Heh, I shoulda known you wouldn't let that slide. You're right. But any 
introvert that wants to contribute and the only way to contribute is to get 
past the vapid (but very real) barriers must be capable of establishing that 
thin similarity _before_ dialing it back and refining the dissimilarities.

Of course that raises the question of whether the introverts really _can_ care 
about anyone other than themselves. If one's strongest inclinations are 
antisocial, it's reasonable to call them a misanthrope, which given Trump's 
"germophobia" and desire to surround himself with people who say what he wants 
to hear, we might claim he's an introvert too ... only extroverted when "the 
room is empty" of dissent.

On January 27, 2017 12:23:09 PM PST, Marcus Daniels <mar...@snoutfarm.com> 
wrote:
>
>Most any introvert has had the experience of some patronizing
>know-nothing `help' them out of their shell.   Is there anything more
>pointless than having to politely play along while run their `find some
>common ground' routine?   They may seem persuaded but really they just
>want the room to be empty again.   If a personality is high
>dimensional, then a low-dimensional connection is cannot be a true
>measure of similarity (assuming that was even sought).  
-- 
⛧glen⛧

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