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Michelle Taylor ([personal profile] chess) wrote2002-05-21 06:31 pm

(no subject)

Everyone's doing this 'ask a question, get an honest answer' thing. However, if I were to do so (and I'm tempted to) I'd have to add a caveat - 'if giving an answer doesn't betray anyone's trust'. I have an absolutely miserable track record with other people's secrets, and I'm certainly not going to give out an oppertunity for anyone to demand them from me.

I'm just wondering why no-one else has ordered this caveat. Is it a case of a) less other-people's-secrets, b) less scruples or c) less thought?

(I must quit posting mildly to seriously controversial stuff and get back to my life, such as it is, sometime or other.)

[identity profile] passage.livejournal.com 2002-05-21 02:54 pm (UTC)(link)
It is an valid point.

But then how good is the offer?

If you forgot and I asked you to betray someone else's trust you could go back on your statement and say "that's not what I meant" or whatever, you're not a computer, this isn't a formal system.

You're very generous however, I was going to (and I'm not tempted ;-)) I'd have to add the caverat "Unless you manage to hit a question I really don't want to answer."

Neil

[identity profile] naath.livejournal.com 2002-05-22 03:29 am (UTC)(link)
because none of the embarassing questions are about other ppls secrets...