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10 answers

Oh yeah. I live in a rather poor area and everyone here seems to think that they deserve to have nice cars, free bills, and whatever the hell else they want delivered to them for free.

Whereas other people actually use their god forsaken brain and realize that in order to have nice things they have to actually have a job and then use their money on what they want instead of blowing it on useless crap and then expecting someone to buy you what you didn't spend you money on in the first place.

Sorry for the rant... lol!

2007-09-07 09:48:15 · answer #1 · answered by its_just_sweet 3 · 2 0

i'm not sure if that happens automatically with everyone, but it definitley happens with some, and it might just be an ego issue depending on different individuals. for example, i don't think someone who is depressed would gain a sense of entitlement. but with some other people, they might feel like the world owes them something and like they deserve to make up what they lacked previously. but actually, they end up overdoing it and seeming arrogant

2007-09-08 10:30:38 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

No, a sense of hopelessness and a lack of personal responsibility lead to a sense of entitlement.

2007-09-07 09:47:50 · answer #3 · answered by oogabooga37 6 · 0 1

No, a sense of entitlement is something taught to a person...it comes from society and the parents, etc...

2007-09-07 09:48:40 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

In a group sense, yes; in an individual sense, no. E.g. African-Americans feel they are owed compensation for what their ancestors suffered hundreds of years ago. Individually, they do not (the majority.)

2007-09-07 09:48:23 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

No, entitlement particular could be super, yet you don't get something in existence without working for it---and then each and every particularly situations destiny comes alongside and takes all of it far off from you anyhow. that's basically the way it works.

2016-10-18 06:20:29 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Not necessarily - we study, work and strain in daily living - working towards the good things in life.
We eventually get what we earn or eventually fall somewhere between our goals and/or somewhere close to them.
No - we are not entitled to success just because of underpriviledge.

2007-09-07 09:57:15 · answer #7 · answered by Jonathan 3 · 0 1

No, more often than not it leads to a sense of despair.

2007-09-07 09:57:13 · answer #8 · answered by the old dog 7 · 0 1

that is curious..
I would say the opposite.
The expected sense would be to expect your experience,
so I would say no .
Your question seems be leading.

2007-09-07 09:47:30 · answer #9 · answered by dragonsandwater 2 · 0 1

I would say no.

2007-09-07 09:45:37 · answer #10 · answered by John C 2 · 0 1

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