John Edwards has joined the parade. The former North Carolina senator and presidential candidate was indicted last week for using campaign contributions to keep his mistress and their baby in hiding during his 2008 run for the White House.
He follows former California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, who admitted fathering a child with a member of his household staff, and Dominique Strauss-Kahn, who had to resign as head of the International Monetary Fund after he allegedly tried to rape a hotel maid in New York City.
A lot of people are asking, why do they do it? Why are these rich, powerful men willing to chance ruining everything they have achieved for momentary pleasure? Psychology researchers have come up with several answers.
Risks vs. rewards
WRAL TV in Raleigh, North Carolina, interviewed Scott Huettel, associate professor of neuroscience at Duke University, about the Edwards case. Huettel studies how the brain weighs risks and rewards. According to WRAL:
The brain, he says, asks this question when making a decision: “Is what I’m going to receive from this better than what I have now?”
Short-term gains often win, while long-term consequences are discounted, Huettel said.
Factors such as wealth and power do not often correlate with a higher cost on risk, Huettel added. In other words, those who have the most are often willing to risk the most.
More power, more adultery
Time Magazine took this argument further. Not only do powerful men tend to assess risk differently than the rest of us, but they are also surrounded by enablers who have an interest in keeping the powerful person in power, and help cover up the indiscretions.
Time also described forthcoming research:
A study set to be published in Psychological Science found that the higher men or women rose in a business hierarchy, the more likely they were to consider or commit adultery. With power comes both opportunity and confidence, the authors argue, and with confidence comes a sense of sexual entitlement.
Type T Personality
Then there’s Frank Farley, a psychologist and professor at Temple University, and former president of the American Psychological Association. He’s come up with what the calls the “Type T Personality.” In response to the Schwarzenegger story, he recently wrote an opinion piece in the Los Angeles Times entitled, What makes politicians stray?
In my view the factor most responsible for philandering in public officials is a predisposition for risk-taking, which also happens to be an essential quality for politicians. My label for it is the “Type T personality,” with the “T” standing for thrill.
Farley has been discussing his theory of thrill seeking for quite awhile. He was quoted in a Time Magazine article back in 1985. In 2006, Farley was interviewed about his theory when Ben Roethlisberger, the Super Bowl quarterback for the Pittsburgh Steelers, went riding a motorcycle without a helmet, was hit by a car and suffered serious head injuries.
At that time, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette wrote:
Dr. Farley divides risk takers into Type T positives — inventors, entrepreneurs, explorers — and Type T negatives — compulsive gamblers, criminals, people who engage in unsafe sex.
Incomplete explanations
All of these theories strike me as partially accurate, but incomplete, explanations for the sexual misbehavior of powerful men. Yes, the brain may find rewards now more appealing than consequences later, but certainly more is involved in behavior that has the potential to blow up everything an individual has worked for. A sense of sexual entitlement doesn’t explain this level of arrogant risk, and neither does the thrill factor.
Measuring psychopathy, however, may very well explain what is going on. Components of psychopathy include superficial charm, egocentricity, need for stimulation, deceit, lack of remorse, impulsivity, irresponsibility and promiscuity. Certainly all of these traits are factors in the egregious illicit affairs of powerful men.
But then we’d have to start using the “P” word in reference to politicians and titans of the business world. I’ll bet that a lot of people don’t want to do that.
Mr. Peebody Cowboy just left! He was a real nice kid…..very apologetic and dug ALL my daffodills right on up and asked if there was any other help I needed!
We chatted and laughed about it……he said he took a rashion of shiat from his friends all night and today they razzed him about when he was coming over to do his gardening service. 🙂
So…..I thanked him for following through on our deal, he thanked me again for not pressing charges as indecent exposure would require him to register as a sex offender….I told him I wasn’t interested in’getting ‘him in trouble over this…..just proving a point really. I would hate to have him go through THAT unnecessary mess….that would definately be UNJUST!
(Especially when spaths are getting away with all they do!)
This kid didn’t deserve that.
So……we goterdone!!!!
And we will BOTH remember this episode!
🙂
🙂 such a great outcome. he learned about respect today.
This ones for my cowboy friend…….
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z0XAI-PFQcA&feature=related
EB:
Wow!!! I so want to be like you when I grow up!! 🙂
Here is another: http://deadspin.com/5818225/the-downfall-of-barry-halper-baseball-collectings-bernie-madoff
I was always suspicious and to be honest, a bit jealous of this guy. The “All-American” kid who turned collecting baseball cards into the finest collection of baseball memorabilia outside of Cooperstown.
Seemed too good to be true and it was.
BBE it is a shame that the guy is dead so he can’t go to jail and be aware of the outing….guess that kind of thing isn’t all that rare after all….if there is big money and big fame involved the crooks will come into play.
Interesting article. Thanks.
There is a corporate sociopath behind all this: Sotheby’s. I cannot believe that they are merely incompetent. The were looking the other way and are now hiding behind corporate policy and statute of limitations…
BBE, follow the money trail….who gets money out of a deal? The seller and the auction house. They can’t do that very often and get by with it, but once in a while they can claim to be “fooled”
Just like bankers with “sub-prime” mortgages.
Now we have an Olympic Skier hopeful arrested for public urination on a Jet Blue flight…