The OP is literally this:
I hate when websites use the terms “Item arrives before Mother’s/Father’s Day”.
Makes me want to cry, thinking about the alternate timeline where I have a normal life and no depression/anxiety.
What about “I hate when websites use the terms” and “Makes me want to cry” tells you that OP wants websites to advertise with mother’s day/father’s day?
And what about “Websites shouldn’t use the term for marketing/websites should allow you to opt out” tells you that I said people (and not only companies) shouldn’t use these terms?
Again, please read what was written, don’t invent arguments and statements.
irmoz@lemmy.world 4 days ago
Don’t put words in my mouth. I didn’t say they wanted them to use. I specifically said that you can infer they don’t want them to use it.
But, like I said, there is no demand there, is there? You can’t get an ought from an is.
That quote is nowhere in the OP. What are you talking about?
squaresinger@lemmy.world 4 days ago
You really have reading problems, don’t you?
The first part was from the OP, the second part was from my post.
Talking with you is like talking with the original version of ChatGPT. You forget everything that was said just in the last post before. There’s no point talking to someone with the attention span of a goldfish.
irmoz@lemmy.world 4 days ago
So OP never told anyone to stop using those terms… you put the words in their mouth.
Why should I consider what YOU said, when making statements about what OP wants?
No, that just wasn’t relevant to what I was saying. Not even a little.
squaresinger@lemmy.world 4 days ago
No, OP only said they hate when websites do that because they love when websites do that. Surely that’s what “I hate when websites do that” means.
Have fun, bot. No need to talk to you.