Being able to inflict real damage on a modern external monitor is highly unlikely.
Connections like VGA, DVI and HDMI don't provide sufficiently direct access to the screen's hardware.
The hardware design of a consumer product can be considered flawed if it allows a killer poke, i.e. destruction of a hardware component by issuing
software instructions.
In modern PC hardware, laptops have a tightly integrated display. It may be possible to write a program that has harmful effects on a laptop's backlight,
e.g. by flicking it on and off rapidly by calling the ACPI interface.
From http://ibm-acpi.sourceforge.net/README:
Whatever you do, do NOT ever call thinkpad-acpi backlight-level change
interface and the ACPI-based backlight level change interface
(available on newer BIOSes, and driven by the Linux ACPI video driver)
at the same time. The two will interact in bad ways, do funny things,
and maybe reduce the life of the backlight lamps by needlessly kicking
its level up and down at every change.