And what’s so wrong about that? Is it my fault that I have nothing worth discussing with you? Why do you insist that people talk about things they clearly have not interest in?
What in the world are you talking about? This is so random and off-topic. I’m talking about your earlier statements that implied (or said?) that you have no obligation to pay attention to someone who’s talking to you, when you have a legitimate relationship with that person, such as work, and the subject is work.
I wasn’t talking about “me.” Why do you keep using the second person singular? I’m not trying to “force” “you” to talk to “me.” I’m telling you that when a person has a legitimate interest in having a conversation with you, based on your relationship with that person, you, I, anyone, is rude to prefer an electronic device, based on some need to “prove” some standard of high interest so that you (or anyone!) will deign to put down the elctronic advice, look them in the eye, and listen.
I’m not talking, naturally, about optional conversations. We’re not socially obliged, let alone morally obliged, to indulge strangers in conversation – whether the topic is or is not interesting to us. We can find a way to deflect their attempts, we can walk away if we can do so without giving offense, etc.
When we’re at work, and the subject is work, we do the same. We’re not required to indulge someone else’s empty talk, gossip, and time-wasting. We can ask them politely to get to the point. We can indicate, if it’s gossip or personal stuff, that we’re not interested and we have work to do. The solution is not to pull out our electronic device. That’s merely answering rudeness or boredom with more rudness and boredom.
If the subject is material to work, we have an obligation not to deliberately bring another conversation into the twosome (or group conversation) with an electronic device, unless we have permission for that.
That has more in common with pushy evangelism than social interaction.
I have absolutely no idea what you’re talking about, but I am talking about manners, and nothing else. No one with manners requires others to live up to individual expectations of exciting subject matter in order to give them merely the time of day. That’s absurd, socially and logically.
Don’t forget, if you want people to have a conversation with you, you gotta bring something to the table. It’s not the other way around (unless you want to turn a conversation into an automatic tutorial about the subject).
Again, I have no idea what you’re talking about. You don’t know me. How would you know whether I do or do not “want people to have a conversation with me?” I expect people, and I would expect you, if we had a relationship of any category, to acknowledge my existence with manners. I would expect that I would treat you respectfully if we were having a conversation – not pulling out my phone if I suddenly found you “boring.” If I felt the conversation were dragging out, I would indicate that; I would not feel entitled to be rude to you by turning on a phone, a TV, a laptop (and ignoring you while doing so).
And all courteous people understand this.