. WW: June 1, 2015Mode(s)Hatred is an developed and published by Destructive Creations that was released on June 1, 2015 on. The player character is a mass-killer who begins a 'genocide crusade' to kill as many human beings as possible. The developer described Hatred as a reaction to video game aesthetic trends such as, politeness, vivid color,.
Hatred - Traduzione del vocabolo e dei suoi composti, e discussioni del forum. These examples are from the Cambridge English Corpus and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
Its October 2014 announcement trailer was characterized as 'controversial' by multiple video game journalists. The game was shortly removed by from their service due to its extremely violent content but was later brought back with a personal apology from. It was greenlit for a second time on December 29, 2014 and released on June 1, 2015.Upon release Hatred received generally negative reviews in video game press. Some critics panned the game as being repetitive and lacking variation, also criticizing its violent and controversial nature, although some minor praise went towards its gameplay and mechanics.
'The Antagonist' (center-right on screenshot) engaging a massacre. 's interiors can be explored and destroyed.Hatred is a presented in a in which the player character is a mass-murdering villain who 'hates this world, and the human worms feasting on its carcass' and embarks on a 'genocide crusade' against the entire human race. The player can carry three weapons and an assortment of grenades, as well as drive some vehicles.
Is regenerated by performing on incapacitated people; the moves made to kill those victims involve cinematic switches of camera perspectives.If the player is killed, the level restarts entirely unless the player completed additional sidequests that provide a limited number of respawn points. The character's voice acting is deliberately kept to a minimum, with his ideology and motivations largely left open to interpretation.Plot The plot of Hatred revolves around a man whose name and background are not given, with him only known as 'The Antagonist'. Disgusted by human and general existence, the Antagonist decides to start a 'one-way trip' spree of killings in.From his up to, the man leaves behind himself a trail of death made up of civilians and officers, forcing protectors of society to hunt him down and put an end to his murderous mission. During a train escape from the police, he plans to carry out his mission by committing suicide and bringing millions of people to death, blowing up a near the city. For this, however, he needs a, which he gets by storming the Fort O'Connor, exterminating several guards, and then heading to the nuclear power plant.He manages to enter the nuclear power plant, killing security guards and overloading the.
Shortly before the end, arriving soldiers shoot him multiple times in the chest while he laughs victoriously. As he collapses, severely injured, and close to death, he activates the trigger; the power plant explodes, shaving New York City to the ground and killing millions of people. His mission is thus completed.Development.
Source: DrimaFilm/Shutterstock, several members of a group calling itself “Respect the Flag” were sentenced to prison for terrorizing guests at the birthday party of an 8-year-old African-American girl in Georgia. Pointing a shotgun, they yelled racial slurs and death threats at guests, including children.It wasn’t an isolated incident. According to a recent, there are at least 917 organized hate groups in the United States.
The study, based on data collected by the (SPLC) and presented in their annual census of hate groups, looked at the presence of hate groups on Twitter. SPLC found that the number of likes and comments on hate group accounts grew by 900 percent in the last two years. This phenomenon is known as, a term coined by to describe our tendency to reject what we don’t like about ourselves. Psychologist Brad Reedy further describes as our need to be good, which causes us to project 'badness' outward and attack it:'We developed this method to survive, for any 'badness' in us put us at risk for being rejected and alone. So we repressed the things that we thought were bad (what others told us or suggested to us that was unlovable and morally reprehensible) — and we employ hate and judgment towards others. We think that is how one rids oneself of undesirable traits, but this method only perpetuates repression which leads to many mental health issues.
Lack of Self-compassionThe antidote to hate is compassion — for others as well as ourselves. Self-compassion means that we accept the whole self. “If we find part of ourselves unacceptable, we tend to attack others in order to defend against the threat,” says Reedy.
“If we are okay with ourselves, we see others’ behaviors as ‘about them’ and can respond with compassion. If I kept hate in my heart for another, I would have to hate myself as well. It is only when we learn to hold ourselves with compassion that we may be able to demonstrate it toward others.”.
'Acts of hate are attempts to distract oneself from feelings such as helplessness, powerlessness, injustice, inadequacy. Hate is grounded in some sense of perceived threat. It is an attitude that can give rise to hostility and aggression toward individuals or groups. Like much of anger, it is a reaction to and distraction from some form of inner pain. The individual consumed by hate may believe that the only way to regain some sense of power over his or her pain is to preemptively strike out at others. In this context, each moment of hate is a temporary reprieve from inner suffering.'
Societal and Cultural FactorsThe answer to why we hate, according to Silvia Dutchevici, LCSW, president and founder of the Critical Center, lies not only in our psychological makeup or family history, but also in our cultural and political history. “We live in a war culture that promotes violence, in which is a way of life,” she says. “We fear connecting because it requires us to reveal something about ourselves. We are taught to hate the enemy — meaning anyone different than us — which leaves little room for vulnerability and an exploration of hate through discourse and understanding. In our current society, one is more ready to fight than to resolve conflict.
Peace is seldom the option.”. Really - I haven't notice it from liberals but from the GOP who i will never vote for again. I got this article coming up because I was wondering why piggish individuals go ballistic if someone likes a movie they don't and have the intelligence and depth to see spirituality and ideas in it if they don't ( the movie in question being A Wrinkle in Time even though it is not my all time favorite by any means, I could find things to like about it).
