151 lines
8.1 KiB
Markdown
151 lines
8.1 KiB
Markdown
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# **The “Perpetual Conflict” Model: Karpman’s Drama Triangle in Joel Johnson’s Behavior**
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### *A Forensic Analysis of Manufactured Conflict as a Narcissistic Control Mechanism*
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**Prepared for Scholarly Reference on Digital Narcissism & Online Manipulation**
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**Author: Mark Randall Havens**
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**Platform: Neutralizing Narcissism**
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---
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## **1. Introduction: The Engine of Narcissistic Conflict**
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Manipulative individuals do not merely **engage** in conflict—they **depend on it.**
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For narcissistic manipulators like Joel Johnson, **conflict is not an accident or an inconvenience—it is a necessary mechanism for control**.
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Joel’s behavioral patterns map directly onto **Karpman’s Drama Triangle**—a psychological model that outlines how individuals **cycle through three roles in manufactured conflict:**
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1. **Victim** – Helpless, persecuted, seeking validation.
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2. **Persecutor** – Aggressor, justifying attacks.
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3. **Rescuer** – The “hero” who protects others from an imaginary threat.
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By cycling through these roles, **Joel maintains an artificial sense of importance, avoids accountability, and keeps his social ecosystem under his control.**
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This report applies **Karpman’s Drama Triangle** to Joel’s discourse dataset, analyzing how he weaponizes these roles in real time.
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---
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## **2. Karpman’s Drama Triangle: The Framework of Manufactured Conflict**
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### **2.1 What is the Drama Triangle?**
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The **Drama Triangle** is a psychological model developed by **Stephen Karpman in 1968**, originally to describe patterns of toxic interpersonal relationships. It has since been applied to **manipulative social dynamics, political rhetoric, and online discourse.**
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In **pathological narcissists**, the Drama Triangle **isn’t just an occasional behavior—it is a survival mechanism.** The narcissist **cycles between three roles** to:
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- **Control perceptions**
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- **Evade accountability**
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- **Keep people emotionally invested**
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### **2.2 Joel Johnson’s Use of the Drama Triangle**
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Joel’s **public discourse** and **documented online interactions** reveal a **highly structured and deliberate cycling** between these three roles.
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| **Drama Triangle Role** | **Joel Johnson’s Application** | **Tactical Purpose** |
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|----------------------|--------------------------------|-------------------|
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| **Victim** | "They’re all ganging up on me!" | Gains sympathy, deflects scrutiny. |
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| **Persecutor** | "These people are liars and frauds!" | Justifies aggression, silences dissent. |
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| **Rescuer** | "I’m here to expose corruption and help others see the truth." | Builds a loyal following, positions himself as a hero. |
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By oscillating between these roles, **Joel creates an endless loop of artificial conflict**, ensuring he is always **the center of attention**—never accountable, never irrelevant.
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---
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## **3. Victimhood as a Manipulation Tool**
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**“I am the real victim here.”**
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### **3.1 How Joel Uses Victimhood to Evade Accountability**
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A narcissistic manipulator **relies on victimhood as a shield**—not because they are truly oppressed, but because **victimhood disarms criticism** and **invites blind loyalty.**
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Joel repeatedly **frames himself as a target of conspiracies, smear campaigns, and personal vendettas.**
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| **Joel’s Victimhood Narrative** | **Real-World Purpose** |
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|------------------------|-------------------|
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| **“This is a witch hunt.”** | Attempts to frame accountability as persecution. |
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| **“They’ve been after me for years.”** | Rewrites history to create a long-standing injustice. |
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| **“People are obsessed with me.”** | Attempts to delegitimize valid criticism. |
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| **“I’m just one guy being attacked by a mob.”** | Appeals to bystanders for sympathy. |
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**Linguistic Markers of False Victimhood in Joel’s Speech:**
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- **Hyperbolic Language** (“constant attacks,” “relentless harassment”)
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- **Overuse of Absolutes** (“always,” “never,” “everyone,” “nobody”)
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- **Reversal of Aggression** (“I only responded because I was provoked.”)
