• AggressivelyPassive
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      2 years ago

      Super emotional behavior in general.

      A lot of people are seemingly completely unable or unwilling to take a step back from their own position and look at a situation at least slightly more rationally. Everything is only seen and interpreted as how it affects them.

      The cashier is not super friendly? Must be, that he’s an asshole, can’t be that he just had a bad day.

      There’s a minor inconvenience to me because of some public good? Well, fuck the public, I want mine.

      An argument with a friend, and I’m already angry? Better get even more angry and start screaming, that’ll show him!

    • @Bye@lemmy.world
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      62 years ago

      We evolved in a climate where that reasoning worked well for our species’ expansion. The amount of time we’ve had written language is only a blink of an eye compared to our species history, so of course we are maladapted to the modern world.

      People who don’t use emotional thinking are the exception rather than the rule.

    • @mindbleach@sh.itjust.works
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      42 years ago

      Reality is a team sport, to some people. They only accept or reject claims based on interpersonal trust. They don’t think there’s anything else. Science is just trusting smart guys. Being real smart grants them the power to decide what’s true, this week.

  • @xkforce@lemmy.world
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    172 years ago

    There are people that destroy things with no benefit to themselves or do things that hurt themselves just because it hurt who they consider to be “the right people.”

    • @Bye@lemmy.world
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      12 years ago

      It’s just tribalism

      The primary goal is to show off how much of a team member they are, by picking on some “other”. It strengthens their ties to their group, by having an enemy to unite against.

  • @eezeebee@lemmy.ca
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    172 years ago

    The obsession with what other people do with their lives. I like to be left alone, mind my own business, not bother others. But there seems to be some part of the population that is the opposite and just can’t help but poke and pry at others.

    • @tetris11@lemmy.ml
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      62 years ago

      Its because there are some that believe that their freedom does not encroach on the freedoms of other, and need a polite reminder that their actions have consequences, and that we’re all part of a larger whole, no matter how much we pretend otherwise.

    • tygerprints
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      22 years ago

      Like when people keep asking “is so and so gay” (usually a celebrity). I mean, unless you’re trying to date that person, what difference does it make. Whatever they do behind closed doors - you’re probably not getting an engraved invitation to join in, so give it a rest!!

  • @Sanctus@lemmy.world
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    112 years ago

    The way we destroy everything in the long term for short term gains. If our goal is to not die out, we are doing it wrong. Its like we’re speed running extinction.

  • @GiddyGap@lemm.ee
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    112 years ago

    That so many people feel the need to force other well-functioning people under their own religious or non-religious moral code.

  • @MorrisonMotel6@lemm.ee
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    2 years ago

    WHAT IS SO FUCKING HARD ABOUT THE ZIPPER MERGE?!?

    Do you motherfuckers REALLY think you’re a defender of traffic justice when you’re attempting to run people off the road for using a designated lane?

    • Seraph
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      2 years ago

      Prison sex. Not literally that’s just a song by Tool, but basically someone hurt me so I’m gonna hurt you.

      They aren’t bright enough to figure out that just continues the cycle.

    • @Candelestine@lemmy.world
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      52 years ago

      Harm done to them by other people, and justifiably and rationally looking for answers to how/why/what/where/when/who, so they can make the harm less likely to be repeated in the future by altering their behavior appropriately.

      With special emphasis on the “who”, because it’s easier, when they should be focusing on the “how” and “why”. The “why” part is the most important, but also hardest to tackle.

      • Talaraine
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        52 years ago

        Right on the money. Psychologically, the best defense is a good offense. Socially, it’s not the best choice for building communities.

  • @m105@discuss.tchncs.de
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    92 years ago

    Well…there are a lot of things I don’t understand, but maybe I’m just weird in that way :)) I don’t understand why some people accept that what they know at this moment is enough and don’t try to learn new stuff and be better tomorrow than they are now. I don’t understand why some people choose to ignore creativity and event think that creative people are childish or even stupid. And also, I don’t understand why lots of people choose to be jackasses and act accordingly to others when it would be so easy do not do this.

  • Ignisnex
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    2 years ago

    Everyone seems to need instant gratification in every aspect of life. No one seems capable of thinking for more than 25 seconds into the future. The pervasive culture of “Fuck you, got mine”, and the rat race to the almighty dollar. I don’t get it, it’s sad, and it’s the driving force behind not wanting children. The world sucks, and I want to reduce suffering.

  • Call me Lenny/Leni
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    82 years ago

    Why “human nature” takes a higher priority than “common sense”.

    Human history is rife with people fueling vicious cycles, most notably surrounding conflicts between certain groups of people like we see today. These cycles are excused under the crutch of “human nature” but wouldn’t exist if those people stepped back and thought “wait a minute”.

    When I was little, me and my siblings were taught that our outcomes are our responsibility and that our physical/neurological/psychological shortcomings are no excuse for a member of society, so when I see someone talk about someone having done something wrong and say “it’s only human nature”, I just want to say “dude, I’m a woman with several medical conditions and yet you’re worse than I am if you use the plain fact that someone is human to justify their behavior”.

  • PlasterAnalyst
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    72 years ago

    People that sit in air conditioned offices and do 3 hours of work all day get paid more than people who work on the factory floor for 12 hours with minimal breaks. Makes no sense.

    • @MrBubbles96@lemmy.ml
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      52 years ago

      Something something “you’re paid more for what ya know/your expertise on something vs just being an easily replacable cog in a machine”.

      Not saying I agree with it all that much, but I think that’s the general idea, anyways.

    • Limitless_screaming
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      2 years ago

      It takes more work to get the 3hour job, so the job itself is easier. It takes less work to get the 12hour job, so the job is harder.

      Less people can get to the “easier” job, so those people are seen as more valuable.

      • PlasterAnalyst
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        22 years ago

        I’m talking about a typical unskilled office job. The kind that will easily be replaced by ai in the next decade.

    • SuiXi3D
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      12 years ago

      It really doesn’t. Sure, some designer in an ivory tower may have designed the product, but they sure as hell aren’t the person that builds hundreds of them.

    • tygerprints
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      2 years ago

      I’ve yet to see the big wigs even do 3 hours of actual work during a work day, let alone the kind of physical labor that factory floor workers have to perform all day long. In the last company I worked for (and I’m now retired) there were 34 managers on my floor, and 3 of us doing sales, customer service, repair, delivery, and distribution for the company. The managers mostly spent time on Amazon, but often had meetings to decide what they could do to prompt us to work harder with more duties.