“No” does not require two people’s agreement. If Aunt Suzie offers me a slice of pie, I don’t need her permission to say no to it.
You don’t, but you don’t have to be rude about it. It’s simply you declining a polite offer. It’s not some sort of categorical imperative that you must assert yourself and throw politeness and respect for Aunt Suzie out the window because otherwise you can’t feel satisfied you’ve asserted yourself enough.
If Trish invites me to a movie, I don’t need her permission to say no.
As above. I’m sure you’ll agree with that a polite person would make it something along the lines of: ‘Thank you, but I have other plans,’ ‘Sorry, I don’t like the director/lead,’ ‘Wish I could, but I’ve got work tonight,’ depending on what’s true. Just because you technically have the right to cut it to ‘Not interested’ doesn’t mean Trish deserves that from you.
If Steve offers to walk me to my apartment (and that idea creeps me out),
Then it looks like you’re creeped out by what was basic courtesy in our grandparents’ time. An orange flag flashing because of the day and age we live in, so you decline? Sure. But rash judgment is something completely different, as is the whole ‘creeping’ thing, which sound so very disdainful and cruel as a way of referring to a fellow human being — especially one who, depending on the details of the situation, and you need to consider that possibility when you judge his conduct — might well be offering it for your own protection or entertainment and actually might have nothing to do with any hope of . In making such a proposal he doesn’t become your property or some modern sort of servant for you to judge and castigate at will no matter how unfairly. Decline to your heart’s content, but the manner of it is something morality very much applies to.
I don’t need to get his permission to say no.
Yup. And you don’t have
his permission to dispense with pleasantries and start thrashing him verbally, either.
If Bob from accounting makes a lewd suggestion, I don’t need permission from him to say no. Etc.
That’s a different situation. Key: ‘lewd’.
- That kind of reasonably well-mannered guy is not both a) riding the subway or bus and
What we are (sort of) discussing was originally just one of the many examples of situations that could be judged either way depending on the facts.
b) bothering women on the bus and subway.
Says everything there is to say, and I commented on that already when similarly disdainful language popped up from other posters…
the Northeastern US is to leave strangers alone on transit. Anybody who violates that rule is–by definition–a rule-breaker, and hence automatically questionable.
We aren’t at Northeastern Answers.
A guy who does that doesn’t have good manners.
Says you.
- I think a guy who is getting that kind of strongly negative response needs to do a little soul-searching and think about whether he doesn’t need to fine tune his approach.
This is not about my approach, it’s about consistently disdainful and contemptuous language in talking about men, coupled with arguments that no politeness or basic human respect applies.
He may be making some pretty egregious social mistakes.
A lot of men make those, so do a lot of women. In neither case does it give others the licence to treat them like trash.