Your examples merely serve to reinforce the notion that what makes us angry is people breaking the (possibly unwritten) rules or violating social cohesion.
That clashes with my introspection, unlike DeVliegendeHollander’s account. When I stub my toe in the dark and start swearing, my thoughts are not anything to do with social rules or their violation (at least not at a conscious level); typically no one else is around, no other person enters my mind, and I’m just annoyed that I’m unnecessarily experiencing pain, and that annoyance doesn’t feel like it has a moral element to it. It feels like a straightforward reaction to unexpected, benefit-free pain.
That clashes with my introspection, unlike DeVliegendeHollander’s account. When I stub my toe in the dark and start swearing, my thoughts are not anything to do with social rules or their violation (at least not at a conscious level); typically no one else is around, no other person enters my mind, and I’m just annoyed that I’m unnecessarily experiencing pain, and that annoyance doesn’t feel like it has a moral element to it. It feels like a straightforward reaction to unexpected, benefit-free pain.