I have no idea what happened in the last few years--either I am getting old, or kids are getting worse. (Maybe a little bit of both)
I guess it has something to do with the fact that many parents these days are trying too hard to be friends with their kids. It isn't 'cool' to give thank you cards, or say "excuse me", and god forbid you give up your seat on the bus for a pregnant woman or the elderly.
I don't get it. When I have kids, you can be sure that they'll be taught manners the same way I was taught by my parents.
2006-12-29 02:47:18
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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I was in a store once sitting next to a woman handling her 2 little ones. The baby she had in her lap dropped something on the floor. A teenage boy walking by stepped over the item and kept walking.
This, and other incidences like this, makes me ask the same question. Common courtesy is not an art. Or, at least, it shouldnt be. I almost never see teens open the door for others or simply just show typical, common manners. Nevermind something like pulling a chair out for someone.
People can be selfish and selfcentered, now and more so than ever.
2006-12-29 03:28:25
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answer #2
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answered by JC 7
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The "real which ability" of martial arts, from the get-bypass, became for use against yet another person in attempt against, probable in a time of conflict, interior the hopes which you get to stay one extra day. the full "perfection of character" stuff is a consequence of the overdue nineteenth/early twentieth Centuries whilst hand reachable attempt against became now no longer the precious ability it was once. combating has continually been the "final determination" considering the fact that day a million (barring athletic opposition, it is how martial arts systems certainly survived as long as they did) in spite of the undeniable fact that it became considering the fact which you probably did no longer comprehend how good the different guy could be at violence. do no longer %. fights because of the fact the different guy could be extra helpful. It became pragmatic, no longer moralistic. i'm no longer asserting "perfection of character" can no longer or should not be a objective in martial arts education, yet so a techniques as i'm in contact, the smart use of ones physique against yet another person is what we are analyzing. it is the objective: to be the perfect we are able to be at with the flexibility to break yet another person with our physique if we would desire to continually. Now do no longer confuse this for asserting that because of the fact we are able to do this, that we would desire to continually at our entertainment; i'm useful law enforcement officials want to be the perfect marksmen they are able to be, yet they do no longer bypass around randomly shooting human beings. i'm merely asserting, while you're actually not attempting to be ready to being the perfect at violence which you will be, you're actually not analyzing martial arts.
2016-11-24 22:51:44
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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Dear Yahoo User,
It's because people don't really have to talk to each other anymore. With email, voicemail, IM and SMS, etc.....a shorthand has developed in how we "speak".. People don't write "Dear --..." when addressing someone by email - they just being a sentence (most of the time in lowercase, with no spellcheck).
A while back, I worked for someone who would send me blackberry messages in all caps, which reads as if you are yelling at someone. He also sat 10 feet away from me and used to IM me to "come into his office". Lest I forget, he did thank me once - by email, of course - punctuated by a smiley face :-).
Best,
Ava_blue
2006-12-29 03:06:24
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answer #4
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answered by Ava 2
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Of course it is... Look at the world around us... our future "leaders" of tomorrow makes me nervous! There parent's can only do so much in raising them... once they get into school around rude children and disgruntled adults, they get jaded.
Technology doesn't help either.. it's much easier to be rude and short via e-mail and voicemails, etc.
2006-12-29 02:43:52
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answer #5
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answered by Reserved 6
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I agree with you. Manners and common courtesy are not what they used to be. Simply saying "thank you" or "please" is all it takes. Everyone seems to be getting ruder, and less aware of their sour attitude.
2006-12-29 02:43:21
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answer #6
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answered by Seven Costanza 5
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I have manners!
2006-12-29 03:20:41
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answer #7
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answered by Brand.New 5
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we wanted more honest kids but we onerdid it
2006-12-29 03:01:43
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answer #8
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answered by Nora 7
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