interesting and probably useless about those facts
#21
Posted 2014-September-09, 09:33
#22
Posted 2014-September-09, 09:52
Trinidad, on 2014-September-08, 10:07, said:
Rik
I didn't understand it without.
London UK
#23
Posted 2014-September-09, 10:18
GreenMan, on 2014-September-09, 09:33, said:
Throw over the fence the horse some hay.
#24
Posted 2014-September-09, 11:35
(nightmares from German 101 class. They return.)
#25
Posted 2014-September-20, 20:25
blackshoe, on 2014-September-06, 00:37, said:
I was going to let this go, but my thoughts returned to it. Why do some people react this way upon being caught out after making pronouncements on matters about which they know fu ck-all?
#26
Posted 2014-September-21, 14:09
Vampyr, on 2014-September-20, 20:25, said:
If you know *****-all about something, and someone who seems knowledgeable says something, are you always expected to go research it for corroboration before repeating what you heard? If it's important to your life, that might be appropriate. But if it's just some random trivia or gossip, that's more work than people should be expected to do.
Yes, I realize this is how urban legends propagate -- no one thinks it's important enough to look for independent confirmation. After a while, there's been so much repetition of the original claim, that someone who DOES look for confirmation will find it, not realizing that it's also derived from the same rumor.
#27
Posted 2014-September-21, 16:37
barmar, on 2014-September-21, 14:09, said:
The OP stated that he read his erroneous information; this may well have been on the internet, so...
Anyway I do think that it is a good policy not to make assertions unless you know you are correct. In other cases, it is prudent to say something like "I heard" "I read" "I seem to remember" "it is my opinion that" etc. But I guess some people think that this makes them sound weak, and it is better to present everything as fact and when proven wrong to get defensive and try to demean the person who corrected him on such a trivial matter.
But my point was not that the OP made a mistake and looked foolish, it was his disrespectful and perhaps character-revealing reaction, as opposed to "oops, my information was wrong; didn't mean to misinform anyone" or the like.
#29
Posted 2014-September-22, 10:25
Vampyr, on 2014-September-21, 16:37, said:
Isn't that essentially what he said? He explained what happened: he read something that seemed plausible, and believed it. "So sue me" is a way of saying "oops" for something that doesn't really matter much.
#30
Posted 2014-September-22, 17:31
barmar, on 2014-September-22, 10:25, said:
Clearly the phrase "so sue me" reads differently to different people if that's what you hear. I hear a tone of "I don't care that I was wrong, and I'm not going to take any blame for it [unless you file a lawsuit to force me]" when I hear someone say that.
#31
Posted 2014-September-23, 09:19
#32
Posted 2014-September-23, 09:29
Call a lawyer and sue me, sue me
What can you do me, I love you
Give a holler and hate me, hate me
Go ahead, hate me, I love you
Read more: Guys And Dolls - Sue Me Lyrics | MetroLyrics
Admittedly, Nathan Detroit might not be everyone's idea of a role model.
#33
Posted 2014-September-23, 11:23
barmar, on 2014-September-23, 09:19, said:
It wasn't trivial when the OP started a whole new thread about it. It was trivial only when he was shown to be wrong.
#34
Posted 2014-September-23, 14:48
#35
Posted 2014-September-23, 15:41
I saw something I thought might be mildly amusing, maybe even interesting. I posted it. You don't agree. That's fine. Beyond that, I'm not getting into any more discussions on it.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#36
Posted 2014-September-23, 16:22
blackshoe, on 2014-September-23, 15:41, said:
No, surprisingly perhaps to you, completely erroneous information was not all that interesting, LOL.
OOPS sorry that was Vampyr.
#38
Posted 2014-September-23, 17:42
"Hoi polloi (Ancient Greek: οἱ πολλοί, hoi polloi, "the many"), is an expression from Greek that means the many or, in the strictest sense, the majority."
So "The hoi polloi" translates to "The the many".
Sort of interesting. I guess.
And now:
Let's shoot craps.
For the culturally deprived, this is the universal response to everything for Big Louie from Chicago in Guys and Dolls.
#39
Posted 2014-September-24, 03:34
kenberg, on 2014-September-23, 17:42, said:
Let's shoot craps.
For the culturally deprived, this is the universal response to everything for Big Louie from Chicago in Guys and Dolls.
Have you ever wondered what it would be like playing bridge the way Big Louie plays craps? - with a pack of cards on which the faces have all worn off, but Big Louie remembers which is which....
#40
Posted 2014-September-24, 05:09
WellSpyder, on 2014-September-24, 03:34, said:
This has definitely occurred to me. Big Ken isn't big enough to pull this off, at least not big enough in a useful way.