“Projection”


As you probably recall, I am not a fan of Psychology. It too often relies on naming things and passing the name off as an explanation for the thing. It’s simple appellomancy [oglaf] – names have power.

So, we have a lot of pent-up power behind the concept of “projection”:

Psychological projection is a theory in psychology in which the human ego defends itself against unconscious impulses or qualities (both positive and negative) by denying their existence in themselves while attributing them to others.

[Note the embedded assumption that Freud was correct that we have an ‘ego’ but that’s a discussion for another day] A more practical explanation might be something like:

As we are constantly modeling other people’s motives and imagining what they may want to do, we are limited by our own experience and imagination, so we tend to imagine other people might do the things we’d do in their position.

This crops up all the time in computer security wonking; computer security’s equivalent of pop psychologists call it “threat modelling” and it’s part of “risk management” (both of which I dismiss as mostly consisting of frameworks for placing the things you’re worried about in an order of likeliness and assigning them priority based on an estimate of the damage they might cause) – when you’re looking at a system you spend a lot of time hypothesizing “what would I do, if I were a bad guy attacking the system?” For many years I render that down into a set of questions:

  • What are you afraid of happening?
  • What would it look like if that thing you’re afraid of having happen, is actually happening?
  • What can you put in place to detect if that thing you’re afraid of having happen, is actually happening, so it can warn you “hey, that thing you’re afraid of – it’s actually happening?”

I’d probably be wealthier if I had made it more complicated, perhaps book-length.

What I’m getting at is that “projection” is just a side effect of how we model other people’s behaviors, that “threat modeling” and “gut instinct” are inevitably tied to our own ideas and imaginations. That’s why, if someone is shouting loudly about there being a “problem with cannibals in the neighborhood!” the first place you should look for cannibals is in their basement. It’s pretty simple, really: they’re thinking about cannibalism a lot, apparently. This approach will not always work, of course, because a clever cannibal would not go around basically marketing cannibalism.

The Republicans – especially the North Carolina Republicans – are suspiciously concerned with election-rigging. Granted, the Democrats also have a long history of voter suppression, but the midterm election generated a high level of Republican heat around allegations of busloads of voters, etc. It appears that the Republicans had been thinking hard about “how to rig an election” and had generated a few credible threat models: because they were doing them.

Naturally, the Republicans are also howling for justice to be done. Because that’s what they planned to do if they caught Democrats cheating. Just kidding; sorry that wasn’t funny.

[cnn]

But a set of 161 absentee ballots for the 9th Congressional District obtained by CNN on Monday showed that the same nine people signed at least 10 absentee ballots each.

Many of those nine people who signed ballots seem to know each other, checks of public records and their social media accounts showed. Some are also associates of Leslie McCrae Dowless, a longtime North Carolina operative who worked for the campaign of Mark Harris, the Republican who leads the race by 905 votes.

A CNN review found three witnesses signed more than 40 ballots each, another signed 30, and three other people signed more than 10 apiece. North Carolina election law states only the voter or a near relative can hand in an absentee ballot.

This is what I mean when I say that the election systems need to be better designed, so that they cross-check themselves. The Republicans engaged in the simplest, most obvious vote fraud that they could come up with – and they probably did that because they thought they had political top-cover that would prevent it from becoming obvious.

What can you put in place to detect if that thing you’re afraid of having happen, is actually happening, so it can warn you “hey, that thing you’re afraid of – it’s actually happening?”

Interestingly, there is discussion about having another election. Why? Once they audit the faked ballots and subtract them, the Republicans lose in that critical district. Meanwhile, where are the Republicans chanting “lock them up?”

Dowless pleaded guilty to insurance fraud in the early 1990s after taking out a $163,000 policy on a dead man, court records show.

In 1990, he forged the signature of an employee at his auto sales business who died in a car accident on a life insurance policy, the outlet reported. He backdated the form and named himself the beneficiary. He received a check for $163,541. He pleaded guilty to felony fraud in 1992. [heavy]

If Dowless starts talking about the cannibal threat in North Carolina, someone get a search warrant and check in his basement.

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My explanation of “projection” is rough and I didn’t put it through any cycles of refinement, but I think it’s pretty good and, most notably, does not require an appeal to imaginary entities like ‘ego’ which require explanation in turn. The problem, I suppose, with my definition of “projection” is that it’s straightforward and non-mysterious, relying on our every day experience and observable behaviors – the exact opposite of “pop psychology.”

It’s interesting that CNN doesn’t mention the “forged signatures” part of Dowless’ criminal record and only mentioned the insurance fraud. Why not, CNN?

