Overzeetop,
Overzeetop avatar

Regardless of what the signs are, after reading through everyone’s suggestions I feel great!

TimTheEnchanter,

People who treat people working in the service sector with kindness and patience. They are usually the first to get yelled at if something goes wrong and put up with a lot of crap that they have no control over. On the flip side, I know someone who is almost always hostile to severs at restaurants, customer service personnel, etc. and it blows my mind. Just…gross. Who does that?

BuddhaBeettle,
BuddhaBeettle avatar

Some people fake it with children to fake appeareances (they may not care about the child, but they do care about the opinion of the parents or anyone watching), I find it way more telling when looking how they treat animals and pets, since those are often percieved as "inferior beings" and its harder to fake it.

I personally trust my dog's opinion on people upon meeting them.

termus,
@termus@beehaw.org avatar

Depends on the state they leave the restroom in after they leave. Leaving piss on the toilet seat says a lot about a person.

tal, (edited )
tal avatar

I dunno if I can agree, OP.

EDIT: Image of Hitler being friendly with a baby was attached. I can see it on kbin.social, but not viewing beehaw.org, at least not in a quick test not being signed in, so just want to clarify to avoid the post being nonsensical if someone else can't see it.

curiosityLynx,

It's my default assumption about anyone unless/until I have indications of that not being the case. To be completely honest, those indications can be rather small sometimes.

bennyp,
bennyp avatar

There's no good answer to this other than time and trust. Psychopaths and con artists can and do fake it to quickly gain trust for nefarious purposes. Doesn't mean you have to live in a cave, just don't imagine there are shortcuts to relationships and community.

BaroqueInMind,
BaroqueInMind avatar

Yours is the only correct answer here.

trolder,

Someone who is willing to listen, think, and non-agressively talk about an alternate view to their own.

greenteadrinker,

People who give others what they wish they had. Sometimes people can be bitter and envious of what others got. I think it takes being a bigger person to accept that you didn’t receive it then, and you can still give it to others.

I’m mostly talking about things like time, attention, patience, tolerance, affection, and positive reinforcement/affirmation. Just because you had a bad time, doesn’t mean others have to experience it.

UngodlyAudrey,
@UngodlyAudrey@beehaw.org avatar

Yeah, sometimes people will just tear down others out of jealousy. I saw a lot of that when I was in the military. It was depressingly common to have one group leave for the day, and someone who still had work to do would call out, "Must be nice". I always hated that. I was assigned to a submarine(which was really awful since the sub force was all male at the time and I was a closeted trans woman), everyone had it lousy. I would always think to myself, "Is it really that hard to be happy for someone, instead of being bitter that you have to stay longer". Now, granted, there were some people who had demonstrably worse times due to workload. But that doesn't give you carte blanche to be a drag on everyone else.

Spudger,
@Spudger@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

The way they treat animals. There is the obvious exception…

furrowsofar,

That is my default assumption. They can then disprove it.

iByteABit,
iByteABit avatar

Maybe my definition of "decent human being" is too strict, but it's way too rare for me to assume it.
I assume that someone I don't know is alright, but they have to do some kind act or show good behavior at their expense without expecting to be rewarded for me to understand that they really are a good person and aren't just good to others when it's easy and beneficial for them.

thumbtack,

people who randomly up litter or are happy to share things with others are always a good sign to me

LinkOpensChest_wav,
@LinkOpensChest_wav@beehaw.org avatar

deleted_by_author

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  • spider,

    We get lots of practice with that during winter months here in Florida.

    AttackBunny,

    Personally, I have all the patience in the world for someone who can’t. I have absolutely zero fucking patience for someone who won’t.

    What I mean by that is if someone is disabled, or old, etc, I will go out of my way to help them, or at the very least be patient with their slowness, or need to overcome an obstacle.

    People who are fully capable and just refuse, yeah……zero patience.

    LinkOpensChest_wav,
    @LinkOpensChest_wav@beehaw.org avatar

    I was thinking about those who can't when I made that comment

    Gaywallet,
    @Gaywallet@beehaw.org avatar

    While I'm sure you're already aware of this, I wanted to take a second to point out some framing you used when you said the following, and a common misconception that people who are not familiar with disability communities or regularly interact with disabled folks often make

    I will go out of my way to help them

    To anyone out here reading this who isn't aware, it's really important to check in with people whether they want help, before offering it. Offering help when it's not solicited is called 'patronizing help', and the difference between how abled and disabled people view this is rather stark. In one study on this, a hypothetical is posed, summarized below as follows:

    Mary is a blind woman who uses a white cane to navigate her commute to work. One day, she finds a construction project obstructing her usual path to the bus stop.

    Stopping at a street corner, Mary asks a passerby to confirm that the bus stop is one block away. One pedestrian tells her it’s too dangerous for her to be walking on her own, takes her by the arm, and insists on accompanying her to the destination.

    Another pedestrian says it’s too dangerous for her to be walking on her own and tells her to go home.

    Which pedestrian was more helpful?

    There's a pretty stark difference between how helpful sighted and blind individuals found the two different responses. Just take a look at this chart

    https://beehaw.org/pictrs/image/9c0d7889-5ec8-40db-aea9-5a33783782fd.png

    So to anyone out there who offers help, please ask whether someone wants help and then follow it up by asking how you can be helpful!

    AttackBunny,

    To clarify. I didn’t say it to limit what how long what I typed out, but yes, I always ask first, unless someone asks me.

    “Can you help me get down this step?” Yes, absolutely, take my arm.

    If I See someone struggling to move trash cans back down their driveway, for instance “would you like some help moving those?” If they say no, ok have a nice day.

    I encounter a lot more elderly people than disabled, and usually it’s a resounding yes please help, but I respect when it’s not. I also took care of my aging grandmother forever, so I am good at picking out what’s the stubborn “I can’t do this dammit” mindset.

    Domiku,

    My expectations are low, but when you put your shopping cart back in the corral. Bonus points if you actually nest it into the other carts instead of randomly pushing it willy-nilly.

    Dee_Imaginarium,
    @Dee_Imaginarium@beehaw.org avatar

    Was going to say the same thing but I'm glad I checked the comments first.

    The shopping cart test is the tried and true method of whether somebody is capable of self governance and therefore at least a halfway decent human being.

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