Interested in the topic, Reddit user cp3t_n3m0 posted a question on the platform, asking others to reveal who they believe is the worst person they have ever met, and why. From rude supervisors to violent relatives, here are the ones who made the list.
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“I was thinking of when I was working with an unpleasant coworker—one who seemed to break every rule the company had,” the Redditor told Bored Panda. “I was baffled at the fact that she wasn’t kicked out right away.”
They added that the woman was eventually fired, but her behavior left a lasting impression on how some people can navigate through life without any regard for others, and so cp3t_n3m0 was compelled to hear similar stories.
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“Most of the replies had something to do with coworkers or parents. I think part of the reason those folks were the most common answers is simply because we spend the most time with them on any given day and truly get to see the real side of those individuals.”
Plus, cp3t_n3m0 said they have noticed that people love to have a villain or someone they hate in their lives “because it makes them feel like the hero. Every story has a hero and a villain.”
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“For a majority of offenders, it’s not worth the trouble to inflict harm purely from a place of cynical greed,” said psychologist Tage Rai, an assistant professor of management at the Rady School of Management and author of the study. “For example, as we saw from the January 6 hearings, many of the perpetrators of the attack on the Capitol believed the election had been stolen from them and that they were morally in the right to punish the congresspeople who had wronged them.”
“Many of these people will be materially punished for their actions, [but] what’s unclear is whether that would stop them from doing it again,” Rai added.
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Across four different experiments in an online economic game, he discovered that providing a monetary bonus for punishing a third party cut participants’ willingness to do so nearly in half.
“The findings suggest people may be more hesitant to do harm when they stand to profit from it if they anticipate condemnation from their peers,” Rai explained.
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“I am a big believer in forgiveness, but sometimes, it can be too much,” they said. “I think it all depends on each individual’s boundaries and comfort level. Everybody is different. Some are better at handling difficult people than others.”
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