I don't think you're slow and stupid, but rather well-read and thoughtful.
@kalfatermann I would make your evening just as enjoyable, but the question i meant to ask is "why do all we nice and not dumb people find no way to stop hateful people from doing harm".
So, did you also wreck your brain on this or would that be new to you?
In any case, thx for being nice, that is always a good thing.
@kalfatermann "no thanks" to "you are nice"?
Anyways, the answer is Kölsch. You take a smaller glass and now there is less to be swallowed...
I think we should find a way to shrink the harmful elements. Maybe we could teach each other to ignore what is bad (as in who is doing harm), as a variation of everyone being told to ignore what is bad (as in going along with whatever is bad)?
Where do you stand on telling someone evil "you don't matter", as opposed to "you are doing bad stuff"?
Sorry, I'm a little tired right now, so I'm slow with my answers.
@kalfatermann Sleep well, i am already touched with you reaching out. I will enjoy your answers tomorrow too, don't stay awake because i make a ruckus please ;-)
@kalfatermann Exactly... for people that harm us with abandon, i am asking if we should switch back from the strategy meant for people that might learn.
Someone being violent for a moment is not "harmful" in general, that is not what i meant.
Thinking of who tirelessly tries to destroy tomorrow.
""Thinking of who tirelessly tries to destroy tomorrow.""
One should not say anything to them, but rather fight them with all means.
@admitsWrongIfProven
Exactly, I am not nice, just a little mice. 😇
When you tell someone: “you don't matter” you take away their opportunity to be relevant, which then results in a defensive reaction.
If you tell someone: "you are doing bad stuff" you give them the chance to explain and justify themselves. A dialogue, even if it is a difficult one, can lead to reflection. However, this can be extremely exhausting, and you don't always have the nerves for it.