Just for the record, in a previous 2010 study on college students, narcissism was explained as “a pervasive pattern of grandiosity, need for admiration and an exaggerated sense of self-importance.” A study* reported in the journal Personality and Individual Differences last month has suggested that there’s a direct link between the number of friends you have on Facebook and the degree to which you qualify as a “socially disruptive” narcissist. Sujay Kansagra, Facebook, flaming, social media, Twitter | 17 Comments Texting at funeralsīefore I start, a plea: don’t shoot the messenger. Continue reading → Posted in Anti-social media | Tagged blogging, disinhibition, doctors online, Dr. That’s already allowed, and it’s called social media.
![alexandra thran er facebook post alexandra thran er facebook post](https://pics.awwmemes.com/84-i-10-15-pm-qo-facebook-3-tyler-dec-14-66784989.png)
Writers should disclose any personal or financial interest in the subject matter of their letters.”Īnd imagine what would happen if The Star or other media outlets let us just willy-nilly vent publicly under fake names whenever we like. For verification purposes, they must also include the writer’s home address, e-mail address and telephone numbers.
#ALEXANDRA THRAN ER FACEBOOK POST FULL#
“Letters to the editor must include the writer’s full name – anonymous letters and letters written under pseudonyms will not be considered. For example, the Toronto Star – unless agreeing to specific requests to protect confidentiality for valid reasons – is just one of many that advise readers: Discouraging anonymity is a good thing, I believe, because the jerk-to-normal person ratio out there is already perilously high even without encouragement. To do so would merely encourage the trolls to spew forth. Generally speaking, news editors rarely accept for publication any letters to the editor that are submitted anonymously.