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I See No One Is Brave Enough To Give Me An Honest Answer To My Last Question

Are you brave enough to say "I don't know" when teaching in a class full of students?

It is not being brave, it is being honest. The correct answer is “I don’t know but I will get back to you on that.” People have more respect for someone who is honest than for someone to pretend that they have all the answers. I have never had anyone say in the dozens of classes that I have taught in college and law school, “why don’t you know?” Clearly, I am teaching a subject and approved by the school administration and I know more than my students on the subject. It is a sign of immaturity and lack of self confidence to pretend to know it all.

If you stopped loving someone, would you be brave enough to tell him/her?

Well that all depends on how you perceive the feeling of ‘stopping loving somebody’.He doesn’t turned out to be the person you thought her/him to be.Maybe you fell in love with her/him for the total set of characteristics: cute, kind, gentle, creative, intelligent, ambitious, strong, possessing leadership skills,… etc. That happens to a lot of persons, in fact it should be the main reason for which you fall in love with a person.But what do you do if (s)he does not fit the picture anymore? What if (s)he turnes out to be dumb and all these characteristics were actually a fake facade for the outside world as a defense mechanism for: lack of self-confidence, narcism?If that is the case then your claim for ‘stopping to love’ is justified and understandable. In that case it’s your duty to tell him/her. Short pain is better than going on under false pretenses.You reached a certain number of months/years that you just don’t feel this burning love, the butterflies anymore.In this case, you are in the middle of a transition. As the feeling of love is different depending on how far in your relationship you are, you should not perceive this as a loss of love. It’s rather on the contrary, your premature sense of love: butterflies, losing the sense of rationality when you meet him/her, constantly thinking about him/her, this warm tension between the both of you, is just temporary.You have reached a stage were you are maturing, at least your sense of love is maturing. Yes, you have had fights and big discussions, you don’t agree on everything and in this pink world of perfect harmony some storms have come by. But essentially, after everything and more, the most important thing is that you feel good with him/her, you still like him/her and you don’t want to leave him/her. That’s mature love, and that’s not at all a reason to break up.Regards,

What’s a good way to stop a person from asking you a question you don't want them to ask?

I've found the best way is generally not doing the thing you don't want to be asked about in the first place. Or being brave enough to stand by it if you do.I'm not claiming virtue here. There's plenty I don't want to be asked about. But that's how I've come to this realisation.If you are living life consistently in line with your own principles then what do you have to fear from questions? Even if you do not wish to answer, a simple “I'm sorry, I'd rather not say” should suffice.Questions like this puzzle me. If you have little enough respect for someone that you would seek to manipulate them into not asking a question, then what's stopping you from simply lying to them with your answer? Does it matter whether they ask or not? You've already decided that they will not be graced with the complete truth.When someone evades questions it always raises my suspicions. It doesn't speak well of them and it doesn't speak well of me. Honesty will carry you a lot further in the long run. Even if it's an honest decline to answer.We all have these two rights: the right to ask questions, and the right not to answer. Does life have to be any more complicated than that?

If interviewer asks me to ask last question before leaving and I ask when can I join? It's good or bad for me and what they think about this question?

This is totally dependent on the mindset and the way Interviewer views your question.To some it shows your confidence and your zeal to join the organisation which is a positive sign , for some it might be a straight forward question on selection. You might not be the last candidate, so there are chances that someone better than you might be waiting for his/her chance . There is possibility that they have shortlisted few suitable candidates and after interview will select the best one among those, so you will not be able to get the answer to your question,upfront.Better way is to ask how did you fair in interview and what are your chances of selection, and if selected what’s the joining period. It is a humble way to end interview on high note and confidence. It will leave a positive impact on interview panel and you will be one among the favorites.Refer this Vikas Goyal's answer to What are the best questions to ask an interviewer during a job interview?

Brave, honest people only please : which country produced thhe bravest soldiers in WW2?

Thanks to all of you for these good, honest answers. From my own personal experience I know that there are brave people in every race - I repeat, every race and nation. However, there can be no doubt that it was the Japs who outshone everyone else in WW2 - and please don't give me the tired old bullshit about brainwashing. How many people know the amazing story of the Japanese American Battalion in France in WW2? They showed a heroism unmatched by any other troops, Axis or Allied.

Anyone ever known a brave reportnik/ Is there any way I can find out who did it?

No you can't find out and it wouldn't surprise me at all if this question were deleted. It takes more than one 'reportnik' to do the job anyway. They report in TEAMS. Ever notice how much crap Yahoo leaves alone? Its because the reportniks tend to be misogynists, not feminists. The decent people tend not to report (but they should).

*Its all up to Yahoo. There is no set amount of violations that cause one to lose their account. Violations are subjective, the "rules" open to interpretation. They don't have to provide you with any justification for what they do. And they don't. Don't forget that actual humans rarely read any of our posts - Yahoo is a machine. To them all you are is an IP#.

Yahoo is a private company. "Freedom of Speech" does not apply.

And as to your last concern, "no".

How to be brave enough to kill yourself?

I know suicide is bad and it would hurt my friends and family... But I'm ugly. And I'm not just saying that. I have untreatable acne. And my body is disgusting. People tell me I'm too skinny every day. I'm 30 pounds underweight and it's actually impossible for me to gain weight. (I'm a 16 year old boy btw). I tried to gain weight on the past, it took me over 6 months to gain 10 pounds and I accidentally lost it all in less than 1 month. Depression I think.

Also I'm dumber than a door knob and I have no special talents or hobbies and nothing is fun to me anymore. On top of that I'm gay and my parents are extremely religious and homophobic. Im so low that I accidentally curled in into a ball in my bathroom corner and cried for an hour. So what's even the point of going on?

Conservatives, What Was Your Opinion Of Rosa Parks?

BD. Cooper: It probably happened, but whites MOST of the time do things to other whites, yet the Klan still exists, so I'm not sure what point you're attempting to make here. As far as invention of the seat, if they paid their fare same as anyone else on a PUBLIC bus, what difference does it make??? Many of the inventions we have now came from African-Americans of the Chinese in Ancient times, so your "argument" doesn't even remotely make sense. Bye now!

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