I'm fine with being alphas and im fine being around betas. But one thing I can't stand are those omegas.
I'm fine with being alphas and im fine being around betas. But one thing I can't stand are those omegas.
I used alpha as a shorthand for people that has a "my way or the highway" attitude, aka people with high dominance scores. Myth is covering them fairly well. That doesn't mean that they don't respect authority (some don't but that's a another trait), authority is one way to keep them in line. What it means is that they want things their way and will insist on keeping it that way. Ask them for 5 minutes of their time for a question and you might be granted it a day later, while the rest takes the question now as the default. You can work with them well, but a lot of it is working around them and adapting to their terms. In a conflict they'll mostly pick battle. That also means that many of them crash and burn because they picked the wrong battle.
Clever stance.
Karl X of Sweden is a prime example of a war junkie. He basically found his calling after his first battle, first time of being truely alive, from being a bit reluctant towards war before that. Did I mention that he started quite a bit of wars?
We are all aware that the senses can be deceived, the eyes fooled. But how can we be sure our senses are not being deceived at any particular time, or even all the time? Might I just be a brain in a tank somewhere, tricked all my life into believing in the events of this world by some insane computer? And does my life gain or lose meaning based on my reaction to such solipsism?
Project PYRRHO, Specimen 46, Vat 7
Activity Recorded M.Y. 2302.22467
TERMINATION OF SPECIMEN ADVISED
Imagine then my platoon in the military officer training program... 50 alphas being tossed in together under extremely though circumstances.
It took some weeks to solve the pecking order, but we did!!
Not that the pecking order was linear, it all depended on the task. Everyone around me shut up and listened when we were skiing, as an example, because they knew I had experience and knowledge they did not. Still though, the one highest in the pecking order ALLOWED me to step forwards there and then.
I don't find alpha/beta/omega thinking misleading at all. In fact, it has helped tremendously in my life to have that perspective. Being strong willed and autistic makes you strong willed and autistic. No more no less.
Getting the people around you to bend to your will, has however nothing to do with stubbornest or autism. They need to look up to you, and few looks up to an autistic guy, no?
Wrong. You are not an alpha because you are stubborn, you are an alpha if you can make people do what you want them to do. Gladly!!In some ways I would be classified as alpha male, in that I tend to go against the grain, will stand up to anybody over just about anything, would fight everybody on the few occasions when I used to get drunk, etc. And yet in other ways I would not be classified as alpha male. For example I prefer to be on casually good terms with people rather than trying to exert power over them, I don't go out of my way to be the head guy in the group, etc.
People are more complicated than these notions of being alpha or beta, our social intricacies are incomparable to other pack animals.
Wrong. 4 betas can work together, sure. But 3 betas and one alpha will speed up the process if they need to solve a problem.
Are you the one in your friendship group that the other adhere to? Do you make decisions for the group and have them follow? If so, you are an alpha.
Are you looking to someone for confirmation before you make decisions for the group when out with friends? Then you are a beta.
Are you just tagging along, never making decisions for the group as a whole when out with friends, you are an omega.
Clear example:
4 guys are out together.
Alpha: Come on guys, drink up and let's go to that other bar.
Beta: (to alpha) Don't you think it's time to go to that other bar?
Omega: Drinks up and gets ready to leave when the group so will.
I sincerely look down on omegas. Grow some balls!!
They shut up even if they have expertise knowledge, unless being asked directly. Flaming idiots.
Granted though, they rarely have expertise knowledge of anything, and are generally meaningless in a group. Except for doing the mundane tasks, perhaps. Gah!!
Unless I am mistaken the OP was not about the good effects war and/or military training can have one men, but the fact that there used to be a time when it helped build the character of a man. And to some extent that is true. People who have been trained and served are generally fitter, tougher and calmer and more in control that most who haven't.
But honestly there are other simpler ways to build character. Even the type of character those medieval soldiers used to have (if at all that is what we even need today).
The way I see it, boy should grow up to be tough, but not brutal. Some degree of sensitivity is required. They should have courage aplenty but also enough sense to remember that the stupid suicidal sort of courage needs to be broken out only in the most extreme cases. And they should also have a good measure of civility and common courtesy. Something akin to modern day chivalry.
And IMHO that is something that can be taught at home. Obligatory military service is not even required. Learn all this can easily be a part of growing up. Of course to teach this the parents should themselves have these qualities in the first place.
The horizon is nothing save the limit of our sight.
Still maintain that crying on the pitch should warrant a 3 match ban
... Yeah, because the screening catch 100 out of 100?? Aight?
You think suicidal candidates go "I am suicidal"?
Just admit that you have a lousy conscript training - and that you openly don't even respect your own country and its traditions - for adherence to a multicultural society... And move on with your life.
Last edited by Kadagar_AV; 05-03-2014 at 22:01.
