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People With Low Emotional Intelligence Tend To Hold Right-Wing Views, Study Says
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Oct 11, 2019 04:23:51   #
PeterS
 
So would throwing our Kurdish allies under the bus be due to a lack of emotional intelligence? Well, it certainly demonstrated a lack of empathy on the Kurdish part.

https://myframeworks.org/emotional-intelligence-tools/?gclid=EAIaIQobChMI0uHy0eGT5QIV8iCtBh3iWADGEAAYBCAAEgKJaPD_BwE

People who are emotionally intelligent tend to be empathetic, able to see different points of view, are open-minded, and bounce back from challenges, one expert told CNN.

"Some people think of emotional intelligence as a soft sk**l or the ability or the tendency to be nice. It's really about understanding what is going on for you in the moment so that you can make conscious choices about how you want to use your emotions and how you want to manage yourself and how you want to be seen in the world," said another.

Researchers in Belgium have linked a lack of emotional intelligence with right-wing political views, reports PsyPost. The study, published in Emotion, found that those who lack the ability to understand and manage emotions are more likely to have right-wing and prejudiced attitudes.

The concept of emotional intelligence was developed by Yale and the University of New Hampshire researchers back in 1990, and it's all about how emotions impact thinking.

People who are emotionally intelligent tend to be empathetic, able to see different points of view, are open-minded, and bounce back from challenges, one expert told CNN.

"Some people think of emotional intelligence as a soft sk**l or the ability or the tendency to be nice. It's really about understanding what is going on for you in the moment so that you can make conscious choices about how you want to use your emotions and how you want to manage yourself and how you want to be seen in the world," said another.

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Oct 11, 2019 04:43:33   #
Canuckus Deploracus Loc: North of the wall
 
PeterS wrote:
So would throwing our Kurdish allies under the bus be due to a lack of emotional intelligence? Well, it certainly demonstrated a lack of empathy on the Kurdish part.

https://myframeworks.org/emotional-intelligence-tools/?gclid=EAIaIQobChMI0uHy0eGT5QIV8iCtBh3iWADGEAAYBCAAEgKJaPD_BwE

People who are emotionally intelligent tend to be empathetic, able to see different points of view, are open-minded, and bounce back from challenges, one expert told CNN.

"Some people think of emotional intelligence as a soft sk**l or the ability or the tendency to be nice. It's really about understanding what is going on for you in the moment so that you can make conscious choices about how you want to use your emotions and how you want to manage yourself and how you want to be seen in the world," said another.

Researchers in Belgium have linked a lack of emotional intelligence with right-wing political views, reports PsyPost. The study, published in Emotion, found that those who lack the ability to understand and manage emotions are more likely to have right-wing and prejudiced attitudes.

The concept of emotional intelligence was developed by Yale and the University of New Hampshire researchers back in 1990, and it's all about how emotions impact thinking.

People who are emotionally intelligent tend to be empathetic, able to see different points of view, are open-minded, and bounce back from challenges, one expert told CNN.

"Some people think of emotional intelligence as a soft sk**l or the ability or the tendency to be nice. It's really about understanding what is going on for you in the moment so that you can make conscious choices about how you want to use your emotions and how you want to manage yourself and how you want to be seen in the world," said another.
So would throwing our Kurdish allies under the bus... (show quote)


I have taken a number of EQ tests... Apparently I do well... But it is easy to see what the testers are looking for....

Once I did an honest test.... Scored high on honesty, loyalty and frankness... Extremely low on sympathy and empathy...

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Oct 11, 2019 05:21:35   #
tbutkovich
 
“Low emotional intelligence” is just another paraphrase for “wisdom,” something all conservatives have!

Reply
 
 
Oct 11, 2019 05:57:33   #
crazylibertarian Loc: Florida by way of New York & Rhode Island
 
PeterS wrote:
So would throwing our Kurdish allies under the bus be due to a lack of emotional intelligence? Well, it certainly demonstrated a lack of empathy on the Kurdish part.

https://myframeworks.org/emotional-intelligence-tools/?gclid=EAIaIQobChMI0uHy0eGT5QIV8iCtBh3iWADGEAAYBCAAEgKJaPD_BwE

People who are emotionally intelligent tend to be empathetic, able to see different points of view, are open-minded, and bounce back from challenges, one expert told CNN.

"Some people think of emotional intelligence as a soft sk**l or the ability or the tendency to be nice. It's really about understanding what is going on for you in the moment so that you can make conscious choices about how you want to use your emotions and how you want to manage yourself and how you want to be seen in the world," said another.

Researchers in Belgium have linked a lack of emotional intelligence with right-wing political views, reports PsyPost. The study, published in Emotion, found that those who lack the ability to understand and manage emotions are more likely to have right-wing and prejudiced attitudes.

