Not telling anything, but leaving that to the voting system (and the text given by the mods) can hardly be not nice.
@QPaysTaxes Which word do you mean?
@QPaysTaxes I'll look up some phrases
@QPaysTaxes: Maybe "Some cultures prefer a straight word and feel pussyfooting around as offending". Hope that makes more sense.
It still is not exactly what I mean. Let's try an example: Some cultures feel offending if one straight says "you made a mistake". Instead they expect something like "we have a problem, what can we do about it?" (Although it is clear the other did make a mistake. I'd use the straight form and I prefer it from others, too.
I honestly would feel the "polite" variant as not polite, but just nonsense.
Instead the first variant is ok for me; it is not an offence to me (iff it really is my fault).
@QPaysTaxes as a ESL, I'm not always sure I picked the right translation. For such a sensitive subject, I just wanted to be very clear.
@QPaysTaxes That was the other phrase I found, yes:-)
See? That's another difference. We don't always weight every word (I didn't even think about that). That just generates too much friction. Thanks for the info nevertheless.
Well, no personal offence, but IMO this - fully applied - will end all communication. Just because - as you might have noticed from my example - what actually is seen offending can greatly vary. Even with time of day (I'm reacting pretty rough to hearing bad news before my "morning" tea and breakfast).
Freedom of speech implies you can express your feelings. And if you are angry, it is better to verbalise than ... well ...
But then you are in the most peaceful country in the world.;-)
Well, I avoid getting personal, too.
But I don't see much sense in my job not to tell what the problem is and - if necessary - who is responsible. That does not mean I'm always right. If not, I'm the first to pick the "Dork" hat and sit in the corner.
@QPaysTaxes I didn't say it (noticed the emoticon?)
@QPaysTaxes You're in good company with that! One "positive" aspect getting older is you see some longer term changes. To me it looks as if reading longer sentences and understanding them is a diminishing virtue.
Most ppl concentrate on either the first part or the last part (depending if they read the whole message or stop at the first punctuation character).
I always have a lot of macro-aggressions (they are definitively not micro) emailing to my phone/IP-provider.