If someone often interrupts but will not easily allow themselves to be interrupted, or if someone completely ignores what the other person is saying, then that is just rude, not some difference in conversational culture. That’s not what we are talking about in this discussion though.
Yes it is. That's the confrontation, again.
The rest of your comment doesn't really make a point, just value judgement on your preference for interrupting. Someone being a loudmouth or a boor is a cultural difference or "just rude," while someone who prefers not to participate in everybody talking over each other (a predictable condition) is cold, distant, judgemental, antisocial, and just plain does not want to be part of the conversation.
This is an antagonistic and bad-faith perspective.
THAT'S THE CONFRONTATION.
If someone often interrupts but will not easily allow themselves to be interrupted, or if someone completely ignores what the other person is saying, then that is just rude, not some difference in conversational culture. That’s not what we are talking about in this discussion though.
Yes it is. That's the confrontation, again.
The rest of your comment doesn't really make a point, just value judgement on your preference for interrupting. Someone being a loudmouth or a boor is a cultural difference or "just rude," while someone who prefers not to participate in everybody talking over each other (a predictable condition) is cold, distant, judgemental, antisocial, and just plain does not want to be part of the conversation.
This is an antagonistic and bad-faith perspective.