The preliminary screening at sesjon(no idea how to translate) catches the most obvious ones, ie. everyone with a history of mental illness. You also need to talk to a shrink there, which weeds out some more.
The recruit period(the first month or so), catches most of the remaining. IIRC, my squad lost 3 out of 20 or so, with at least one of them sent home for being a nutcase(the other was a pacifist, and I can't remember the last one).
To summarize, if you're going to compare anything, you would need to exclude everyone with a history of mental illness prior to age 18 from the control group. When that's done, the result is at least high enough to get the brass' attention, seeing as how mental illness after serving is actually taken seriously now.
....And the risk of suicides is the reason my service rifle in the home guard doesn't have a firing pin.
As for the comment on lousiness, well, I think that's a little too pathetic to comment on.
Last edited by HoreTore; 05-03-2014 at 22:09.
Still maintain that crying on the pitch should warrant a 3 match ban
Conscript talk with conscript knowledge.
Suicidal people are more prone to join the army than not.
If army keep suicidal statistics on par - it's a damn miracle.
No screening in the world can catch suicidal people who DO NOT openly state they are suicidal - like most people wont.
GAH, why am I arguing with a ******* Norwegian conscript who are adamant to prove me wrong while making a fool of his own case?
Last edited by Kadagar_AV; 05-03-2014 at 22:25.
I am simply amazed at the wealth of sources you have used to back up your claim that suicidal persons have a higher concentration in the army than elsewhere.
I am also amazed at the academic backing you gave for your claim that spotting a suicidal person is impossible unless they openly state it. I suggest you notify the psychological association, it looks like quite a number of them are surplus personnel. After all, all they need to do is ask a simple question.
Last edited by HoreTore; 05-03-2014 at 22:31.
Still maintain that crying on the pitch should warrant a 3 match ban
Still maintain that crying on the pitch should warrant a 3 match ban
You are probably both right. People with suicidal tendencies are more likely to join the army, and the experience of army life makes people more likely to be driven to suicide. The two positions are not mutually exclusive.
At the end of the day politics is just trash compared to the Gospel.
PTSD makes you more likely to commit suicide, and PTSD is more common among veterans than others.
As for suicidal persons being impossible to spot, that is of course complete nonsense. Psychologists starts probing for suicidal thoughts from at least puberty, and it's quite a lot more complicated than just asking them if they're suicidal. I work at a school with a higher than normal concentration of such students, so I know the drill. Anyway, these things are of course logged, and the army won't take them in.
Still maintain that crying on the pitch should warrant a 3 match ban
Conscript talk with conscript knowledge.
Suicidal people are more prone to join the army than not.
If army keep suicidal statistics on par - it's a damn miracle.
No screening in the world can catch suicidal people who DO NOT openly state they are suicidal - like most people wont.
GAH, why am I arguing with a ******* Norwegian conscript who are adamant to prove me wrong while making a fool of his own case?
<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< This is what I wrote before. It still stands, and what you wrote is BS coming from a conscript who have no clue what so ever.
lol.
The suicidal tag is latched onto students long before they're open about their thoughts. The very idea that you have to say suicide in order for a psychologist to understand it is just absolute rubbish. Psychologists are slightly more clever than that. I assume you just disregarded the paper I gave on methods to uncover suicidal thoughts? I'll give you a clue: it was longer than the sentence "are you planning to whack yourself?"
Added to that, the army bans you for a lot more than just suicidal thoughts; just about any record of mental illness will get you booted from service. And when you ban everyone with a history of teenage mental illness, you end up with a rather skewed population group. One where you would suspect a smaller amount of suicides.
Still maintain that crying on the pitch should warrant a 3 match ban
Last edited by Kadagar_AV; 05-04-2014 at 03:50.
Still maintain that crying on the pitch should warrant a 3 match ban
All this talk is weird. PTSD only occurs if the army goes to war if I'm not mistaken. If the army goes to war, people will also usually die in the war. In this case, the benefits of being in the army probably do not outweigh the downsides of having war, such as the cost of lives and possible destruction of stuff on either or both sides. When we just assume the army never goes to war anyway because we have reached such peaceful times (despite some of the rhetoric in the Ukraine thread), then having an army is probably the most expensive and ludicrous way to prevent suicides in the first place. And it's no surprise that brainwashing people and pretending to give them a useful purpose in life (and new friends) can remove their suicidal thoughts.
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"Topic is tired and needs a nap." - Tosa Inu
We do not sow.
Finally, someone who GETS me... I should put this in my sig - but RVG's idiocy still just happens to be soooo juicy...
Anyway, if you want to follow me as a apprentice or do I dare say, disciple... The first thing you have to do is put a cucumber in your ear. Not a whole one, silly, just enough so it fits neatly, and of course only in the left ear.
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