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This is a question Ignorance

I once was in a programming class where the task was "build a calculator". A student did one with buttons 1, 2, 3 all the way up to about 25 and then ran out of space on the screen. We've asked this before but liked it so much we're asking again: What's the best example of ignorance you've encountered?

(, Thu 30 Aug 2012, 12:30)
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topical -
ignoring your electorate and your manifesto pledges with a blatantly pro aviation reshuffle...?

just sayin...
(, Tue 4 Sep 2012, 15:16, 23 replies)
Just because "ignorant" and "ignore" share many of the same letters,
it doesn't follow that someone who ignores something is de facto ignorant.
(, Tue 4 Sep 2012, 15:34, closed)
That said,
Rory is still on my ignorant list.
(, Tue 4 Sep 2012, 15:35, closed)
I really liked this.

(, Tue 4 Sep 2012, 19:30, closed)
but in this case
ignorant/ˈignərənt/

1. Lacking knowledge or awareness in general; uneducated or unsophisticated: "he was told constantly that he was ignorant and stupid".
2. Lacking knowledge, information, or awareness about something in particular: "they were ignorant of astronomy"

it therefore follows that, in the second definition, the aviation loby and pro avaition MPs' lack of awareness of the impact that the aviation industry has on west london's population in both health and social terms can be said to be 'ignorant'.
(, Tue 4 Sep 2012, 15:41, closed)
"not giving a shit about the plebs"
could possibly be wilfull ignorance, but is more likely to be simple not giving a shit. Standard MO for all politicians and business-types.
(, Tue 4 Sep 2012, 16:06, closed)
Not at all.
It's possible that they've just reached a different conclusion based on the evidence. I hate to come over all sympathetic to that shower of bastards, but you've not shown that there's anything they don't know that they reasonably might be expected to know.
(, Tue 4 Sep 2012, 17:34, closed)
And if aviation's an industry, shouldn't the Tories be stifling it rather than supporting it?

(, Wed 5 Sep 2012, 22:10, closed)
Doesn't it?
So what is someone ignoring someone engaged in the process of?
(, Tue 4 Sep 2012, 15:42, closed)
Ignoring them?
Just a thought.

I suppose you could call a person with a propensity to ignore things (perhaps things that she ought not to ignore) self-absorbed, or distracted, or uninterested, or negligent, or... well, it's a long list. But I'd want to deny that "ignorant" would be on there.
(, Tue 4 Sep 2012, 17:36, closed)
And what word would you ascribe to that process of ignoring them?

(, Wed 5 Sep 2012, 9:26, closed)
Actually, I agree with your point on this one Enzyme.
They are definitely not ignorant. History is littered with 'promises' and 'pledges' that have not been fulfilled, but have been ignored. It doesn't make politicians ignorant, maybe more clever b******s who know how to work the electorate (as much as we'd like to think they don't).
(, Tue 4 Sep 2012, 15:55, closed)
Some of them are so good they should have careers in it.

(, Tue 4 Sep 2012, 15:58, closed)
Exactly *gives a knowing stare*
I do not like the development of 'career politicians' - it means we're voting for people who have been trained in the art of winning votes. It moves them from reality.
(, Tue 4 Sep 2012, 16:02, closed)
oh, right
you didn't realise politicians lie, then?
(, Tue 4 Sep 2012, 15:48, closed)
oooh. english... what is this, theory or pedantry? my favourite.
bored are we?
(, Tue 4 Sep 2012, 15:54, closed)
Hunt's the one to watch..
www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/conservative/9520269/Jeremy-Hunt-is-controversial-appointment-as-Health-Secretary.html
Off the top of my head other than Shoe Size IQ Mensch or Mad Nad I can't actually think of a worse possible candidate for that job.
(, Tue 4 Sep 2012, 17:31, closed)
Mad Nad has already been on the Twitters
to tell everyone that giving the Health Sec's job to Jeremy Spoonerism is a good move.

With endorsements like that...
(, Tue 4 Sep 2012, 17:38, closed)
I live practically next to Heathrow
... and I'd welcome its expansion. The noise of planes flying nearby does not bother me in the slightest: in fact. I like it because it reminds me of holidays.

A third runway would actually reduce the amount of time planes spent circling around pointlessly, and actually get them landed. Shouldn't the so-called green lobby be in favour of that?

With regards to demolition of Harmondsworth village etc: that only affects very few people. Most of the houses round there have been bought up by BAA anyway: and I might understand objections from a few people who simply don't want to sell up because they're attached to their homes: but what does that have to do with anyone else in West London?

This country's full of NIMBYs and whingers, and it's why the UK is no longer great. See the booming economies of South-East Asian countries? They're not scuppered by all the moaning red-tape-loving nothing-better-to-do protest brigade that we have here.
(, Wed 5 Sep 2012, 0:35, closed)
i see the future... a daily mail headline.... 'immigrants cause capacity issues at heathrow'

(, Wed 5 Sep 2012, 10:44, closed)
note to self
qotw + cabinet reshuffle/ politcs = drearyness
(, Wed 5 Sep 2012, 10:44, closed)
Haha
Most passengers are Brits returning from holiday or business. "Immigrants" - in the loosest sense of the word - are a small minority.
(, Wed 5 Sep 2012, 16:55, closed)
Mere facts like that wouldn't stop the The Daily Mail waging one of its hate campaigns though.

(, Wed 5 Sep 2012, 22:08, closed)
You all need to watch out
for Jeremy Twunt.


He'll be to the NHS what Harold Shipman was to care for the elderly.
(, Wed 5 Sep 2012, 12:56, closed)

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