Folks already know my answer.
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Moderator: Edi
I would say that if someone is abusive or tries to act high-and-mighty, he should expect an abusive response. It's hard to see someone with his nose up in the air and not want to knock him down a few pegs.Marc Xavier wrote:How much of an offense (minor slight, accidental comment, or out-right being a huge pain in the arse) deserves a mean response?
Vorlon1701 wrote:Nice. It's always funny seeing people's reactions to someone just waving hi for the hell of it, and the girls seem to like me a lot now...
Recurring incidents of any of the above. A single instance will not warrent my assholeness, but continuing offenses will.Marc Xavier wrote:How much of an offense (minor slight, accidental comment, or out-right being a huge pain in the arse) deserves a mean response?
What a lot of people my age, and even older fail to notice is a real friend is someone you can really depend on, and who is loyal. Not some "neat" kid who you can waste time with.Darth Wong wrote:It is more important to be genuinely nice than superficially nice. The world is full of people who wave hello, smile, never say a bad word, never use foul language, never directly insult anyone ... and then turn their backs on you when you need help.
Me, if somebody I know needs a helping hand, I'll go out to help him. That's how I find and keep friends in real life; by actions, not words. That's also how I judge others. I don't put much stock at all in a friendly outward mannerism, to be honest. When the chips are down, that's when you find out who's really nice and who's not.