Well, it's kind of true....
Society/media have some responsibility for influencing the way people behave. OK, the individual has to take responsibility for acting on the influence, and can't rely on blaming society as an excuse not to change the habits that got them into a mess, but when a particular message is so pervasive in everyday life it's hard for the individual to ignore.
Plenty of financial institutions added to the 'irrational exuberance' with credit-on-a-plate offers, and how much media coverage was given to big spenders and those living the high life compared to that given to the Eddie Hobbs's of this world? Maybe society as a whole didn't pull the trigger, but didn't it protest either when the institutions that shape it were telling people how great guns are and where they could get them, at a low apr...
OK, the individual has to take responsibility for acting on the influence, and can't rely on blaming society as an excuse not to change the habits that got them into a mess, but when a particular message is so pervasive in everyday life it's hard for the individual to ignore.
Plenty of financial institutions added to the 'irrational exuberance' with credit-on-a-plate offers, and how much media coverage was given to big spenders and those living the high life compared to that given to the Eddie Hobbs's of this world? Maybe society as a whole didn't pull the trigger, but didn't it protest either when the institutions that shape it were telling people how great guns are and where they could get them, at a low apr...
I'm with Clubman on this one. Its easy to blame society, the meeja, etc for one's own actions and decisions. Whatever happened to a bit of personal responsibility?