The concept of emotional intelligence was developed by Yale and the University of New Hampshire researchers back in 1990, and it's all about how emotions impact thinking.

People who are emotionally intelligent tend to be empathetic, able to see different points of view, are open-minded, and bounce back from challenges, one expert told CNN.

"Some people think of emotional intelligence as a soft sk**l or the ability or the tendency to be nice. It's really about understanding what is going on for you in the moment so that you can make conscious choices about how you want to use your emotions and how you want to manage yourself and how you want to be seen in the world," said another.
So would throwing our Kurdish allies under the bus... (show quote)



Then I conclude that you have low EQ because you have no understanding of conservative views. You're a bigot

Reply
Oct 11, 2019 06:08:06   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
Sorry, but this reads all too similar to that of the nonsense that liberalism is a mental disorder.

I prefer/tend to stay away from stereotypical images of others.

Reply
Oct 11, 2019 07:01:40   #
ACP45 Loc: Rhode Island
 
PeterS wrote:
So would throwing our Kurdish allies under the bus be due to a lack of emotional intelligence? Well, it certainly demonstrated a lack of empathy on the Kurdish part.

https://myframeworks.org/emotional-intelligence-tools/?gclid=EAIaIQobChMI0uHy0eGT5QIV8iCtBh3iWADGEAAYBCAAEgKJaPD_BwE

People who are emotionally intelligent tend to be empathetic, able to see different points of view, are open-minded, and bounce back from challenges, one expert told CNN.

"Some people think of emotional intelligence as a soft sk**l or the ability or the tendency to be nice. It's really about understanding what is going on for you in the moment so that you can make conscious choices about how you want to use your emotions and how you want to manage yourself and how you want to be seen in the world," said another.

Researchers in Belgium have linked a lack of emotional intelligence with right-wing political views, reports PsyPost. The study, published in Emotion, found that those who lack the ability to understand and manage emotions are more likely to have right-wing and prejudiced attitudes.

The concept of emotional intelligence was developed by Yale and the University of New Hampshire researchers back in 1990, and it's all about how emotions impact thinking.

People who are emotionally intelligent tend to be empathetic, able to see different points of view, are open-minded, and bounce back from challenges, one expert told CNN.

"Some people think of emotional intelligence as a soft sk**l or the ability or the tendency to be nice. It's really about understanding what is going on for you in the moment so that you can make conscious choices about how you want to use your emotions and how you want to manage yourself and how you want to be seen in the world," said another.
So would throwing our Kurdish allies under the bus... (show quote)

==========

"So would throwing our Kurdish allies under the bus be due to a lack of emotional intelligence? Well, it certainly demonstrated a lack of empathy on the Kurdish part."

Perhaps we should examine the validity and necessity of sticking our nose in the Syrian regime change/ Kurdish problem in the first place.

If it was wrong to interfere in the sovereign affairs of another country to begin with, continuing that policy shows a profoundly "insane foreign policy" that needed to be corrected. The Turks, Syrians, and Kurds need to work out the situation for themselves. We do not have a horse in that race, and continuing to act as such does not have a bearing on emotional intelligence, or empathy. I can feel empathy for any group or minority that suffers persecution. There is a lot of that going around. It does not mean that it within our power or responsibility to attempt to fix every problem that exists in the world. Charity begins at home, and we certainly have enough of our own problems that need fixing.

Reply
Oct 11, 2019 07:06:11   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
ACP45 wrote:
==========

"So would throwing our Kurdish allies under the bus be due to a lack of emotional intelligence? Well, it certainly demonstrated a lack of empathy on the Kurdish part."

Perhaps we should examine the validity and necessity of sticking our nose in the Syrian regime change/ Kurdish problem in the first place.

If it was wrong to interfere in the sovereign affairs of another country to begin with, continuing that policy shows a profoundly "insane foreign policy" that needed to be corrected. The Turks, Syrians, and Kurds need to work out the situation for themselves. We do not have a horse in that race, and continuing to act as such does not have a bearing on emotional intelligence, or empathy. I can feel empathy for any group or minority that suffers persecution. There is a lot of that going around. It does not mean that it within our power or responsibility to attempt to fix every problem that exists in the world. Charity begins at home, and we certainly have enough of our own problems that need fixing.
========== br br "So would throwing our Kurd... (show quote)

Well said.

Reply
 
 
Oct 11, 2019 07:39:05   #
Canuckus Deploracus Loc: North of the wall
 
ACP45 wrote:
==========

"So would throwing our Kurdish allies under the bus be due to a lack of emotional intelligence? Well, it certainly demonstrated a lack of empathy on the Kurdish part."

