Someone who blames others for their mistakes would have an external locus of control. This means that the responsibility for their actions is outside of them (so they are not responsible).
This is also a part of the Fundamental Attribution Error, which states that people tend to attribute their success more to themselves and their failure to others or situational factors.
I would use the word "blamer" to describe somebody who always blames other people for their mistakes or problems.
We call them a teller
COVERED
A good Christian life is lead by someone who puts God first, tries to follow the example of Christ, tries to love and accept other people and forgives others for mistakes they make in the hope that others will forgive them for their mistakes.
to fix your mistakes
To keep from making the mistakes other people have made
Because they are insecure and so they actually see everything that is troubling themselves on other people. In other words people tease people for their own mistakes. Or they're just jerks...
It helps us not make the mistakes other people have made in the past.
History in the past has helped people just like with WW1 Generals in the army had made mistakes then other generals (when they came into power) learned from those mistakes and made more different mistakes, finally other generals learned from all the different mistakes meaning they managed to solve the problem in the end this helped the world and stalemate in WW1 (sorry if this explanation is a bit complicated but i think u can get the point!)
yes i do love someone. but i think bout date other people sometime.
To keep from making the mistakes other people have made
Contributors have said: So that they can take the attention off of themselves, in hopes that people will not notice their own laziness. - - - - Psychologically seen, people often spot other people's mistakes better but never their own, and very often they make exactly the same mistakes but won't see it if they do them, it's like they are blind for their own mistakes, unless someone comes up with a mirror and says: "Hey, you act just the same, remember when...?" Another reason could be to justify one's own behavior, to make oneself feel better, not having to feel guilty.