“An idea is a point of departure and no more. As soon as you elaborate it, it becomes transformed by thought.”—Pablo Picasso
Vanilla 1.1.4 is a product of Lussumo. More Information: Documentation, Community Support.
Fareed, I really wish you were honest in your reporting. It is
people like you, that stear people to vote the way they do. To say Trump
wants to ban all Muslims is incorrect. If you would show ten more
seconds of the clip, he would say, until we can find out who these
people are, that we just let in. You cannot absolutely believe everyone,
just because they say they want asylum. You actually have to verify
that they are freeing persecution. There are people out there that will
not tell the truth. You, unfortunately are one of them. We stopped
immigration from west Africa during the Ebola, so people wouldn get
sick. I didn hear you say anything about that as racist. If Trump can
stop one terrorist, by finding out their true intention, so be it.
Please start reporting everything, and not part of what someone says. It
really makes you look like a racist yourself. Thank you
Taking this line of reasoning a step further, diminished distress in
the face of extremely violent or victimizing situations could make an
individual more likely to engage in violence involving firearms by
removing the distress normally caused by extremely violent situations,
we remove an individual's natural tendencies towards empathy in such
situations, emotions that would otherwise act as a natural barrier
against causing harm towards others. Basically, violence seems an
increasingly acceptable choice.
The promotion and maintenance of mental health is an increasingly
important societal issue. Previous research has shown that
identification with social groups is positively associated with adult
mental wellbeing, with multiple group identifications being particularly
beneficial. The aim of the current study was to investigate whether the
same is true for adolescents. 1111 Scottish secondary school students
aged 13 17 completed a questionnaire investigating mental health
symptoms and the extent of their identification with their family,
school, and friendship groups. Higher identification with each group
predicted better mental health. There was also an additive effect of
group identification, with the odds of reporting psychiatric disturbance
decreasing for every additional group with which participants
identified strongly. These effects held even when age, gender, and group
contact were controlled for. Our findings have implications for the
prevention and treatment of mental problems, offering an alternative to
traditional ways of viewing mental illness in adolescence and beyond.