MHPD and UVPD
Delusions in action
It’s a wrap………it’s over. Full stop. Period. There really is no reason to keep on pretending, to keep on “faking like” tomorrow is going to bring forth a better quality of people to represent and “do the peoples business” on the land. It is not going to happen. Why? Messianic fanaticism. See, this “sickness” is so endemic that I believe it will never be treated as the disease that it really is. It is a mental disorder. It is based upon 100% fantasy talk, with none of it provable in any tangible, empirical way. “Faith” has no basis in provable science.
The “Faith” or the “trust in me” doctrine is the only validation of ANYTHING related to Messianic fanaticism. The only other validation is the script that the participants wrote. History and science evidences this fact.
Faith does have a Power, but not faith in “that.” Faith is for rational, provable things that evidence the Hand of All Mighty God in nature and our natural realm, IN OUR LIVES, not fables, myths, allegories, scripts or stories. Especially not Babylonian, pagan, and “inverted” Messianic stories.
In the same way that scripts and stories systematically removed people from the Presence of The Source Creator, the same thing was done to the people in a physical way. Not to be satisfied with defiling the spirit of The Perfect Creation, the evil ones wanted to defile the body and the mind, and this could only be accomplished by making the people “defame their fair nature,” i.e. crazy tattoos, crazy piercings, horns, slit tongues, deviancy, perversity. alcohol, and substance abuse.
Another way is to humiliate “the being.” Make the person into a open display of their own ignorance. Make them participate and perform in sundry acts that defy rational thinking, and thus humiliating them in the process. Make them “fool naturals.” Make them “wards.”
“Drink the blood,” they snicker, “Eat the body.” The symbology of “that” goes without saying. Is it rational? Who eats bodies and drinks blood? Who? Think about that and get back to me? Humiliation…
To add insult to injury, on top of one falsehood another is added. The humiliation ritual is based upon a premise that too IS NOT REAL. The “wall” that people are humping on is not even the Temple of Solomon. It is a Roman fort.
Think about that? Two delusions wrapped into one, and this is used as a basis of some sort of “divine guidance.” People pay homage to the Roman fort and they even place their “prayers” in the wall, under the pretext that the “wall is real.” It’s not. They place their prayers there, “a delusional believing,” that somehow the wall is going to bolster them. It’s just a wall. If that is not a humiliation ritual, what is it? If the person believes the “ritual” as real, what does that make the person? What would that person classify as in a psychiatric setting?
The 3rd most powerful person in the states united. The 3rd in line for the throne. Think about that?
Messianic fanatism costs money. Specifically “money lost.” Delusions tend to do that.
Title: The Economic and Legal Consequences of Messianic Fanaticism and Religious-Psychotic Disorders in U.S. Policy (1900–2025)
Abstract:
This report investigates the estimated economic loss sustained by the United States between 1900 and 2025 due to messianic fanaticism and related psychological conditions, namely Messianic Hero Personality Disorder (MHPD), Unknown Veneration Personality Disorder (UVPD), and related cluster delusions. Using historical data, economic reports, legal frameworks, and psychological analysis, the report estimates the cumulative cost of wars, tax exemptions, scientific obstruction, mental health crises, and political dysfunction attributable to religious delusions to exceed $22 trillion. It also explores the legal, constitutional, and psychiatric implications of these ideologies when embedded in public institutions and governance.
I. Clinical and Ideological Definitions
Messianic Fanaticism: Belief in a divine mission or national destiny, often tied to religious prophecy or apocalyptic expectations.
Messianic Hero Personality Disorder (MHPD): A psychological condition defined by delusional belief in oneself (or one’s nation) as chosen to fulfill a messianic role, often accompanied by paranoia, martyr complexes, and supremacist rationalizations.
Unknown Veneration Personality Disorder (UVPD): A condition marked by obsessive reverence for unverifiable historical or mythological figures, doctrines, or texts, often at the expense of empirical reasoning and social functionality.
