"Both of you... go to your rooms and put your leg irons on!"
(Hey, it used to work when my sons were younger.)
Now, now, gentlemen....
T'is human nature to jump to conclusions.
That's why we have the phrase..."Jump to conclusions".
Sometimes emotions over-ride our inner voice of reason.
Due to our similarity here, we tend to view things personally.
If my neighbor said, "Hey Prom, I took my "HUMMER" to the dealership and he ripped me off", I would reply, "Gee, that's too bad...(you snooty upstart.)
Now, if my other neighbor said, "Prom, I took my motorcycle to a dealer and he ripped me off", the story turns a different page.
I own motorcycles, I buy parts.. I go to dealerships...
I'd be outraged... and would grab my pitchfork and join the other villagers forming a mob.
We form our opinions the best we can, with what info is made available at the time. We also should not only judge this info, but also actively seek more... to ensure our thoughts are correct. Sadly, this is not always possable.
And like I stated, there's the emotional "it could have been me" issue that also gets thrown into the equation.
Nothing wrong with changing opinions based upon new data.
I could go back and research the number of times that I jumped on the wrong bandwagon for one reason or another.
(As a moderator, I don't worry about which bandwagon I'm on anymore... I just make everyone else play the songs I want to hear.)
... nothing wrong with changing one's mind as more information and reasoned opinion comes in.
To stubbornly resist just to save face... is the act of a faceless coward.
As for "trust"...
I'd rather trust a man who admits that he was wrong, than to trust a man who knows he's wrong, and won't admit it.
Points go to Madmax-im... for his public declaration.
(Hey, it used to work when my sons were younger.)
Now, now, gentlemen....
T'is human nature to jump to conclusions.
That's why we have the phrase..."Jump to conclusions".
Sometimes emotions over-ride our inner voice of reason.
Due to our similarity here, we tend to view things personally.
If my neighbor said, "Hey Prom, I took my "HUMMER" to the dealership and he ripped me off", I would reply, "Gee, that's too bad...(you snooty upstart.)
Now, if my other neighbor said, "Prom, I took my motorcycle to a dealer and he ripped me off", the story turns a different page.
I own motorcycles, I buy parts.. I go to dealerships...
I'd be outraged... and would grab my pitchfork and join the other villagers forming a mob.
We form our opinions the best we can, with what info is made available at the time. We also should not only judge this info, but also actively seek more... to ensure our thoughts are correct. Sadly, this is not always possable.
And like I stated, there's the emotional "it could have been me" issue that also gets thrown into the equation.
Nothing wrong with changing opinions based upon new data.
I could go back and research the number of times that I jumped on the wrong bandwagon for one reason or another.
(As a moderator, I don't worry about which bandwagon I'm on anymore... I just make everyone else play the songs I want to hear.)
... nothing wrong with changing one's mind as more information and reasoned opinion comes in.
To stubbornly resist just to save face... is the act of a faceless coward.
As for "trust"...
I'd rather trust a man who admits that he was wrong, than to trust a man who knows he's wrong, and won't admit it.
Points go to Madmax-im... for his public declaration.
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