The rise of bad education, by Matías Vallés

Soy the rudest person I know, or am I the rude person I know best. In order not to sin in reverse swagger, I use rudeness as a shield, the hedgehog armor. I take refuge in the Nobel Prize in Economics Daniel Kahneman, when he admits that “bad mood can bring benefits & rdquor ;, because good education makes us more gullible and sensitive to junk information. I also function as an excellent barometer of the state of affairs. If at the end of the day I have come across a sporadic example of rudeness, the statistical laws are complied with given my low rate of human contagion. However, right now I am continually overwhelmed by the rude. They exceed my standards, people who were an example of probity overtook me. I am sure it is a shared perception, not because it is true but because it’s easy to agree that something is getting worse.

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Since the coronavirus is the measure of all things, the rude pandemic in parallel must be attributed to the aftermath of confinement, to the scream at the exit of the cave. Customers protest in greater proportion, salespeople are increasingly inconsiderate and reply viciously. The planet can survive the galloping inflation, the shortage of kiwis or the world war that Ken Follett is writing right now, but it will hardly recover from the empire in the terrible ways.

I can’t prove it but, in the midst of writing this personalized article, I stumble upon thoughtful reports from ‘Time’ magazine and ‘The Washington Post’ under the heading ‘The epidemic of rudeness’. Global trends always emerge from a individual drive, we human beings equalize ourselves in sensations at the same time that we have decided to quarrel with anyone who comes within our reach. It is an expensive mismatch, corroding the inner workings of society and consuming energy. An army of urban peacekeepers or sweeteners should be hired to restore urbanity.

Reference-www.elperiodico.com

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