rruff, Your inability to connect the dots is understandable. You want me to show you the path that you take? How I ask, can this happen? You can not see the path of others, which in itself is a skill that few master, but yet you state that the path another takes is false and wrong. This at the same time that you are not able to actually know of your own path. Yes, to you its lies to fill in others' missteps, but thats your opinion of something grown out of your state of confusion you refuse to help. Yes, help as in to help yourself understand why you do not know, felt by you as confusion, one of the most terrifying and destructive places a person can find themselves, which answers the question not asked by them, "what now" since they flee away from that which they cannot exit, except using an ignore and filter method that replaces confusion with "They don't understand." or just more same old same replacing your confusion with problems & troubles created by others that prevent you from a smooth & troubled free existance. Imagine if BobZ wrote the iHub user functionality code in the same manner you deal with items and objects and concerns of your life. Imagine when BobZ new code with bugs or simple "oops, it was not to do that" and BobZ mimicked the rruff song & dance, well, BobZ would do that ignore + filter and place that code into production, and when Sheriff Matt gets a tonne of 911 calls and calls Bob, well Bob tells the Sheriff to tell the iHub users to place that code onto the Ignore/Filter so it will not cause them trouble. And ya'up, what if the Ignore/Filter feature is that which folks complain about as not letting them have a good iHub'n venture? So see rruff, you do not, as you choose a path to not see. And yes, one has to be able to see one's own pathway first, else you will be looking at the pathway others travel, and when you step into a pothole, or hit an unmoving object, you will look at another's path as having that which causes you to trip or stop. Best you stop telling others to clean up their act(path) and start looking at where you place your own feet, as the trouble places are where you step, your path. Also, to follow another's path and not like it? Well, complain to yourself, not to the one you followed, and most likely has no clue of you, and even if so, another walks for their own trip, not yours, no matter your complaining.
D:oug |