Tuesday, February 7, 2017

Political Differences Between the Left and Right




Political Differences Between the Left and Right


For most Americans, we our level of anxiety rises at the thought of turning on the TV, internet or radio because our nation’s turn of events which destroys our sense of safety. This negativity affects all areas of our lives by draining our desire to improve and achieve what we want out of life. The left expects ill-tempered, disobedience, and apprehensive behaviors for the excitement to spew weakness, as a strength of character. They complain how easily offended they have become and a need for safe spaces by committing criminal acts against society.
  
Weakness is not strength. The strength of mind is a strength. The strength of character is the ability to deal with negative issues that come into our daily lives.                                               

People on the left see the world as a conducive conduct of anti-social behavior between personal values and criminal behaviors, such as the craving to engross in thrill seeking criminal acts.  This narcissistic culture manipulates and bullies the world by its worship and fixation that insanity is sanity. This culture accuses the right of acting unsympathetic and inhuman because they are not eager to contribute to irrational behaviors. The right understands that making bad life choices and self -destructive act will not satisfy one’s life. They consistently practice self-control because of the beliefs in free will, personal choice, responsibility, conscientiousness, and protective factors. The Right attains a strong work ethic and moral conduct to reach for their potential, self-worth, and self-actualization. Happiness is earned by the way one lives their life by making better decisions and better life choices.

Whereas liberals believe life factors choose one’s choices in time, situation, and geographical settings. They dislike and dismiss social norms and push the boundaries by the victim ideology that circumstances have robbed them of their goals creating resentment and entitlement. They view the world as an environmental, racist, and oppressive. They dwell on hopeless, misfortune and adversity. For this reason, they justify their acts of criminality by rejecting society’s social norms by blaming the government, denial of one’s actions, and power control tendency.
There are two types of criminality (Wright, et al., 2016)
1.       Impulsive criminals are opportunists such as theft, and grand theft auto.
2.       Dark triad personality consists of four traits: narcissists, Machiavellians, psychopaths, everyday sadists, who enjoys violence. These traits set them apart for their lack of emotions and callous behavior. They have no regard for others and will use people as pawns in their own game, as a violent tool for retaliation or pleasure. In close examination, this theoretical idea uncovers it’s beginning to children with conduct disorders, and within this group of adolescents there is a smaller group with a dangerous trait in callousness and unemotional.  They are manipulative, physically violent, and abusive treatment toward others. 
 
Academia has excluded biological studies of behavior for the rational of good intent to keep out Nazism. In truth, it is a deceit to deny their political intent. Taking this into consideration, 1960s war rioters make up most social science academia, who lean toward liberalism. As such, they are teaching our children the parallel activities of today’s rioters, who emulate the 1960s rioter criminal behaviors. For example, execution of police officers, domestic bombings, riots, assaults, and public destruction.  The left scholars, media, and leaders glorify political violence for their own purpose by excusing the perpetrator’s acts and idolization of Mao, Che Guevera, and Castro. They continue to demonize the right because they consider the right as malevolent (Wright, et al., 2016). Therefore, the right is the enemy and the left will increasingly justify their behavior my means of violence. 




Reference

Wright, J. P., Morgan, M. A., Almeida, P. R., Almosaed, N. F., Moghrabi, S. S., & Bashatah, F. (2016). Malevolent Forces: Self-Control, the Dark Triad, and Crime. SAGE.

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