Who gets to decide what is "rude"? The person speaking or the person spoken to?
If you say the person spoken to then you will have a lot of people afraid to say anything for fear of being thought rude even though they may not have intended to be rude. I have that problem a lot myself. People often think I m rude but I have no intention of being so and often don't understand why someone would think I was rude. To keep on topic, I tried to make a batch of cs and went off and forgot about it. There was lots of black stuff in the bottom but nothing floating anywhere else. I decanted off the clear stuff and it seems to be very weak. I would like to know if this is safe to use or do I have to discard it? Linda On 11/8/2007 11:52:25 AM, marmar...@bellsouth.net wrote: > Hi Faith. I think you are confusing the right to free speech with the > right to be rude. Twisted thinking like that is what encourages people to > behave badly in public. This is especially true in this day and age of > cyber-societies, where people can hide behind their computer and say what > they want with relative impunity. I don't think that's what the founding > fathers had in mind when they created the doctrine of free speech -- that > it be a vehicle for people to attack other people without provocation. You > are, of course, entitled to your opinion -- as am I. MA