Or what about constant checking of BlackBerries and Smartphones? When I’m out with colleagues, most of us tend to check our BlackBerries once in a while, which in the news business is understandable. (As one of my colleagues once wrote, “Looking down is the new looking up.”) There are often stories that need to be looked after once we’ve left the office. But there are a few colleagues that check in constantly. It leaves me thinking that they would rather be at work, or are at least more interested in what is going on at work, than having a conversation. That, to me, spells rude. Being disrespectful of a colleague’s time, whether on the job or not, probably does more harm than incessant checking in does good for your career.This is what I think: the heart of manners is consideration for those around us. It is an intrusion into the lives of others to foist loud noise, be it music or conversation or shouting, upon them. Also, the people in whose company we are in at the moment deserve our immediate attention, not those texting or phoning us, with the exception of emergencies. If we need to take a call or answer a text, then we should excuse ourselves profusely and later try to take up the conversation where it was when interrupted. Share
Readers, do you think the concept of rudeness has changed (or not) with mobile technology? Do you agree, as Markoe describes, that to some people, “what’s rude is asking for privacy in any place that gets a signal, because you’re interfering with someone else’s rights of expression”? (Read entire article.)
The Last Judgment
5 days ago
2 comments:
I think manners, like grammar, has changed over the years. It may not be a good thing, but it has occured. Just look at the films from the early 1900's with men and women walking on the beach in hats and long sleeves. Now, we can barely get people to put clothes on for a job interview or to go to church.
The new technology has changed manners just like television (and probably telephones) did in their time.
It really is a question of prescriptive or descriptive manners.
I feel people were becoming more rude even before the new Technology. It has just added another level of rudeness. Our society believes everything should be out in the open, everything... and that being polite and gracious is just being a fake and a fraud, and is masking one's true self.
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