Quote:
Originally Posted by Embracingtruth
"But my friend is important to me." That right there is your answer. If your friend is special to you then make sure you invest that time productively. Most importantly try and stray from subjects that you and her husband do not agree on. Hopefully it will be easy to avoid social and political issues while all of you are out doing things together. I also think you need to pause before you jump too far into judging him for standing up for what he believes in. Why? Because you did exactly the same thing. You went down your checklist of virtue signaling like he did and you both came out looking about the same - no tolerance for different opinions. Both of you think you're right and your choices are the obvious ones. Let me say this. You got to give to live. That means you have to turn the cheek and show him tolerance if you want to see the bigger picture. Maybe in time, if he can see you're respectful to his views, it might make him think differently. Living by example is often the best way to persuade people no matter how you see the world.
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Yes my friend is absolutely important to me.
However, I would disagree and say that I do have tolerance for different opinions than mine. And I was keen to continue to discuss but he got annoyed and stated that I would never change his mind (I wasn’t trying to, I was explaining why I think the way I do just as he did for me).
I have difference of opinion with my husband on things. But he is open to evidence and able to discuss his views without insulting me or claiming that I’ll never change his mind. He’s also willing to admit that he doesn’t know everything.
This guy had a strong opinion on almost everything that was discussed. And he couldn’t admit, even when presented with evidence, that there might be another way to think. I think the ignorance was probably the most rattling thing.
I appreciate that my original post could have been interpreted as me being intolerant of others views but that certainly isn’t the case and I usually actually enjoy learning how others think.