The so-called 'Christian(s)' on the post threw a hissy fit because I liked a movie they didn't. I now don't understand why i have ever liked any of the citizens of this 'country' ( a perfectly mindless theocracy - lmao) and will never care about the likes and dislikes of its citizens again regarding books and movies and will never stand up for their rights to have said likes/dislikes. The point is that I have never had a liberal be rude or piggish to me based on preferences or gender or religious affiliation ( all the hate has come from conservatives). I don't really get much into Marvel movies although I liked Doctor Strange and Dark Phoenix. I don't make a point of seeing those type of movies unless a family member wants me to go to one of them. The most recent films at the theater that I really liked were Onward, Little Women, and Emma - quite different from the Marvel universe.
I like just about any Jane Austen adaptations. I don't care to watch movies that are specifically religious - such as the God's Not Dead ones or I Still Believe - but don't mind movies that have some religious content in them such as Emma ( it has several short pieces of music that mention Emma) and Little Women ( with church buildings in the movie) and Tolkien ( a movie apparently not sufficiently ' religious' for some conservative Christians. It did not show his friendship with C.S. Lewis because the movie was mainly about the time period in his life before he met C.S.
I go to movies for entertainment and not to be preached to. Disfranchisement and hate. In other words, the more one feels their voice and opinion are being dismissed or ignored on matters of importance they believe in.the more they hate those who are not listening to them. The matters one believes in as 'important' may or may not change throughout one's lifetime - for whatever reason(s) - however, increased feelings of disfranchisement (seems to) lead to increased feelings of isolation and hate.and stronger desire for a sense of human belonging - which may explain the increase in off/online hate groups, just wanting to be 'heard' and 'taken seriously' about 'XYZ' concerns, complaints.Also, escapism seems to be a factor, too. Hate can be an addicting emotion.further reinforced by feelings of belonging to hate groups. You don't see a lot of happy, hateful people walking around.
There's nothing to envy about misery, that's for sure. Hate seems to be a self-serving emotion, a self-fulfilling prophecy drenched in confirmation bias and self-inflicted wounds. Hatred is a lower-level function of human awareness.
It is necessary as it alerts us to that which we find incompatible to survival, providing a strong incentive to take corrective action. Corrective action is key, here.
However, demonizing, i.e., hating and blaming the 'other' for its own sake, while nothing new, has become the norm now, particularly of the Left and organizations like the SPLC. We should understand the demonization of anyone for what it is-an emotional attack that does not seek a solution but rather the eradication of an opponent. There is no honesty or good faith in such a position, whether it's promulgated by a group or a loner.
Individuals, acting in accordance to their own conscience do not stoop to demonizing. Honesty and self-respect are purely individual attributes that cannot be conferred by any group or conquest. 'Character' used to be a term that implied such qualities, but I think honesty and self-respect are more to the point in defining personal strength as opposed to personal weakness. Well I've been worried about myself because I hate Donald Trump. I hate his foul language which has destroyed the respect of his office, I hate what he has done to immigrant children at the border, I hate the way he calls people names, I hate the way he talks about women, I hate that he thinks he is above the law and use and abuse his power. So I guess this is because I hate myself? I don't think I can accept that.
I value honesty, integrity and love for others. I guess I AM prejudiced against him, and Mitch McConell and Lindsey Graham because I do not value their behavior. So I will sit here and see if I can compassion for them to heal my hate.NOT. If someone can say, 'I hate spiders/snakes/willow trees.,' then why can't they hate other people-whether a group or individuals or (nearly) all other people? There's no reason people can't hate other people (obviously some of us do), even though many cultures want to promote enough harmony within themselves to keep order. I don't advocate hate, but constructing elaborate but unprovable justifications for others' tastes and then claiming our idea constructs are objective answers for why others feel what they do seems to me fundamentally contrary to science.If someone isn't 'sick' for hating fish or shrubs or any other class of living beings, I don't see any reason they must be sick/ill or whatever other label you want to slap on them because the rest of us happen to belong to the group they strongly dislike.
Recognizing hate as natural human behavior doesn't have to mean most of us must embrace it or we shouldn't protect the vulnerable from hateful ACTS. I'm concerned that economic conditions are not front and center in your analysis of why we hate. History shows that in bad economic times, hate baiting gets the full force of attention from discourse makers in politics and media. Matches are thrown into degrading economic and social conditions. There is an observed pattern.1.
If SPLC data can be used, we can correlate it to economics and such data as unemployment, under employment, long-term unemployment. There have already been university studies of gun violence, mass shootings, and employment conditions in places where that happens.2. Neuroscientists (I guess different field from psychologists) also studied how scarcity of time and money affects brain function. When we are afraid, our brain functions shift to the amygdala, this is the fight or flight stem part of the brain left over from our reptilian days.
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Our higher order logical brain gets less of our attention. We lose self control and other rational functions.All these factors should be here. We have a terrible economic situation for a growing number of us who are falling out of the middle class. This affects people particularly in the heartland which has been drained of capital and bank credit. There is a reason pols and alt right hate baiting discourses are getting money thrown at them right now, and media focus on it. The same thing happened in the 1930s.Finally, the Arthashastra perhaps the how to manual for divide and rule to control economies recommends to kings and rulers that they foment hate and discord.
There are no coincidences here as a large% of US citizens are being downgraded in quality of life and standard of living to match up with lesser developed economies who they are effectively competing with in a global labor market.I guess it shows up in your 'fills a void'. Yes, watching one's family, friends, and community degrade with poverty, hopelessness, opioides, etc. In comparison to the time of one's grandparents and parents must generate a void in the amygdala brain.Economic conditions that affect our brains should be a higher order factor on your list about why we hate.
And, the political motivations of the few who need to hold onto all the resources using all the politicians, media, blogosphere and social media that propagate and promulgate hate content as an observable pattern need to be accounted for also.