I said, "Don't tell me it's an over-generalization," but it doesn't matter. Say it as many times as you want; I don't care. I could explain it, but I actually don't care anymore. People are terrible and nothing, nothing will ever convince me otherwise. I hate all of humanity; they deserve it. You wanna deal with the reality of those hoards of people in those videos? Are they all special as they needlessly literally trample people, sometimes to death, over material items. (No question mark).
Why I made my post like that, is because in the time between then and now--you (as in, the wording) display very similar indicators that fall parallel to being jaded; nothing is needed to justify a generalization about the existence of a species and the characteristics towards them other than what one chooses to believe, and if a small sample set--a certain occurrence does such, it puts one into a position to either treat the concept as specific as it is towards one area, or to work with it as they please. These beliefs are all correct at a certain point in time, but when they become conclusions, that's another important point. It affects further ideas. All that in the link is on-point; it's a terrible happening, and it will affect anyone viewing or seeing it by adding more ideas in mind. And personally, this is a point which is handled by
everyone in the field geared towards mental health and dealing with people everyday. It's a very stressful area, but it's also an area with the most potential to get to know people; the only limitation is the part for the self. That's what I was nudging when I was poking your post--it lacks specificity, and puts bias and prejudice
from experience onto people
undeserving of that kind of characterization. It is an over-generalization because it's as if what dysfunctional behavior one has seen, is expected to be seen from other people in similar or otherwise situations. That's the importance of culture and seeing into culture to bridge that gap.
The general idea of 'people' begins to be constructed by whom you're generally with. That's a similarity with many people who hold cynical beliefs about humanity
as a general point; their thoughts, not necessarily their lived experiences as a whole, follow a mindset of thinking that focuses in mind upon these characteristics. And a certain attitude--western or otherwise--does not represent the whole existence of humanity nor their current capabilities and innate nature.
And that's me from a psychology course, alongside further studies into the whole science. That is why I am prodding at that generalization; because your posts were towards giving advice...but recently have been more and more biased because of what's being focused on
It's a general notice for anyone working with dysfunction to not let one's OWN burden affect them--to deal with one's own personal 'mental burdens' else their capabilites in aiding others or giving rational, realistic advice may be hindered by these. That signifies the "
" I see in the tone of the recent posts. They use very spurious terms, filled with slang and shallow characterization, call upon assholes and other degenerate terms, but lack the follow-up needed to actually clarify the situation to forward understanding. Yes, the people are showing pretty ass-y behaviors; what could be done about it for the person you're advicing for their understanding and well-being? It should not end at misanthropy or towards
just acknolwedging how bad the environment is.
And it's a disparate position when you see 'people' being defined very vaguely when the 'people' being mentioned using context clues are from one's lived experiences instead, hence the need of specificity since nobody is going against each other here--but for the purpose of advice to the OP.
@True: Do not let the people who you've experienced jade you into making them your representative benchmark for humanity. It's a very
distinct line within the study of behavior how
maladaptive behavior is noted. Do not use maladaptive behavior as your baseline towards seeing humanity, because that will inevitably skew your own perception while leaving other impressions stable (like one's own view of what they did; there may not be a connection at all between those, but the feelings towards them may stay).
And that's why I go against those generalizations,
because they do not necessarily apply. They are right in a way, but come off more as a very cynical way to cope with what experiences you've went through. It's visible in the tone, and affects more than what's being said concisely.
I sometimes wonder if this is more an american thing than a human thing, but the innate nature to be assholes is indeed baked into everyone.
Big correction
People are not assholes by generalization;
it's the behaviors rather. There's my gripe with the recent posts by which there's a lot of surface generalization without checking the specifics of what meaning is being presented, or what's going to be discussed from these--there's a lot between noting an 'innate nature' that creates this delicate conception, because it'll affect how people will see others given the meanings being presented. It's misinformation to mention such--that people can innately be assholes, but rather the idea would be that it's in the process of behavior
given that how one would understand someone being 'an asshole' (totally western term :v) is localized in culture.
That said, it's rooted into maladaptive behavior. It's a lot more complex than saying 'this is innate and this isn't innate', because there are many factors which support the existence of certain behaviors over others. The 'asshole' behavior is directly tied into how the culture of the people, localized within areas where social norms, work (stretching from the workplace to the home to other areas applicable) are perpetuated. Like for example, a difference from my viewpoint given me being from another country. I'm all
reading many posts here being so generalizing towards humanity when another viewpoint is completely different--I can note that the examples being given in the recent posts are localized, rather than actually generalized (because using my own examples from my city, country, province, etc, alongside connections to studies and cross-referencing from other people give a different viewpoint). We've noticed how American culture (not the holistic one but the one being perpetuated in common media) is pretty individualistic; there seems to be a lot more on words with less to what is being thought about, a lot more on turns of phrases and on saying what's on one's mind rather than thinking about the idea with others, but that's only to one tiny bit of such culture, and not even describing the majority of what's going on.
But that's the gentle poke towards misanthropy--it comes from those dealing with these directly, and in itself is a jaded view of reality disconnected from how it's being seen. Hell is other people, is the common quote supporting it, but it's not other people, it's the attitudes being reinforced and perpetuated, the thoughts commonly being thought
about others and the limits of knowledge being present in individuals which are better overcome when people are together.
There's a lot of generalization being thrown out that derails from the OP, and more towards 'I've become a misanthrope because of what I've seen', and yet there are many people who have seen more and had a convincing outlook of faith in humanity which could specify a lot more than what was noted, rather than ignorance and not paying enough attention to what's happening. While there may be many problems within the world that are too many to specify and discuss--the most control anyone has, is with themselves and their thoughts and perception.That's why I ask a bit more thought into those posts. Misanthropy is not connected to one of open mind or open heart, or to how much one's mind is filled with information, but how that information is processed, alongside the lived experiences one has gone through.
...And seeing the content of that misanthropy, it seems more like a really reinforced dislike or otherwise towards certain characteristics being shown: Only that it's connected to the idea of 'person' rather than characterized by itself. ...So it's incomplete or misleading by itself to see it as misanthropy. Would be just like saying 'what they have done that I didn't like, anyone else can do--even those I didn't even meet yet'.