II. Cluster Delusions Associated with MHPD and UVPD
Persecutory Delusion Complex
Apocalyptic-Deliverance Delusion
Savior Identification Syndrome (SIS)
Grand Unified Conspiracy Syndrome
Bloodline Obsession Disorder
Martyrdom-Persecution Identity Fusion
Symbolic Literalism Delusion
Divine Retribution Projection
These form mutually reinforcing belief systems that contribute to extremist behavior, political violence, and systemic policy dysfunction.
III. Mechanisms of Economic Loss
1. Wars and Religious-Geopolitical Conflicts
Iraq War (2003–present): $2.89 trillion
Aid to Israel (1948–2024): $300 billion
Homeland Security (Post-9/11): $1.1 trillion
Subtotal: ≈ $4.3 trillion
2. Religious Tax Exemptions
Estimated Total (1900–2025): $10.6 trillion
3. Anti-Science and Educational Suppression
Climate Delay + Education Suppression: $7.5 trillion
4. Mental Health, Cults, and Radicalization
Estimated Total: $300 billion
5. Political Gridlock from Ideological Extremism
Estimated Fraction: $37.5 billion
Total Estimated Loss: $22.74 trillion
IV. Legal Implications
Establishment Clause Violations
The use of messianic religious narratives in lawmaking and war-making constitutes a breach of the First Amendment’s prohibition on establishing religion through state power.
Material Support to Violence
Funding foreign wars based on religious prophecy may qualify as indirect material support for crimes against humanity under international law (Rome Statute, Geneva Conventions).
Tort Liability and Civil Rights Violations
Victims of policies shaped by religious psychosis (e.g., forced pregnancy laws, homophobic statutes) may pursue redress under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
Mental Competency and Oath of Office
Officeholders with active MHPD/UVPD may be found legally incompetent under standards of rationality and reasonableness (based on U.S. v. Windsor, and criteria from Godinez v. Moran, 509 U.S. 389 (1993)).
Public Harm and Fiduciary Negligence
Elected officials who act upon delusions breach their duty to govern rationally and in the public interest, subjecting them to removal, impeachment, or injunctive action.
Failure to Separate Church and State
Systemic incorporation of unverified spiritual beliefs into public education, law enforcement, and public health violates the Lemon Test (Lemon v. Kurtzman, 403 U.S. 602 (1971)).
V. Psychological Implications
Diagnostic Classification and DSM Proposal
MHPD and UVPD should be included in DSM as Cluster A/B hybrid delusional disorders with socio-political harm risk indicators.
Social Contagion and Group Delusion
These disorders often manifest as shared psychosis (folie à plusieurs), necessitating community-level mental health responses.
Public Health Consequences
Increased rates of PTSD, depression, suicide, and intergenerational trauma in populations exposed to religious authoritarianism.
Professional Ethics and Screening
Mental health screenings for public office may be justified where beliefs impair rational legal decision-making.
VI. Methodology and Limitations
Estimates based on published economic data, NGO audits, and federal reports.
Causal attribution is inferred via consistent ideological justifications in official decisions, speeches, and public records.
VII. References
Brown University Costs of War Project
American Humanist Association
Secular Coalition for America
CRS Reports on Foreign Aid
National Climate Assessment
Brookings Institution
Pew Research Center
U.S. Supreme Court Opinions: Lemon v. Kurtzman, Godinez v. Moran, United States v. Windsor
VIII. Conclusion
Messianic and veneration-based delusions—when allowed to dictate policy—have led to war, impoverishment, educational decline, mass incarceration, and social collapse. The economic losses are quantifiable; the psychological damage, immeasurable. Both psychiatric and legal interventions are necessary to restore secular governance, civic rationality, and constitutional integrity. (finis)
“In clinical psychology and psychiatry, cluster delusions are patterns of related or interlocking delusional beliefs that form a coherent system, often reinforcing one another. These are not isolated delusions, but part of a network of beliefs that distort perception, cognition, and behavior. While not yet formally categorized in the DSM as “cluster delusions,” they are well-documented in clinical, forensic, and sociopolitical contexts—especially in cults, ideological movements, and extremist groups.”
“Here is a list of other cluster delusions that commonly appear alongside or in proximity to Messianic Hero Personality Disorder (MHPD) and Unknown Veneration Personality Disorder (UVPD):
I. Common Cluster Delusions
1. Persecutory Delusion Complex
Belief that the individual or group is being systematically oppressed by governments, media, or secret societies.
