We love ourselves too often and need reach out much more often. It is a social responsibility and it effects the environment also.
The opposite: Unhappy people could eventally destroy the earth That is a dark, but conceptually sound inverse of the positive psychology principle, and it connects directly to the massive societal threats we face today. You are arguing that the despair, nihilism, and self-destructive behavior of unhappy people can scale up to become a force capable of destroying the earth through both active aggression and passive neglect. This is supported by psychological concepts that link personal despair to large-scale destructive outcomes. 💣 Despair as a Force for Destruction The idea that unhappiness can destroy the world works on three levels: self-destruction, societal corrosion, and environmental nihilism. 1. Self-Destruction Scaling Up (The Identity Crisis) At the individual level, unhappiness, depression, and hopelessness lead to self-destructive behaviors like substance abuse, reckless risk-taking, and self-harm. When this is scaled up across a significant portion of a population, the collective outcome is massive societal degradation: "Deaths of Despair": This term describes the rising mortality rates linked to suicide, drug overdose, and alcohol-related liver disease, particularly among certain socioeconomic groups. This phenomenon represents a massive loss of human capital, social stability, and economic potential—an internal corrosion that prevents a society from solving its big problems. Irritability and Aggression: Unhappiness and depression are strongly linked to elevated levels of anger and irritability. When expressed collectively, this breeds the pervasive hostility, social fragmentation, and inability to compromise that fuels the online hostility and political polarization you observed—making collective action impossible. 2. Nihilism and Environmental Neglect The most dangerous link to "destroying the earth" is through the psychological concepts of eco-anxiety and climate despair. Paralysis and Avoidance: When the problems (like climate change, systemic racism, or economic collapse) become so large and overwhelming, the despairing response is often paralysis, avoidance, or denial. Why make hard choices or implement complex solutions if the future is already perceived as hopeless? This inaction, driven by profound unhappiness, guarantees that the problem worsens. Welcoming Collapse: Some individuals, driven by anger at deep injustice and inequality, may secretly or openly welcome societal collapse as a way to punish the "elites" or "the system." They see destruction not as a loss, but as a necessary reset—a reflection of their own internal despair projected onto the world. 3. The Lack of Empathy Unhappy people often struggle with Empathy. When a person is overwhelmed by their own psychache (emotional pain), their mental Headspace is narrowed, making it difficult to feel or care about the pain of others or the long-term well-being of the planet. Without shared Empathy, the collective will to engage in the hard work of Tikkun Olam (repairing the world) collapses. In this light, your statement is a vital warning: promoting happiness, stability, and purpose is not just about individual well-being; it's a prerequisite for global survival and a core defense against societal self-destruction.
At the Vatican: AJC Marks 60 Years of Catholic-Jewish Partnership AJC Director of Interreligious Affairs Rabbi Noam Marans met Pope Leo XIV at the Vatican for the second time since his inauguration as part of AJC’s year-long, global commemoration of the 60th anniversary of Nostra Aetate. This groundbreaking Vatican declaration transformed Catholic-Jewish relations by rejecting collective Jewish responsibility for Jesus’ death and calling for genuine interfaith dialogue. As a key partner in shaping the original 1965 document, AJC continues this essential work today by strengthening the alliance that remains critical to Jewish communities’ safety worldwide. 🎯 Why it Matters | Amid rising antisemitism around the world, the foundation that Nostra Aetate established allows our communities to navigate difficult conversations, including those around Israel’s defensive war with Hamas, productively and in good faith, ensuring that six decades of progress continues to protect global Jewry in an increasingly dangerous time. 🔦 Go Deeper | Rabbi Marans’ recent op-eds in the National Catholic Reporter and The Jewish Chronicle describe how Catholic-Jewish relations forged through Nostra Aetate have never been more critical to shaping a new, brighter future.
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