Perhaps we should examine the validity and necessity of sticking our nose in the Syrian regime change/ Kurdish problem in the first place.

If it was wrong to interfere in the sovereign affairs of another country to begin with, continuing that policy shows a profoundly "insane foreign policy" that needed to be corrected. The Turks, Syrians, and Kurds need to work out the situation for themselves. We do not have a horse in that race, and continuing to act as such does not have a bearing on emotional intelligence, or empathy. I can feel empathy for any group or minority that suffers persecution. There is a lot of that going around. It does not mean that it within our power or responsibility to attempt to fix every problem that exists in the world. Charity begins at home, and we certainly have enough of our own problems that need fixing.
========== br br "So would throwing our Kurd... (show quote)


Well said

Reply
Oct 11, 2019 09:14:16   #
lpnmajor Loc: Arkansas
 
PeterS wrote:
So would throwing our Kurdish allies under the bus be due to a lack of emotional intelligence? Well, it certainly demonstrated a lack of empathy on the Kurdish part.

https://myframeworks.org/emotional-intelligence-tools/?gclid=EAIaIQobChMI0uHy0eGT5QIV8iCtBh3iWADGEAAYBCAAEgKJaPD_BwE

People who are emotionally intelligent tend to be empathetic, able to see different points of view, are open-minded, and bounce back from challenges, one expert told CNN.

"Some people think of emotional intelligence as a soft sk**l or the ability or the tendency to be nice. It's really about understanding what is going on for you in the moment so that you can make conscious choices about how you want to use your emotions and how you want to manage yourself and how you want to be seen in the world," said another.

Researchers in Belgium have linked a lack of emotional intelligence with right-wing political views, reports PsyPost. The study, published in Emotion, found that those who lack the ability to understand and manage emotions are more likely to have right-wing and prejudiced attitudes.

The concept of emotional intelligence was developed by Yale and the University of New Hampshire researchers back in 1990, and it's all about how emotions impact thinking.

People who are emotionally intelligent tend to be empathetic, able to see different points of view, are open-minded, and bounce back from challenges, one expert told CNN.

"Some people think of emotional intelligence as a soft sk**l or the ability or the tendency to be nice. It's really about understanding what is going on for you in the moment so that you can make conscious choices about how you want to use your emotions and how you want to manage yourself and how you want to be seen in the world," said another.
So would throwing our Kurdish allies under the bus... (show quote)


This is the type of nonsense that perpetuates and exacerbates the divide that is destroying this country. Admittedly, all sides use this kind of crap to make themselves feel better, but it is wrong no matter who uses it or why.

I know for a fact that you'll never turn someone to your point of view, by calling them stupid.

Reply
Oct 11, 2019 10:16:31   #
crazylibertarian Loc: Florida by way of New York & Rhode Island
 
lpnmajor wrote:
This is the type of nonsense that perpetuates and exacerbates the divide that is destroying this country. Admittedly, all sides use this kind of crap to make themselves feel better, but it is wrong no matter who uses it or why.

I know for a fact that you'll never turn someone to your point of view, by calling them stupid.



Amen to that. Don't forget deplorables and irredeemables. Progressives know they're better than conservatives and PeterS shows it, all the time in his posts. Look what's happening to Ellen DeGeneres. Kevyn has no problem with A****a's assaults.

Reply
Oct 11, 2019 10:25:37   #
crazylibertarian Loc: Florida by way of New York & Rhode Island
 
ACP45 wrote:
==========

"So would throwing our Kurdish allies under the bus be due to a lack of emotional intelligence? Well, it certainly demonstrated a lack of empathy on the Kurdish part."

Perhaps we should examine the validity and necessity of sticking our nose in the Syrian regime change/ Kurdish problem in the first place.

If it was wrong to interfere in the sovereign affairs of another country to begin with, continuing that policy shows a profoundly "insane foreign policy" that needed to be corrected. The Turks, Syrians, and Kurds need to work out the situation for themselves. We do not have a horse in that race, and continuing to act as such does not have a bearing on emotional intelligence, or empathy. I can feel empathy for any group or minority that suffers persecution. There is a lot of that going around. It does not mean that it within our power or responsibility to attempt to fix every problem that exists in the world. Charity begins at home, and we certainly have enough of our own problems that need fixing.
========== br br "So would throwing our Kurd... (show quote)



The Founders cautioned against entangling alliances. John Adams said that while we wish the rest of the world well in its pursuit of freedom, we are the stewards only of our own.

Interventionism became our foreign policy only with Woodrow Wilson and FDR, both progressives.

The CIA was founded under progressive president, Harry S. Truman with a split congress. Conservative Republican Sen. Robert Taft opposed it on the grounds that it would enable the executive to pursue foreign policy without congressional oversight. Talk about insightful.

