Well basically I caught a taxi home and I saw that the taxi driver was Asian so me being crafty asked him if he was Sikh/Hindu, wanting to know if he was muslim or not Perhaps it's the drink I dunno but I don't think the question was bad...?
Well basically I think he took offence, told me he was muslim and started asking if I had coloured friends I mean, what's it to him?
Would you be offended if someone had asked what religion you follow? Anything wrong with it? :X
If this doesn't make sense I'll correct it tomorrow
That could be true^ but in answer to your question England no i wouldn't be offended..i'd just tell the person i was a muslim..on the other hand if their made negative comments regarding my religion/race then i would be offended
From your post it dosen't seem that you did this..so don't worry bout it
Well basically I caught a taxi home and I saw that the taxi driver was Asian so me being crafty asked him if he was Sikh/Hindu, wanting to know if he was muslim or not Perhaps it's the drink I dunno but I don't think the question was bad...?
Well basically I think he took offence, told me he was muslim and started asking if I had coloured friends I mean, what's it to him?
Would you be offended if someone had asked what religion you follow? Anything wrong with it? :X
If this doesn't make sense I'll correct it tomorrow
I would say he probably had a bad day.
Another possibility is he may be fairly new in the Country and not that fluent in English and percieved your question as interregation, rather than curiosity.
On a personal note I would not have been offended and would have used that as an opportunity for you to ask me about Islam. I would have have answered something like "Yes, I am. Do you know much about us?"
we are so polarized because of what is happening in the world, i think some people take offense at things that wouldn't ordinarily be offensive.
sad world.
each man thinks of his own fleas as gazelles
question authority
Another possibility is he may be fairly new in the Country and not that fluent in English and percieved your question as interregation, rather than curiosity.
Or may be the questioner had mischief making in mind and asked the question in a loaded manner to illicit the response that he got (he does same kind of things here on this very forum)
A genuine enquirer might have put it differently for example: May I ask what your religion is?
or even "wuts ur religin then me old mucker" or however one says it skinhead lingo
Would you be offended if someone had asked what religion you follow? Anything wrong with it?
No, but I wouldn't expect someone to in that sort of context. I can see why the cab driver would have been wary, and he is likely to have perceived your query as having more to do with prejudice than curiosity - wrongly, obviously.
Seriosly, the very fact that you asked if he was Sikh meant that you made a wrong assumption. If he was to wear a turban then I'd assume he was Sikh, but without any strong evidence I wouldn't ask if he was a Sikh.
As for me, I'd be irritated if someone was to come to me, and ask me if I was Hindu. Firstly, I'd be wondering, how exactly does one assume one is of anything without any evidence. And secondly, if I was to ask, I'd put it so it seems I'm not making any assumptions.
Its not always easy to know what the intentions of the other person are.
Well, there is a stereotype out there that most cab drivers are either Sikh, Hindu, or Muslim. It would probably make somebody a little defensive, especially if he has been hassled or offended in some way before by these sorts of questions.
"Imagination was given to man to compensate him for what he is not, and a sense of humor was provided to console him for what he is."
It is divided up as such:
12% it is what you say
34% the tone of Voice
54% your body language
Here is how everyone subconsciously assesses the situation. That is why there is a great deal of discord and hatred on the Internet, because you just read words and you are missing the other human factors that come to play. If you honestly felt the other two big players of the formula were non-deserving of a gore like reaction, then perhaps the trouble is with the driver? Maybe he was having a bad day and misconstrued your intent in his own mind!
peace!
Text without context is pretext If your opponent is of choleric temperament, seek to irritate him
It is divided up as such:
12% it is what you say
34% the tone of Voice
54% your body language
Here is how everyone subconsciously assesses the situation. That is why there is a great deal of discord and hatred on the Internet, because you just read words and you are missing the other human factors that come to play. If you honestly felt the other two big players of the formula were non-deserving of a gore like reaction, then perhaps the trouble is with the driver? Maybe he was having a bad day and misconstrued your intent in his own mind!
peace!
Very true. Although different researchers will differ with your exact percentages there are will within the average range of what most would say. Back when I taught a class on the "Theories of Communication" I would have placed the figures as 8%, 34%, 58%
We never know how a person hears us until we get feed back from the person.
Very true. Although different researchers will differ with your exact percentages there are will within the average range of what most would say. Back when I taught a class on the "Theories of Communication" I would have placed the figures as 8%, 34%, 58%
We never know how a person hears us until we get feed back from the person.
lol akhi my percentages aren't exact... my mind isn't as sharp as when I first learned of this which was some ten yrs ago.. so yours I am quite sure are most accurate. I always in fact try to work on my facial expressions to be utterly neutral no matter what I hear, especially in my career path. A person can't survive being abrasive and volatile, even though some people just really beg for a good whack-- It is best to control self if one can't control the situation... of course on the forum I am free to be as abrasive as I want lol kiddddddding-- no I am not :X
Text without context is pretext If your opponent is of choleric temperament, seek to irritate him
I don't know about you, but every race has certain knowledge about their type of people (no I'm not trying to be racist).
For example, me being brown, I can differentiate very easily between who is from where (ie. Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh etc etc.) where as I have a very hard time differentiating if a person who is White is from England, French, German etc. Similarily, I also have a trouble sorting the African-American from the Africans etc.
I've noticed this trait in many people. The similar concept occurs in religion too. You may not know, but me and others alike, find it hard to understand how anyone can see us as anything but muslims. Likewise, for many European/American Christians, if you consider asking someone whether they were Muslim or Jew or any other, they'd look at you funny and ask does it look like they are.
Oh my God I can't believe I made this thread. I felt bad for asking but now I don't give a crap, miserable old fart How can you possibly be offended by being asked what religion you follow? He seemed a nice guy that's why I was curious. He was talking about the England game and that we should have won so I started thinking to myself "is he muslim?"
Now if he took offence to that then...lol....pfffffffft
If someone said to me "are you French/American/Dutch/Swedish" or whatever I'd smile and tell him with pride "I'm English"
English men are not always well perceived. They are too with nose up
Huh? You mean arrogant lol? Don't mix arrogance with pride Even if nobody does like us, I'd do the exact same thing, I'd respond with pride Although we English are liked abroad. I've been abroad to many places and the respect you get for being English is great, more so in Alanya, Turkey
But that's besides the point. He should have stuck his nose up and said "I'm muslim" with pride not get all whiney about it, miserable git :X
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