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9natree
9Natree
100 episodes
1 day ago
9Natree Channel, we aim to share knowledge with people around the world.
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Self-Improvement
Education,
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All content for 9natree is the property of 9Natree and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
9Natree Channel, we aim to share knowledge with people around the world.
Show more...
Self-Improvement
Education,
Technology,
Business,
Entrepreneurship
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[Review] Inside the Criminal Mind (Stanton E. Samenow) Summarized
9natree
9 minutes 10 seconds
1 day ago
[Review] Inside the Criminal Mind (Stanton E. Samenow) Summarized
Inside the Criminal Mind (Stanton E. Samenow) - Amazon USA Store: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00KAFX8FY?tag=9natree-20 - Amazon Worldwide Store: https://global.buys.trade/Inside-the-Criminal-Mind-Stanton-E-Samenow.html - Apple Books: https://books.apple.com/us/audiobook/the-villain-institute/id1546361933?itsct=books_box_link&itscg=30200&ls=1&at=1001l3bAw&ct=9natree - eBay: https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_nkw=Inside+the+Criminal+Mind+Stanton+E+Samenow+&mkcid=1&mkrid=711-53200-19255-0&siteid=0&campid=5339060787&customid=9natree&toolid=10001&mkevt=1 - Read more: https://mybook.top/read/B00KAFX8FY/ #criminalpsychology #criminalthinkingpatterns #offendermanipulation #responsibilityandaccountability #rehabilitationandrecidivism #InsidetheCriminalMind These are takeaways from this book. Firstly, Criminal thinking as a pattern of choices, not a single cause, A central theme is that crime cannot be explained well by one factor such as socioeconomic hardship, peer influence, substance use, or psychological diagnosis. The book emphasizes a pattern: the offender repeatedly makes choices that favor immediate wants over rules, obligations, and the rights of others. This view does not deny that life circumstances matter, but it argues that circumstances do not mechanically produce crime. Two people can face the same adversity and respond differently, and that difference is rooted in how they interpret situations and justify actions. Samenow frames criminality as a style of thinking that develops over time, marked by an early willingness to test limits, disregard correction, and treat rules as obstacles rather than shared agreements. The offender learns to convert everyday frustrations into permission to break norms, then reinforces those decisions through short term gains such as excitement, status, or material benefit. This approach leads readers to look for repeated decision points rather than searching for a single origin story. It also highlights why some interventions fail: if an offender is treated as a victim of forces, the program may neglect the repeated cognitive and moral choices that keep the behavior going. Secondly, Entitlement, power, and the refusal of responsibility, The book describes how many offenders operate from a sense of entitlement that makes exploitation feel justified. Entitlement can be expressed as believing one deserves special treatment, deserves to win, or deserves compensation for perceived slights. When entitlement is paired with a desire for dominance, rules become negotiable and other people become tools. Samenow’s analysis stresses that responsibility is not merely admitting wrongdoing after the fact; it is the ongoing discipline of acknowledging obligations before acting. In criminal thinking, responsibility is routinely shifted outward. Blame is placed on parents, partners, bosses, society, the police, or bad luck. Even when an offender admits an action occurred, the admission may be hollow because it is coupled with excuses that preserve a self image of being clever, mistreated, or forced. This mindset also helps explain repeat offending: if the individual believes consequences are unfair or someone else’s fault, there is little internal reason to change. By focusing on responsibility as a skill, the book links accountability to daily habits such as following instructions, respecting boundaries, and tolerating frustration without retaliation. The discussion is especially useful for readers who want to understand why remorse can appear convincing yet fail to translate into consistent lawful behavior. Thirdly, Manipulation, deception, and the victim stance, Another major topic is how offenders often manage impressions to control outcomes. The book explores common tactics such as selective honesty, charm, intimidation, and strategic helpless...
9natree
9Natree Channel, we aim to share knowledge with people around the world.