The justification for it was the 'surprise' attack on Pearl Harbor, which was anything but. It was provoked and planned for at the highest levels of the FDR administration.

Reply
 
 
Oct 11, 2019 10:43:35   #
ACP45 Loc: Rhode Island
 
crazylibertarian wrote:
The Founders cautioned against entangling alliances. John Adams said that while we wish the rest of the world well in its pursuit of freedom, we are the stewards only of our own.

Interventionism became our foreign policy only with Woodrow Wilson and FDR, both progressives.

The CIA was founded under progressive president, Harry S. Truman with a split congress. Conservative Republican Sen. Robert Taft opposed it on the grounds that it would enable the executive to pursue foreign policy without congressional oversight. Talk about insightful.

The justification for it was the 'surprise' attack on Pearl Harbor, which was anything but. It was provoked and planned for at the highest levels of the FDR administration.
The Founders cautioned against entangling alliance... (show quote)



Reply
Oct 11, 2019 11:01:27   #
Radiance3
 
PeterS wrote:
So would throwing our Kurdish allies under the bus be due to a lack of emotional intelligence? Well, it certainly demonstrated a lack of empathy on the Kurdish part.

https://myframeworks.org/emotional-intelligence-tools/?gclid=EAIaIQobChMI0uHy0eGT5QIV8iCtBh3iWADGEAAYBCAAEgKJaPD_BwE

People who are emotionally intelligent tend to be empathetic, able to see different points of view, are open-minded, and bounce back from challenges, one expert told CNN.

"Some people think of emotional intelligence as a soft sk**l or the ability or the tendency to be nice. It's really about understanding what is going on for you in the moment so that you can make conscious choices about how you want to use your emotions and how you want to manage yourself and how you want to be seen in the world," said another.

Researchers in Belgium have linked a lack of emotional intelligence with right-wing political views, reports PsyPost. The study, published in Emotion, found that those who lack the ability to understand and manage emotions are more likely to have right-wing and prejudiced attitudes.

The concept of emotional intelligence was developed by Yale and the University of New Hampshire researchers back in 1990, and it's all about how emotions impact thinking.

People who are emotionally intelligent tend to be empathetic, able to see different points of view, are open-minded, and bounce back from challenges, one expert told CNN.

"Some people think of emotional intelligence as a soft sk**l or the ability or the tendency to be nice. It's really about understanding what is going on for you in the moment so that you can make conscious choices about how you want to use your emotions and how you want to manage yourself and how you want to be seen in the world," said another.
So would throwing our Kurdish allies under the bus... (show quote)


===================
Aha, when your Obama removed the US Special Forces in Iraq in 2011, that paved ways for ISIS to take over. Therefore he did not have any emotional intelligence, or sk**ls, the ability to be nice that is PeterS assessment. All of you were jumping out and down praising Barack until ISIS took over almost all areas of Irag and Syria until now harassing Syria. Slaughtered millions of Christians. So, your emotions are so artificial and unstable, violent, and dishonest as proven by the actions of your people.

Reply
Oct 11, 2019 11:06:21   #
Canuckus Deploracus Loc: North of the wall
 
Radiance3 wrote:
===================
Aha, when your Obama removed the US Special Forces in Iraq in 2011, that paved ways for ISIS to take over. Therefore he did not have any emotional intelligence, or sk**ls, the ability to be nice that is PeterS assessment. All of you were jumping out and down praising Barack until ISIS took over almost all areas of Irag and Syria until now harassing Syria. Slaughtered millions of Christians. So, your emotions are so artificial and unstable, violent, and dishonest as proven by the actions of your people.
=================== br Aha, when your Obama remove... (show quote)


ISIS was not a nation...

And can you imagine the uproar if the leader of ISIS had conversed with Obama and convinced him to withdraw US forces from Iraq

I also disagreed with the timing of the Iraq withdrawal... Although I was happy that America was removing itself from the area... Egg on my face.. Hindsight 20/20

Reply
Oct 11, 2019 11:36:09   #
Radiance3
 
Canuckus Deploracus wrote:
ISIS was not a nation...

And can you imagine the uproar if the leader of ISIS had conversed with Obama and convinced him to withdraw US forces from Iraq

I also disagreed with the timing of the Iraq withdrawal... Although I was happy that America was removing itself from the area... Egg on my face.. Hindsight 20/20

================
US getting out of Iraq in 2011, was how ISIS started. That is the ISIS, Obama's JV Team, that we are fighting until now. ISIS spread to Syria.
Without ISIS, Iraq could have succeeded to more stability, on its economy and peace, without Iran's intervention.

Do you think I don't know that ISIS is not a nation? How shallow could that be? I think that is ridiculous!

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