Seeing as how that's just the epitome of her personality, yes, I do use it. But if you want more - look at how she treats Bashir throughout the series, especially when he first meets Leeta. Or how about in The Ship, when her solution to the problem of Worf and O'Brien fighting is too insult them and then get pissed off when Sisko reprimands her for it.
Just to name a few.... Playing God (Quark even comments on it), Past Tense, Facets, Starship Down, The Ship, Looking for par'Mach in all the Wrong Places, Trials and Tribble-ations, Let He Who is Without Sin, The Reckoning
Unfortunately, I don't have the DVDs, so you'll have to give me more specifics. So all of these will be "as I recall."
Nobody was at their best in
The Ship; that was kind of the point of the episode, to watch Our Heroes turn on each other. I'm not recalling anything in particular about how she acted towards Bashir that strikes me as arrogant or narcissistic - and especially not in
Starship Down.
Playing God was a continuation of a character trait was Curzon's - and really, considering the situation, it's a valid way to weed out potential Initiates, if a bit hypocritical considering Jadzia's own experience with it.
Trials and Tribble-ations - you mean the episode where Jadzia was turned into a wide-eyed fangirl for Mr. Spock? Or wait, was it where she reminisced about her friend Koloth and also a pleasant if short-lived romance with Bones McCoy?
The others, I have no idea what you could be referring to from them.
Because what commonly passes as "equality" these days is in fact another form of gender inequality--about putting men down rather than raising both up to a truly equal level. You don't get true equality by stepping on bodies, or hearts...only revenge.
Right. Us poor, poor, oppressed men. Tragic, really, the suffering we go through, almost as much as the suffering of white people.

You and
Hermiod and
3DMaster should form a club.
Kestrel said:
I'm sure you can provide plenty of examples where Dax did this, yes?
Her relationship with Worf was a primary example, the way she claim to love him and then would mock everything important to him and piss all over his values. But the way she toyed with Bashir was also pretty arrogant and domineering, too. If she wasn't interested, she shouldn't have led him on, just made it clear that she was not interested and moved on and not given him anything else except for what professionalism requires. I'm not even going to get into the others that I get a feeling were "just" booty calls...the way she acted in her supposedly
serious relationships was quite enough for me.
So to recap, you think she's a slut for maybe having casual sex, you find friendly flirtatiousness before commitment to be leading on and would prefer cold aloofness, and you believe she's "pissing all over" Klingon values.
The last despite the fact that she's been part of Klingon society for longer than Worf's been alive (via Curzon) and was willing to take part in a Klingon blood debt that risked getting her in serious trouble with her CO and cost her a little piece of her soul. Yeah, I think she was more than respectful of Klingon values and had made them a part of her own identity, to the extent that it took a new host with a new personality to smack Worf in the face and say "LOOK at what your people have become!" In fact, an
entirely Klingon wedding, despite the fact that she's, y'know, Trill? She's a 300-year old with a penchant for tweaking people; and really, considering K'Ehleyr and to some extent Deanna Troi, Worf seems to be attracted to this personality.