Freedomfighter wrote: But what about people who slurp their water or chew with their mouth open. I mean come on its just bad ****** manners.
Freedomfighter wrote: Now im sure everyone will agree that these are the basic rules if you will for life.
What has happened to the world?
clown bag wrote: The thing that really annoys me is when someone cuts across me mid
Freedomfighter wrote: Im far from posh or from Dublin 4
clown bag wrote: Manners are relative.
jcoote wrote: For example going for a meal:
Freedomfighter wrote: Am i wrong to be giving out here.
bonkey wrote: Whats your problem with that?
DadaKopf wrote: Dinnertable manners and etiquette are interesting - these rules were largely invented by an upwardly mobile, and avaricious, middle-class who saw these rules as a route to aristocracy. They were also a way to exclude those below them.
Freedomfighter wrote: But i was brought up to be well mannered. Now if someone serves me i need to say thank you. I feel weird saying nothing. I need to say please, its just the way i was brought up. And i mean it everytime i say it. But what about people who slurp their water or chew with their mouth open. I mean come on its just bad ****** manners.
nesf wrote: I will definitely be teaching my child manners.
Bottle_of_Smoke wrote: Well I'll be teching them .. . . .Actually no I'll just make them feel insecure about not having good ones-
colm_mcm wrote: My take on it is this: Parents aren't spending enough time with children. Teachers are afraid to critisise or correct kids on their behaviour.
crazy days wrote: ha ha Reading your public profile...how'd you teach that to a reptile i'd like to know?
crazy days wrote: Anyone ever in some of the more rougher parts of Dublin lately and walked into a shop ...Did you ever hear the way some mothers swear really badly at their kids ...it really sickens me. "Anto ya little Bastard come here or i'll bleeden kill ya!" and I've heard worse.
Freedomfighter wrote: I was brought up in one of the worst areas in dublin, but my mother and father wanted me to have a better start in life. It gives your child a grounding in how to treat people with respect. Manners is a form of respect. Ive heard mothers and fathers talk to their children like they were adults. Swearing at them and what not. All it does is teach the child its ok to do it. Can anyone remember the child in their class that was always in trouble, always speaking back, cursing even or striking the teacher. I can and they are working low paid jobs with nothing to show for their lives. And when i went to school it was still ok but not as much to strike a child. There was still the fear and intimidation a teacher held but not anymore.
growler wrote: Cultural diversity certainly plays a part in it, in my own neighbourhood its obvious that, for example, the Turkish and African communities have no hang ups about litter, strangely enough, neither do many of their 1st generation offspring.