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I am a troglodyte, not a Luddite. I am incapable of learning, I am not averse to it.Britney Spears said:Hey, as long as you're referring to healthy skepticism and not a blind comitment to ignorance, we're on the same page.
so, you're diggin' where I'm comin' from now, then?You sure had me fooled when you asked a string of questions about polling and then didn't bother to look for any of the answers that were easily found. I guess I just got the impression you didn't want to find out.
I don't 'fear' the media. I simply don't trust them. They are not the unbiased Fifth Estate they claim to be. They are an industry. Just as I don't trust the tobacco industry, (even though I am an addict of their products. Or perhaps because of it.), I similarly don't trust the media. In fact, I trust them less as they claim to be unbiased, whereas the tobacco scoundrels have since admitted that they are such.I was referring to your seemingly irrational fear of "the media".
then don't throw the word 'paranoia' around, dude.No one said anything about your real name or identity. That's your business, as mine is mine.
my suspicions are.Simple suspiciousness is not paranoia--not if it is based on past experience or expectations learned from the experience of others.
I see it as a wonderful place, full of good people, with some real asshats runnin' around loose.An unmistakable sign of paranoia is continual mistrust. People with paranoid personality disorder are constantly on their guard because they see the world as a threatening place.
I have been proven wrong so many times I've lost count. I probably couldn't count the number of times I've admitted my mistakes on this site alone.persons with paranoid personality disorder...cannot accept blame, not even mild criticism...even when they are at fault
I am a fun-loving twit.In addition to being argumentative and uncompromising, the people with paranoid personality disorder are often emotionally cut off from other people. They appear cold and, in fact, often avoid becoming intimate with others.
Kendler, K.S.; Spitzer, R.L.; and Williams, J.B.W. Psychotic disorders in DSM-III-R. The American Journal of Psychiatry 146:953-962, 1989.
Munro, A. Delusional (paranoid) disorders. Canadian Journal of Psychiatry Vol. 33(5):399-404, 1988.
Opjordsmoen, S. Long-term course and outcome in delusional disorder. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica Vol. 78(5):576-586, 1988.
Schizophrenia Bulletin Vol 7, No. 4, 1981 (available in most medical libraries).
Sorensen, D.J.; Paul, G.L.; and Mariotto, M.J. Inconsistencies in paranoid functioning, premorbid adjustment, and chronicity: Question of diagnostic criteria. Schizophrenia Bulletin Vol. 14(2):323-336, 1988.
Williams, J.G. Cognitive intervention for a paranoid personality disorder. Psychotherapy Vol. 25(4):570-575, 1988.
(Yeah, I'm doing some research on it. Maybe my book-learnin' is making me hypersensitive, and paranoid?)