acemusic415
Member
2176 brew.
yeah basically that, and those kinds of jokes have more to do with immaturity than any actual prejudicesim from the north shore area and yes u do get a few ppl who'll look down on you for those reasons although most of us just make jokes such not wanting to go to the west cos we dont want to get stabbed etc (kinda like the deal with racism, everybody makes racist jokes etc but actual racists are rare)
explainThat is true... to some extent.
That is true... to some extent.
Hardcore 5T Viet Gangstarrrrr. (keeping in line with this thread)Cabramatta 2166 rep.
Lol mate. Individuals aren't influenced to that extent. How much time do you spend on the street? Family/educational/ethnic(don't kill me)/cultural influences are much more prevalent.If an individual is to live in a region surrounded by violence, terror, fear...how will that influence the individual? The individual may either become like the violent people in his region..... or mentally break.
Now you're stereotyping that we're all stupid and are conformists.If an individual is to live in a region surrounded by violence, terror, fear...how will that influence the individual? The individual may either become like the violent people in his region..... or mentally break.
so what you're saying is you like to make broad assumptions and lack an understanding of people and the worldIf an individual is to live in a region surrounded by violence, terror, fear...how will that influence the individual? The individual may either become like the violent people in his region..... or mentally break.
Yes, but that's not the same thing as living in a certain place. The PTSD is mostly from seeing people being killed and maimed, and from doing 'soldier' work.I have some support to my broad assumption.
Is it true that many Australian soldiers who fought in the Vietnam War suffered (and maybe are still suffering) from posttraumatic stress disorder (a form of mental instability)?
Okay fine, we'll use your metaphor. So some soldiers in Vietnam came home and were later diagnosed with PTSD.
Are we then to assume that because a soldier fought in the Vietnam war, we can safely assume PTSD?
I don't think so.
So again, I see your point - yes, our environment influences us - but again I think we're getting away from the real point of contention, which is: "Can we assume certain traits of a person who has lived in a certain environment?" and I think the answer to that is, overall and in general - no.
You're both arguing the same point lol.We can't assume a person definitely has a certain trait due to certain environment....but we can assume the possibility of certain traits to develop within the individual due to certain environment... but of course, we can't assume 100%...
EDIT: In my previous posts, I did use words such as "likely" and "may" to indicate the uncertainly.
Wealthy people are associated with crime/violence/fear too. A drive-by occurred at John Ibrahim's home in Dover Heights in July. I'm sure his wealthy and affluent neighbours were perpetually influenced with the gun shots and violence that occurred. There's violence everywhere, just as there are drop-kicks everywhere. If people care where you're from, they're pretentious brats and you probably wouldn't want to be associating with them anyway. You both got the marks to be in that course, no one is better than the other.If an individual is to live in a region surrounded by violence, terror, fear...how will that influence the individual? The individual may either become like the violent people in his region..... or mentally break.