Dr. Shades wrote:Roger Morrison wrote:I suggest again, the question "WHY", in that event, and every tragic event, at home and abroad, should consume honest researchers... MY trite question: Are there situations where/when negotiations are NOT "useless"? ;-) Warm regards, Roger, hoping this goes through, from another library????
Let's cut to the chase, Roger. Rather than sitting here playing 20 questions, why don't you just give us your answers to the above two questions?
RM: It takes two to play. I assume these are the 2 questions you refer to. 1- "...are there situations where negotiations are useless?" Of course. I expected we both knew that. 2- Re the 9-11 hijack: I don't know. Had there been the 'right' people on the passenger list, who's to say? Obviously the 'right' people weren't there.
(Also: A person is only allotted a finite amout of quotation marks to use in his or her lifetime. You've exceeded your quota many times over. The same goes for question marks.
RM: Is this a rule on MDF? Is there a monetary cost involved? (If so i'll send a cheque :-) Or, just a personal irritant? (If so, maybe we both can adjust? ;-) For your information below:Quotation marks or inverted commas (also informally quotes,[1] and occasionally speech marks) are punctuation marks used in pairs to set off speech, a quotation, a phrase or a word. The pair consists of an opening quotation mark and a closing quotation mark, which may or may not be the same character. (UL added by RM)
Next time, so the rest of us can make better sense of your writing, please don't use any quotation marks unless you're actually typing out the words that someone else said beforehand. And, for the next little while, no more than one punctuation mark per sentence. Deal?)[/quote
Explaination of the multiple "?": They express 'wondering' &/or 'uncertainty' on my part. To me they add more clarity than confussion. But, i certainly want you to, "... make better sense of (my) writing..." But, please appreciate, "old habits--especially 'good-ones'--die hard". Warm regards, Roger