Often linked to MHPD: "The world is against us because we are chosen."
Examples:
“Deep State demons are targeting us.”
“The devil is trying to silence truth-tellers.”
2. Apocalyptic-Deliverance Delusion
Belief that the world is about to end and that a specific group will be saved (rapture, chosen people).
Often co-occurs with UVPD and religious zealotry.
Examples:
“Only we will be taken up in the rapture.”
“God is going to destroy the unbelievers.”
3. Savior Identification Syndrome (SIS)
Belief that oneself or another person (often a political, military, or religious leader) is a prophesied savior or divine agent.
Examples:
“Trump is the modern-day Cyrus.”
“This child is the reincarnation of [insert deity or prophet].”
4. Grand Unified Conspiracy Syndrome
Merges all major conspiracies into one belief system (e.g., vaccines, aliens, government, Satanic cults).
Individuals believe they have secret or forbidden knowledge others lack.
Examples:
“TV is a government mind control weapon planted by the aliens.”
“COVID, climate change hoaxes, and school shootings are all planned to enslave us.”
5. Bloodline Obsession Disorder
Fixation on one’s ancestry or tribal/spiritual lineage as justification for superiority or victimhood.
Seen in religious ethno-supremacists and historical veneration cults.
Examples:
“We are descendants of the real Hebrews.”
“Our bloodline is the only pure one.”
6. Martyrdom-Persecution Identity Fusion
Identity is based on suffering or being “attacked” for beliefs; normal opposition is seen as proof of righteousness.
Leads to paranoia, militancy, and moral absolutism.
Examples:
“We’re being censored because we speak God’s truth.”
“They’re attacking our church because we are holy.”
7. Symbolic Literalism Delusion
Belief that metaphorical or symbolic texts are to be taken literally and applied in law or politics.
Common in fundamentalist interpretations of religious scripture.
Examples:
“The Constitution was divinely inspired and cannot be changed.”
“The Book of Revelation describes modern America exactly.”
8. Divine Retribution Projection
Belief that natural disasters, disease, or war are caused by moral failures of society (especially those outside the group).
Examples:
“Hurricanes happen because of gay marriage.”
“God sent COVID as punishment for abortion.”
II. Clinical Relevance and Diagnosis
While DSM-5 and ICD-11 do not yet list these as discrete diagnostic categories, many can be interpreted as subtypes or syndromes under Delusional Disorder, Paranoid Schizophrenia, Schizoaffective Disorder, or Shared Psychotic Disorder (Folie à Deux or à Plusieurs).
They often manifest in cult leaders, radical political activists, conspiracy influencers, or militant ideologues.
III. Legal and Social Risks
Incompetency in Governance: Individuals with cluster delusions in power may make decisions that risk mass harm.
Domestic Terrorism: These delusions often precede violent acts (e.g., QAnon-linked attacks, religious militias).
Child Abuse and Neglect: In cults or families with these delusions, children may be denied medical care, education, or safety.
IV. Suggested Classification
Proposed Name- Description- Related Disorders
Messianic Hero Syndrome (MHPD)- Delusion of personal or national divine mission Delusional Disorder, GPD
Unknown Veneration Personality Disorder (UVPD)- Obsession with venerating unknown figures/ideologies OCD, Schizotypal PD
Persecutory Cluster Syndrome- Belief in global persecution of the group
Paranoid Schizophrenia Apocalyptic- Deliverance Complex Salvation/damnation obsession in near-future prophecy
Religious Psychosis Grand Conspiracist- Delusional Matrix Merges various irrational beliefs into one narrative Schizoaffective Disorder (finis)
So much revenue is lost on this land just simply because of avoidable things. Public schools gobbling up nearly 15 trillion in 20 years, 22 trillion lost on delusional thinking disorders, and the list goes on. No wonder the country is 40 trillion in debt. 35 trillion is due to nonsense. Nonsense being, “fake education and fake religion.”
Now, nobody can tell what a person thinks in their mind. Until they open their mouth. What is Mike Johnson saying?
Lord have Mercy

