>>937292850My god.”
• Insulting? Yes, this is a dismissive and dramatic expression meant to mock or express disbelief or frustration, suggesting the speaker sees the other person’s comment as absurd or exasperating.
• Incorrect? Not factually incorrect, but emotionally charged and unproductive.
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“You rather be a psychopath than have ODD?”
• Insulting? Yes, it misrepresents the original speaker’s intention, implying they are actively choosing to be labeled as a psychopath, which they explicitly did not do.
• Incorrect? Yes. The original speaker didn’t say they’d “rather be” a psychopath. They said the accusation sounded more like psychopathy, which is an analytical distinction, not a personal preference.
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“Or have some type of authoritarian complex?”
• Insulting? Yes, suggesting someone has an “authoritarian complex” implies a personality defect — that they crave control or domination — without evidence.
• Incorrect? Possibly. This is speculative armchair psychology with no diagnostic value unless the speaker has evidence, which seems absent here.
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“Again, delusions of grandeur…”
• Insulting? Absolutely. Accusing someone of having “delusions of grandeur” is mocking and highly personal, implying they’re egotistical, irrational, or mentally unstable.
• Incorrect? Unless the original speaker claimed superiority or exhibited grandiose behavior (which doesn’t seem to be the case from the context), this is a baseless psychological insult.
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“But who WANTS to be a psychopath rather than antisocial?”
• Insulting? Yes, it continues to twist the original point into a straw man — as if the speaker is proudly choosing psychopathy.
• Incorrect? Yes. This question is based on a false premise. The person didn’t say they “wanted” either label — they were commenting on the inaccuracy of the ODD diagnosis.