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In the same dreadful spirit as
hotornot.com, a website called something
like hesaidshesaid.com in which couples
can post their versions of an argument or
problematic situation. Readers could then
vote on who they think is right.
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Annotation:
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[+] Because a divorce court's the wrong place for petty squabbles. |
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I question whether a vote amongst people I don't know has much meaning to me in a personal argument, though. |
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I've seen a site exactly like this, but I'll be damned if I can think of the name of it. |
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...because everyone knows that that
there's three sides to every story: what
he said, what she said, and the truth. |
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"Always" and "Never" are the culprit words in couple arguments - seriously. |
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If you are fighting a lot, try setting up an agreement where the first person to use "Always" or "Never" in the argument is automatically deemed to have lost. |
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Or split up and sell the trailer. Whatever. |
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With the right marketing I see this website getting very popular. Good idea. |
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I can forsee this causing even more rifts, gets me bun. |
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In my esteemed and expert opinion, the words of an argument and the circumstances surrounding the argument are rarely, if ever, relevant to the actual problem. Anonymous votes on some trivial issue are unlikely to help the fact that two people may hate each other but are too insecure to part. |
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//...because everyone knows that that there's three sides to every story: what he said, what she said, and the truth.// |
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6 Total:
Hers/His/Truth then, |
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What mihali and afro said, and everyone else will just say, "yeah, what waugs said". |
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As for the idea, I am not the sort that likes to air my dirty linens in public. This sounds like an internet copy of the Springer show. The audience voices their opinion by shouting at the people they disagree with. |
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Ah, but through the magic of the internet nobody will know the linens are yours. |
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...or that they are dog linens. |
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...or that they're imaginary linens... |
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