in order to control situations and people.
Power Plays
The sexual offender uses various tactics to overcome resistance to his bullying. For instance, he berates the victim, calling her a “tease,” a “slut,” etc. If they have friends or acquaintances in common, he may organize others to shun or criticize her for daring to “accuse” him of rape or sexual assault.
Playing Victim
Occasionally the sexual offender will pretend to be helpless or will act persecuted in order to manipulate the victim into accompanying him or staying with him. Here, the offender thinks that if he does not get what he wants, he is the victim; and he uses the disguise of victim to attack or make fools of others.
Drama And Excitement
Sexual offenders make the choice not to have close relationships with other people. They substitute drama and excitement for closeness. Offenders find it exciting to watch others get angry, get into fights, or be in a state of general uproar. Often, they will use a combination of tactics described earlier to set up a dramatic and exciting situation.
Closed Channel
The sexual offender does not reveal much about his real feelings, and he is not open to new information about himself such as insights into how others see him. He is secretive, close-minded, and self-righteous. He believes he is right in all situations.
Ownership
The sexual offender typically is very possessive. Moreover, he believes that anything he wants should be his, and anything that is his he can do with as he pleases. That attitude applies to people as well as to possessions. It justifies his controlling behavior, physically abusive behavior, and taking others’ possessions.
Self-Glorification
The sexual offender usually thinks of himself as strong, superior, independent, self-sufficient, and very masculine. His idea of the ideal man often is the cowboy or the adventurer type. Any action or perceived attitude of another person that does not conform to his glorified self-image is seen as a putdown.