"There are no stupid questions."
I used to hate it when teachers said that, and I still loathe the sentiment because there are, in fact, stupid questions. Often times stupid people ask them, which is something one might expect. Let me offer up an example:
In class a teacher explained clearly a concept, let us say it was that 1+1 =2. He had a slide that said 1+1 =2, he wrote on the board that if you have one thing and add it to another you now have two things, he clearly fucking explained that 1+1 = 2!
When someone raises their hand and says "That's great, but what I really want to know is: what does 1+1 =?" that, my friends, is a stupid fucking question.
I used to hate it when teachers said that, and I still loathe the sentiment because there are, in fact, stupid questions. Often times stupid people ask them, which is something one might expect. Let me offer up an example:
In class a teacher explained clearly a concept, let us say it was that 1+1 =2. He had a slide that said 1+1 =2, he wrote on the board that if you have one thing and add it to another you now have two things, he clearly fucking explained that 1+1 = 2!
When someone raises their hand and says "That's great, but what I really want to know is: what does 1+1 =?" that, my friends, is a stupid fucking question.
A-haha! . . .
How goes it?
[Edited on Apr 27, 2006 5:38PM]