They have to say something that can be accepted by the generic public. They cannot say nothing, and they cannot say prayers alone or else risk being called religious bigots. That's just how companies work, they always say they are aware of issues, are working on them, and that they care about 100% customer satisfaction. When someone is representing something much bigger than themselves, they need those "robotic" responses or else they will screw up somewhere and get someone angry.
I guess maybe I hate the "general public" for forcing us to have to use such stupid responses. On a related subject, I hate interviews with pro sports players. It's so boring and predictable.
"What did you think of that questionable play that Rodriguez made today?"
"Well, Bob, we're just here to play baseball and do what we need to do and blah blah blah. "
thoughts and prayers, thoughts and prayers
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They have to say something that can be accepted by the generic public. They cannot say nothing, and they cannot say prayers alone or else risk being called religious bigots. That's just how companies work, they always say they are aware of issues, are working on them, and that they care about 100% customer satisfaction. When someone is representing something much bigger than themselves, they need those "robotic" responses or else they will screw up somewhere and get someone angry.
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Crudler
9 years ago
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I guess maybe I hate the "general public" for forcing us to have to use such stupid responses. On a related subject, I hate interviews with pro sports players. It's so boring and predictable.
"What did you think of that questionable play that Rodriguez made today?"
"Well, Bob, we're just here to play baseball and do what we need to do and blah blah blah. "