Baron Kurtz
I'll Lock Up
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In the thread re: "What is the FLounge all about" (http://www.thefedoralounge.com/showthread.php?t=28457), some issues have arisen that people take exception to. I propose to discuss one of these here.
Specifically the issue of manners, politeness and the way responses should be couched.
It has been suggested by a number of respondents that though the FLounge is reputed to be a haven of politeness, manners etc. in the general murky waters that are the internets, this is simply a fa?ßade. That the surface of politeness is merely the same old flaming couched in fancier language or more elaborate put-downs.
Now, i'm not sure exactly what was the general consensus, but i plot to explore this feeling through a very specific question which i will illustrate with an example. Thusly:
1) If someone is wrong, or is putting forth opinion as if it is fact, is it correct to pull that respondent up? If i were to suggest that zippers were not used in men's trousers until the 1950s (a common myth you'll read on the internet in general and eBay seller boards in all their uneducated glory) should I be corrected? Or should my statement be allowed to stand lest i get offended by being corrected? Is it correct (polite/mannered) for another member to say simply: No, you're wrong. Here's why you're wrong . . .
I pick my example carefully, as this is the general level I see these contretemps occurring on, and the above is not an atypical response which would generate a complaint of "unpolite" or hurt feelings on the part of the respondent who was wrong.
bk
Specifically the issue of manners, politeness and the way responses should be couched.
It has been suggested by a number of respondents that though the FLounge is reputed to be a haven of politeness, manners etc. in the general murky waters that are the internets, this is simply a fa?ßade. That the surface of politeness is merely the same old flaming couched in fancier language or more elaborate put-downs.
Now, i'm not sure exactly what was the general consensus, but i plot to explore this feeling through a very specific question which i will illustrate with an example. Thusly:
1) If someone is wrong, or is putting forth opinion as if it is fact, is it correct to pull that respondent up? If i were to suggest that zippers were not used in men's trousers until the 1950s (a common myth you'll read on the internet in general and eBay seller boards in all their uneducated glory) should I be corrected? Or should my statement be allowed to stand lest i get offended by being corrected? Is it correct (polite/mannered) for another member to say simply: No, you're wrong. Here's why you're wrong . . .
I pick my example carefully, as this is the general level I see these contretemps occurring on, and the above is not an atypical response which would generate a complaint of "unpolite" or hurt feelings on the part of the respondent who was wrong.
bk