ANSWERS: 6
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When a little kid asks if Santa is real.
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When the answer is none of the questioner's business. Examples: Questions on sexual orientation, weight, intensely personal events, love life, etc. "That's not something I care to discuss."
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How about when your in a voting booth and the people that are hosting the voting event ask who you are going to vote for before you even sit down to vote.
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1. When the question oversteps reasonable boundaries ("Do you and your husband engage in [pick a sex act] in the bedroom?"). 2. When the question is so loaded that a direct answer could be a trap to "prove" a disputed point . ("So, how long have you been a deviant sinner who's going to hell?"). 3. When the direct answer may endanger another. ( "She cheated on me and I am so mad i could kill. Do you know where she is right now?"). Those are three examples, but there are more. There are no hardcore rules with such things and exceptions will always be justifiable. One has to treat each unique situation independently.
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When someone asks you personal or prying questions they have no reason to ask ... I would not answer them at all, rather find a way to sidestep the questions entirely.
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When it's gonna stir up controversy, mega drama and cause fights.
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