Yes, I have noticed that also. And it isn’t just verbal communication, it’s all person-to-person interaction. Anger is rampant and self-control minimal to nonexistent. The notion of quiet indignation and the moral authority that it carries seems to be dead.bloke wrote:The real point that I was trying to make is that people are now sheltering themselves from real verbal communication - and insisting on written communication (texting), but fail to read the written communication for important details, so what the heck...
Another consequence of this is that people don't really say what they mean in written communication, because it's a permanent record of what they said, and they don't particularly like that.
Verbal phone calls are useful, and people need to return to them and embrace them when they are best.
But I like texting for a lot of things because it allows asynchronous communication, except that texters often become demanding about an immediate response.
99.7% of the landline phone calls we received are unwanted solicitations. We ignore them. But it’s there for 99.999% of the emergency calls we might need to make. Cellular service is the first thing that dies around here in a good rainstorm, let alone a real disaster.
Rick “wondering what road will lead us back” Denney