Majoru Oakheart said:
Hey, I take offense to this. It is a crime to want people to speak their minds instead of pretending to like things they don't? In this situation, I'd much rather have the woman say "Look, I don't think I really want to meet you in real life, you just don't sound like my type." than tell me "call me later and we'll see."
This is a very long thread, and I may well have misunderstood, but
I think in this case the woman was on some kind of dating agency thingy whereby standard practice is (apparently) to see about getting dates with a few members of the opposite sex rather than concentrate all your energies on one person at a time.
She put KenM on hold while she saw how a date with another person turned out, and then later decided in the other person's favour and told KenM she no longer wanted a date with him.
"Call me later and we'll see" is actually a fair reflection of her position at the time (even if its not a particularly happy one from KenM's point of view).
Other than that, I agree with you that its better to be told "no thanks" from the start if that's what the person actually thinks.
The other problem with politeness is that it only works if the other person is on your wavelength. For example, my gran has (obviously) known me all my life, but still persists in repeatedly offering me food, in the face of consistent refusals on my part, because she thinks I am just being polite in refusing.
One of the more unpleasant evenings of my life occurred as a result of a group of relative strangers asking me if I wanted to come along with them for the evening. I like meeting new people, so I readily agreed.
As a result, I left a group of people who were happy to have me with them in order to spend time with a group of people who didn't want me with them and who became more and more rude in their efforts to get rid of me - but who were still unable to actually come out and tell me that they hadn't meant the invite and it would be better if I left.
Why the heck they invited me in the first place I will never know. Presumably it was because they were being "polite", but I consider that the "polite" thing to do would have been to say "nice meeting you, hope to see you again some time" (even when it isn't true) and leave to continue the rest of their evening (as they had previously planned, so it wasn't as if I would have thought they were leaving on my account).