Dowless appears to have been paid $400,000+ by the Harris campaign. Damn! Computer security is a good career but apparently “felon political hack” pays a whole lot better.

Comments

  1. johnson catman says

    I know you have probably seen this already, but the vote for the US House was nearly evenly split (something like 48-51) but the Democrats got 3 seats and the Republicans got 10. This state is one of the biggest offenders with regard to gerrymandering. The republicans have no intention of allowing a fair race or representation proportional to the vote, and they will do everything they can to prevent it. At least the super-majority that they had in the state legislature was broken this election, but it should have been much more pronounced.

  2. Reginald Selkirk says

    It’s simple appellomancy [oglaf] – names have power.

    I feel reassured by having learned that.

  3. polishsalami says

    Psychological projection is a well-founded concept. It appears as often in group/political situations as much as individual ones, across many eras: eg., the English repeatedly describing the Irish as “violent,” or the USA calling Iran “the world’s leading sponsor of terrorism.”

  4. voyager says

    Well, that’s about the best definition of projection that I’ve come across. It’s simple and makes sense and I would have failed out of Psych 101 if I’d used it. (I am not a fan of Freud, either. His work on ‘hysteria’ in women made me question everything else he wrote.)
    As for ‘appellomancy’, it’s another part of othering. If we call Mexicans rapists and thieves and Muslims terrorists then in too many people’s minds that’s what they are. The truth gets lost because people are lazy and don’t ask questions or take the time to think for themselves.

  5. kestrel says

    My grandmother used to say, “A thief sees nothing but thieves everywhere they look” and “Them that can’t trust, can’t be trusted”. Looks like she was right.

  6. says

    It’s a good modification of psychological projection. Mine is something like “attributing negative characteristics to others that you are capable of yourself”. Take out the “negative” and there might be a deeper phenomena there.

  7. says

    Brony, Social Justice Cenobite@#6:
    Mine is something like “attributing negative characteristics to others that you are capable of yourself”. Take out the “negative” and there might be a deeper phenomena there.

    That’s a good one, too; I think we’re capable of more than we usually pay attention to, which is why I tried to embed the idea that its what we’re thinking about. In a sense, when we are doing a threat assessment of someone else’s actions, we are doing a threat assessment of ourselves.

  8. says

    kestrel@#5:
    My grandmother used to say, “A thief sees nothing but thieves everywhere they look” and “Them that can’t trust, can’t be trusted”. Looks like she was right.

    Old age means surviving, grandmother usually means old age. I always listened to my grandmother pretty carefully.

  9. avalus says

    My thoughts about your voting … zustand: [Bloody bollocks from hell on a stick on fire!]

    @Marcus #8:
    I would disagree, it can also mean being really sheltered or plain lucky. One of my two gramas still does not really think we germans did do really that bad when she was young. All those dashing boys and men in sharp uniforms. And it was really just not nice and really impolite of these americans and british to bomb us. I tend, somehow, not to take her advice.
    (The other one luckily is like Kestrel’s and Marcus grannys instead, pretty wise. As was my great grandfather, whom I had the pleasure to meet.)

  10. says

    That’s why, if someone is shouting loudly about there being a “problem with cannibals in the neighborhood!” the first place you should look for cannibals is in their basement. It’s pretty simple, really: they’re thinking about cannibalism a lot, apparently.

    And kestrel @#5

    My grandmother used to say, “A thief sees nothing but thieves everywhere they look” and “Them that can’t trust, can’t be trusted”. Looks like she was right.

    If that was true, then also this statement would be true: “If Marcus is talking loudly about hackers and computer viruses, then he himself is probably a hacker who is unleashing viruses upon other people’s computers.”

    In my opinion, that’s not how it works. There can be many other reasons why somebody sees thieves everywhere they look. Maybe they are a victim who got robbed recently. Maybe their friend or family member is a victim. Maybe their professional career is related to preventing theft. Maybe they read too many novels about criminals. Maybe they just happen to be paranoid.

    My mother happens to be a person who sees thieves everywhere and never trusts people. Her problem? She has a specific personality that makes her more likely to be targeted by people with bad intentions. She has had her wallet stolen on multiple occasions. Several of her friends have betrayed her. Even her own sister abused her trust in a very nasty way. I have tried to have this talk with my mother several times about how her behaviour attracts the wrong kind of attention and how she turns herself into an attractive victim. She understands the problem, but she’s still unable to change her personality/behaviour. Thus she has come to the point where she believes that majority of humans are assholes.

    It also goes the other way—it’s not necessary for a thief to see thieves everywhere. Maybe a professional thief knows that among humans there are a few thieves and the rest of people are just clueless and gullible prey.

