“To Protect Free Speech”: 86 Times People Tried Their Hardest But Failed Miserably (New Pics)
Failures are a part of life, and they happen to the best of us. And when such misfirings happen, we often credit the person for taking a shot, at the very least.
But of course, not everyone deserves kudos for their efforts. Some of them deserve to be shamed and called out, especially if they attempted to conceal their sanctimonious behaviors. Unfortunately, some of the world’s most influential people are guilty of such faults, as you will see in this list.
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To Insult Linus Torvalds (Creator Of Linux) By Calling Him "Woke"
To Go To Lunch…
To Recruit A 17 Year Old For The Us Military
People often call out hypocritical behavior by telling the erring individual to “practice what they preach.” However, as neuroscientist and author Dr. Dean Burnett points out, maintaining that moral h**h ground is a considerable amount of work for anyone.
“Hypocrisy allows you to appear principled without having to be so, which is much easier than adhering to strict principles,” Dr. Burnett wrote in an article for The Guardian.
To Lie About Her Son
To Go After Ms. Rachel For Caring About Palestinian Children
To Vandalize An Anti Ice Mural
A person may also act hypocritically because they have a self-serving bias, which, according to Dr. Burnett, is part of human nature. As he noted, we inherently evaluate our capabilities far more highly than they really are because of our brain’s natural wiring.
“The brain is riddled with cognitive and memory biases that are geared towards making us feel like we’re good and decent and capable, no matter what the reality,” Dr. Burnett explained.
To Have A Free Press
To Win A Political Slap Fight With Australia
To Tell Canada What To Do
Behavioral scientist Erman Misirlisoy shared a similar sentiment, stating that self-interest is one of the strongest (if not the strongest) catalysts for hypocritical behavior. In an article for Medium, he noted that many people may say that “personal costs” are enough to outweigh the “intention to act morally.”
“Essentially, we all want to act fairly until we are put on the spot and are facing our own personal consequences,” he wrote.
To Get A Nobel Peace Prize
To Be Taken Seriously As Astronauts
To Ignore Epstein’s Victims In Hopes They Go Away
In his article, Misirlisoy pointed out another observation: we tend to hate hypocrites more than outright liars. According to him, it’s because the former employs a “double layer of deception,” which is one layer more than the latter, who simply says they “act morally when they haven’t.”
To Troll Newsom - Newsom Won This One
To Attain Justice In The Trump Era
To Have A 'Bring Your Child To Work Day' Without An Hr Incident
Misirlisoy dropped one unavoidable truth: we’ve all had our hypocritical moments. However, a sensible, upstanding person will subject themselves to honest self-criticism and admit when they fail to live up to their own standards.
“If we’re going to lie, that’s bad enough; let’s try not to fool and distract other people by pointing the finger,” he wrote. “(That) may be a good foundation for integrity.”