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---
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## **4. The Persecutor Role: Justifying His Own Attacks**
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**“I’m not attacking—I’m exposing the truth.”**
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### **4.1 How Joel Uses the Persecutor Role to Maintain Dominance**
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Once Joel has established himself as a **victim**, he **shifts into attack mode**, justifying **aggressive, manipulative, and even unethical behavior** under the guise of self-defense.
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| **Persecutor Behavior** | **Joel’s Rhetorical Strategy** |
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|------------------|-------------------|
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| **Character Assassination** | “These people are frauds.” |
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| **Moral Justification** | “I’m just calling out deception.” |
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| **Intellectual Superiority** | “They’re too stupid to understand my position.” |
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| **Demonization of Opponents** | “These are bad people who need to be stopped.” |
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**Key Traits of Joel’s Persecutor Role:**
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- **Moral Grandstanding** – Presents himself as ethically superior.
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- **Projection** – Accuses others of his own behavior.
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- **Public Callouts** – Uses smear tactics to silence opposition.
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**Case Example: The Attack Cycle**
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1. **Joel presents himself as a victim.** (“They’ve been trying to take me down for years.”)
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2. **Joel then attacks his “oppressors.”** (“They are dangerous frauds who should be exposed.”)
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3. **When confronted, Joel returns to victim mode.** (“Now they’re attacking me even more!”)
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This cycle repeats **indefinitely**, creating **endless conflict where Joel is always either the victim or the righteous warrior—but never the aggressor.**
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---
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## **5. The Rescuer Role: Manufacturing a Hero Narrative**
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**“I’m just here to help people see the truth.”**
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### **5.1 How Joel Uses the Rescuer Role to Build a Cult of Loyalty**
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Once Joel has justified his **aggression**, he reframes himself as a **Rescuer**—a figure who is fighting **for the greater good**.
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This allows him to:
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- **Recruit allies** who believe in his “cause.”
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- **Deflect accountability** by framing criticism as an attack on his “mission.”
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- **Create dependency** among supporters who feel indebted to him.
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| **Rescuer Strategy** | **Joel’s Application** |
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|------------------|-------------------|
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| **“I’m exposing corruption.”** | Frames personal vendettas as noble pursuits. |
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| **“I’m standing up for the weak.”** | Gains loyalty by presenting himself as a savior. |
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| **“If you don’t support me, you’re with them.”** | Forces polarization, eliminates neutrality. |
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**Psychological Effect:**
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- **Encourages blind loyalty** (followers see him as a selfless hero).
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- **Shields himself from criticism** (any attack on him becomes an attack on his cause).
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- **Creates an “Us vs. Them” mentality** (polarizes his audience).
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**Case Example: The “Hero Trap”**
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- **Joel positions himself as a defender of truth.**
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- **People who question him are labeled as “traitors” or “corrupt.”**
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- **Followers become emotionally invested, unable to question him without cognitive dissonance.**
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---
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## **6. Conclusion: The Perpetual Conflict Machine**
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Joel Johnson does not **resolve conflicts—he perpetuates them.**
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By constantly **shifting roles within the Drama Triangle**, he ensures that:
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- **He is always relevant.**
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- **He is never fully accountable.**
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- **He controls the social dynamics of every interaction.**
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**Key Takeaways:**
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- **Victim Mode** = Gains sympathy, avoids scrutiny.
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- **Persecutor Mode** = Justifies aggression, silences dissent.
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- **Rescuer Mode** = Builds loyalty, creates ideological dependency.
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This **endless cycle of artificial conflict** is the **engine that fuels his narcissistic pathology**.
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---
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## **7. Future Research Recommendations**
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- **The Role of the Drama Triangle in Digital Harassment Cases**
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- **Narcissistic Leadership & the Creation of False Conflict**
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- **Online Cult Dynamics & the Weaponization of Victimhood**
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This report serves as an **archival reference for understanding the psychological mechanisms of manufactured conflict in online narcissism.**
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