At one end of the #narcissism spectrum, people may be confident & charming. In the middle, people may be overly focused on seeking out status, success, & admiration, with a need to appear special or superior. At the extreme end, is a disorder...
As a disorder, people can be self-centred, grandiose & destructive.
People with narcissistic personality disorder tend to overestimate their abilities and exaggerate their achievements. And they are surprised or angry when others don’t notice their accomplishments.
They need constant confirmation of their value, specialness or importance. They may have fantasies about power, success, having perfect lives or relationships, believing these are not only achievable but deserved.
When their status or superiority is challenged they can respond with extreme anger, rage or belittling the person and their opinion. They find it difficult to tolerate the thought they may be flawed or vulnerable in some way.
In relationships, they can have exceedingly high expectations of devotion from partners and friends, but may themselves be low in empathy and lack of awareness of others’ needs. They may be envious of and unable to celebrate the success of others, and respond by devaluing them.
Certain experiences in childhood are also more likely to lead to narcissistic personality disorder. These might be either particularly negative, such as trauma or rejection, or overly positive, such as excessive praise or being constantly told you have extraordinary abilities.
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I've seen Eddie Izzard live many times, & loved every show. But I'm really not keen on *anyone* who knows fuck-all about #Sheffield or its people being parachuted in (Eddie did *one* year at Sheffield Uni in the early 1980s) - no matter which Party they represent.
Let's have a look at some proud Sheffielders who have made a significant contribution to Sheffield & its people, standing as candidates to be Sheffield Central's next MP.
First up, qualified teacher, solicitor & community activist, Abtisam Mohamed.
A large number of people are counted as 'inactive', rather than 'unemployed', because they are not job-seeking or available to start work.
The inactivity rate is up 0.6% on the quarter at 21.7%, driven by long-term sickness among older people & by students choosing not to work.
“This presents a headache to the government and Bank of England,” said Thomas Pugh, economist at the audit firm RSM, adding: “The government has no chance of meeting its 2.5% growth target without getting more people back into work.”
On 7th October, 2022, news broke that Westminster student union has been accused of “racial segregation” after banning white students from #BlackHistoryMonth.
This thread is about truth, the culture war, the UK's broken news media, & the amplification of hate.
On 7th October, the non-dom billionaire-owned Telegraph broke the story, followed the next day by the same story appearing in the non-dom billionaire-owned Mail.
Both newspapers quoted Dr Neil Thin, a social anthropology lecturer at Edinburgh University.
Dr Neil Thin said it was “tragic” to see a UK university “copying the racial segregationism that we have previously seen in South African & USA education systems”, adding: “It is bitterly ironic to see the rhetoric of ‘safe spaces’ abused to justify racial segregation.”
On 10 October 1937, British aristocratic fascist leader Oswald Mosley was knocked unconscious and hospitalised in Liverpool by a stone thrown by anti-fascists who attacked a Nazi meeting at which he had attempted to address the crowd.
The Glasgow Herald newspaper reported: "Sir Oswald Mosley was hit on the head by a stone and knocked semi-conscience immediately he stood on the top of a loud-speaker van to address an open-air meeting at Queens Drive, Liverpool, yesterday."
"As the van was being driven to a piece of waste land, hundreds of missiles were thrown, Sir Oswald, had not had time to utter a word when a large stone hit him on the temple and he fell on his face."
Simon Springer's 2016 book, 'The Discourse of Neoliberalism: An Anatomy of a Powerful Idea' explores the internal workings of capitalism’s most infamous contemporary offspring by dissecting the diverse scholarly interpretations of #neoliberalism in HE.
The book offers a discursive understanding wherein political economic approaches to neoliberalism are joined with poststructuralist interpretations in an attempt to overcome the ongoing ideological impasse that prevents the articulation of a more vibrant solidarity on the Left.
Reading neoliberalism as a discourse better equips us to understand the power of this variegated economic formation as an expansive process of social-spatial transformation that is intimately bound up with the production of poverty, inequality, and violence across the globe.
The Right often attempts to distract & divide voters by constructing an imaginary 'crisis', offering a scapegoat & a misleading & simplistic mischaracterisation of an act/process. Today, the Mail offers #decolonisation, without saying what it is.
#Decolonising the curriculum means expanding it to consider a wider range of voices, perspectives & thinkers within a subject. It is about informing & telling the whole story about any given subject – not 'erasing' it, as the right-wing press & politicians would have us believe.
#Decolonisation not only refers to the complete removal of the domination of external forces within a geographical space, but it also refers to decolonisation of the mind from the colonisers' (usually Eurocentric) ideas – ideas that usually made the colonised seem inferior.