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An adult who switches from ambivalence to extreme hostility to authority as a result of an external event doesn't have a mental illness. That's the normal affect for perceived wrongs from authority.
I guess the problem with this is that it treats "authority" as a singular entity, and not as a blob with a million arms that don't talk to each other.
For example, let's say I am the victim of "authority" when a university racially discriminates against me in admissions. A common story. But that doesn't mean my boss, landlord, or local hospital are also out to get me. They are different forms of authority, not closely related to the other.
I don't think it's a mental illness necessarily. It's just that people who are low IQ or agency might have trouble with these distinctions and adopt a suboptimal "everyone's out to get me" mentality that doesn't square with reality.
Then why do they all start repeating the same mantras at the same time?
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