Sentences with phrase «sense of entitlement become»

They say you can't judge a book by its cover, but it seems the «cover» now takes on a whole new level of significance, particularly in this super fast - paced internet connected globe where instant gratification and sense of entitlement become more common.
Third, a sense of entitlement became more evident, to progress through the chairs in an orderly fashion — you go, then you go, then you.

Not exact matches

When one of the hosts made a joke about Notre Dame, Finebaum then turned it back to the Wolverines and unleashed on Michigan and its fans for having a sense of entitlement that he believes became worse when the school hired Jim Harbaugh.
As generation Y becomes an increasingly key part of the workforce, companies are complaining about the expectations of their youngest employees — and their unabashed sense of entitlement.
Maybe she's right, and Americans — particularly millennials — are developing stronger senses of entitlement, but the idea that «you can get something for nothing» becoming more prevalent, isn't necessarily a bad thing when it comes to faith.
Now, in a longawaited followup, Mogel addresses the question she hears most frequently: what to do when those children become teenagers, their sense of independence and entitlement grows, the pressure to compete and succeed skyrockets, and communication becomes fraught with obstacles.
As the clips mount up, the sense of smug, generational entitlement on which many of these films depended becomes depressingly clear: here, in clip after clip, are cocky young men (Jack Nicholson, Elliott Gould, Dustin Hoffman) venting their self - righteousness on cardboard establishment figures, a suspiciously large number of them played by women.
This, unfortunately, is a problematic formulation, for as it became clear during the conference debate, burden - sharing frameworks (GDRs and some versions of the budget approach) which explicitly assign «negative entitlements» to industrialized countries with large emissions obligations actually make sense.
While a rising elasticity contradicts the standard economic model in which price - sensitivities don't change much over time, Point # 5 provides a reasonable explanation: gasoline prices (and energy prices in general) had fluctuated so wildly for decades, and a sense of entitlement to cheap gasoline had become so ingrained in American society, that it took a long time for households and businesses to internalize the rise in pump prices — to regard it as real.
After inviting a candidate to interview and scheduling a time, it became pretty clear that I wouldn't want to hire the person (they ended up being a bit pushy and displayed a sense of entitlement).
With easy access to unlimited information and immediate gratification, we have become a culture of entitlement, not just in the sense of being present but in the way of «I deserve to be happy so I should have what I want.»
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