    I’m not denying that there are cases where a person being overly concerned with some behavior can be seen as a red flag indicated that they might be secretly engaging in this behavior. But this isn’t always the case. People are more complicated than that.

    The Republicans – especially the North Carolina Republicans – are suspiciously concerned with election-rigging.

    The way I see it, the Republicans are concerned with winning elections. Election rigging is just a method for it. Occasionally they can benefit from directly rigging the election. That’s when they do it. On other occasions, they can benefit from talking about elections being rigged (for example, when it allows them to pass voter ID laws that prevent people of color from voting). I don’t see this situation as one that requires some fancy psychological explanation. It’s just a basic case of people doing whatever the hell lets them achieve their goal.

  11. lorn says

    An axiom around higher education is the : “Psychology majors are crazy”. From experience I can say while perhaps not clinically true a lot of them are drawn into psych because of extant mental issues. People with major issues tend to think about mental health more frequently and this naturally tends to draw them to study the problem.

    It is said, and I have noticed in personal experience, that fat people tend to obsess about weight and this manifests frequently as their having a lot of diet books. This is so consistent that he argument that you can tell a persons weight by the number of diet books on their shelves is at least in part true.

    The single most paranoid person I have ever known about physical security, he was obsessed about locks and bars and keeping burglars at bay, was a thief. The irony wasn’t lost on anyone.

    I suspect all of this comes from our internal modeling. We kind of know something about ourselves, even as we frequently deny what we know. We are loath to admit that this internal knowledge applies to ourselves simply because we like to think of ourselves as special and unique and far more sophisticated than simplistic drives and motivations would indicate. Lacking any other pattern for the mental operations of others we use what we have, the ostensibly orphaned model of ourselves. Which is how we get a situation where public accusations against others are essentially confessions of their own crimes. The kicker is that the irony is entirely lost on them.

    Of course projection, as powerful and explanatory a concept as it is, has limits. Applied too quickly and carried too far you end up with: “He who smelt it dealt it”. A situation where you can’t cite any wrongdoing for fear you will be accused of the same crime.

  12. Curious Digressions says

    A friend of mine likes to say, “If IT guys wrote the DSM, psychologists would have ‘Can’t Shut Up About My Feelings’ disorder.

    In addition to fearing the misbehavior they’re likely engaged it, I think a lot of politicians fear-monger what would have to be true to pre-justify their actions.

  13. says

    lorn @#11

    The single most paranoid person I have ever known about physical security, he was obsessed about locks and bars and keeping burglars at bay, was a thief.

    An anecdote cannot be seen as evidence.
    Or, more precisely, in this particular case, this anecdote could prove that “sometimes people who are obsessed about some negative behaviour actually engage in it.” However, from the wording in your comment, it seems for me like you were trying to argue that “usually people who are obsessed about some negative behaviour actually engage in it.” There’s a difference. An anecdote can prove that something can occasionally happen. It does not prove that it happens frequently or on a regular basis.

    It is said, and I have noticed in personal experience, that fat people tend to obsess about weight and this manifests frequently as their having a lot of diet books. This is so consistent that he argument that you can tell a persons weight by the number of diet books on their shelves is at least in part true.

    I’m not sure about the relevancy of this example. This blog post started with an example where people choose to engage in some behaviour. A person chooses to commit election rigging, and the same person also chooses to publicly talk about election rigging. Same goes for a thief who chooses to steal and also chooses to install locks and bars at their home. It’s a whole different matter with medical problems. Someone with diabetes will obsess about sugar and insulin; somebody with a celiac disease will obsess about their food being gluten-free, somebody with a heart disease will obsess about cholesterol. When a person has some medical problem, thinking about it (or “obsessing” about it) is no longer a choice, it’s a necessity. Being obese has numerous health related drawbacks, thus people who have a problem with managing their weight are pretty much forced to “obsess” about losing weight.

    Lacking any other pattern for the mental operations of others we use what we have, the ostensibly orphaned model of ourselves. Which is how we get a situation where public accusations against others are essentially confessions of their own crimes.

    Asking “what would I do if I were in such situation” and then assuming that other people will act the same way certainly is reasonable. That’s the simplest way how a human can try to predict other people’s behaviour. However, people are also capable of going beyond that and understanding that other people differ from them, that they think differently, act differently, and have other priorities.

    People with major issues tend to think about mental health more frequently and this naturally tends to draw them to study the problem.

    Oh well, this one is actually true about me. The only reason why I have read psychology books was my suspicion that there might be something weird going on with the way how my brain works. I also wanted to understand how exactly my thinking patterns differ from those of other people. Simultaneously, understanding that my brain works somewhat differently is also the main reason why I expect other people to behave differently than I would. For example, my ability to feel emotions is limited, thus my actions are rarely influenced by emotions. Yet I’m aware that this isn’t the same also for other people, hence I expect their actions to be more heavily influenced by what they feel.

  14. billspight2 says

    The current Republican strategy can be called projection, but I do not for one second believe that the accusers themselves believe their accusations, except perhaps in part. For instance, isolated examples of individual voter fraud surely exist, but not the massive amounts that accusers claim.

    Funny story, which you may wish to skip. In a election for a city office years ago, the losing side found an elderly man who had voted twice. They sued to overturn the election results and put the man on the stand, who admitted that he had done so. (He was not prosecuted, however.) The opposing attorney asked a few questions on cross examination and then the judge ordered a new election. Afterwards the suing attorney thanked the man for his testimony. The man replied, “Glad to help. That’s why I voted for your guy.”

    Only in the current political atmosphere have I found that when a political or pundit makes an unfounded accusation, their side turns out to be doing the same or similar thing. (Aside from what everybody does, OC.) Why that tactic seems to work is not clear to me.

    As for the Democrats’ long history of voter suppression, it is both longer and harsher than that of the Republicans. Murder was one of the Democrats’ main tactics in the 19th century and into the 20th century. Modern day Republicans are not as bad, although murders have occurred. But there is a continuity between earlier Democrats and modern Republicans, as a result of the Republicans’ infamous Southern strategy. The change has occurred within the last half century. We are talking about the same people or their descendants.

  15. komarov says

    Meanwhile, where are the Republicans chanting “lock them up?”

    Out of breath, perhaps, from dragging a heavy set of ball and chains around all day.

    Regarding the discussion around Kestrel’s grandmother’s sayings, I’d agree with Ieva: Context matters a lot. Sadly if you started adding bits those lovely expressions would be a lot less catchy.

    Humans tend to have a short attention span, what’s on their mind is whatever happened most recently. Whether you were robbed, rigged an election or stubbed your toe, you’ll probably be preoccupied making sure it doesn’t happen again even while the next misfortune is already headed towards you. Oh, sorry, I’m projecting. I have a very short attention span…

    Also, apropos of nothing, a reminder that members of the clergy are often very concerned with a plethora of sins…

    Re: Ieva Skrebele (#13):

    Oh well, this one is actually true about me. The only reason why I have read psychology books was my suspicion that there might be something weird going on with the way how my brain works.

    I’ve taken the lazy path by assuming all brains are weird and we can’t really tell. [xkcd] It doesn’t really help much but at least avoids the temptation of diagnosing myself with anything, or many things, something I suspect I’d be very prone to do.

    Really the weird bit seems to be how so many different brains tend to converge on the same modes of thinking – so we can predict each other at all. Given how malleable our brains are supposed to be there ought to be a huge number of methods that can be adopted to approach a cognitive problem and hence different results depending on the path taken. Thinking “out of the box” shouldn’t be the exception, it should be exceptionally hard not to do.

  16. says

    komarov @#15

    I’ve taken the lazy path by assuming all brains are weird and we can’t really tell. [xkcd] It doesn’t really help much but at least avoids the temptation of diagnosing myself with anything, or many things, something I suspect I’d be very prone to do.

    I’m not trying to diagnose myself with anything. When I was a child, I managed to appear normal enough so that at school nobody tried to shuffle me into a locked up room with a mental health professional. Thus I avoided any diagnoses. Yay! Lucky me; apparently I’m normal enough.

    The thing is, I don’t care to find out whether I correspond so any specific set of criteria that could give me some diagnosis. Finding out whether I’m weird enough to warrant giving me a diagnosis is irrelevant for me; my interest was a very different one—I had observed that occasionally other people behave in ways that are alien and incomprehensible for me. I wanted to figure out what was going on and why other people did and felt things I couldn’t experience.

    A trivial example: about two weeks ago our family’s dog almost died, because she couldn’t breathe when a piece of chicken bone got stuck in her throat. When our dog stopped breathing, my mother started panicking; she was crying, speaking and acting incoherently. I, on the other hand, was as calm as ever. I couldn’t feel a damn thing even when it seemed like our dog was dying (or, possibly, had already died). Logically I knew that I didn’t want this dog to die. It’s not like I didn’t care, I cared. It’s just that I didn’t feel any emotions at that moment. We managed to pull out the bone and free her throat. Even though the dog was unconscious for at least a minute, her heart hadn’t stopped beating yet, so she started breathing again once her throat was free. She survived.

    In past these kinds of occurrences used to puzzle me: why are other people showing signs of panic, why are they crying, why can’t they remain just as calm as me? Now I know better—there simply are some differences in how our brains work.

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