For miscellaneous discussions and remarks not suitable for top-level posts even in the Discussion section, let alone in Main.
(Naturally, if a discussion gets too unwieldy, celebrate by turning it into a top-level post, just like in the good old days.)
A post in French about "You always want to be right!" presents an interesting hypothesis: People who always want to actually be right like corrections a lot (because they make them righter). So they emit a lot of them; whenever someone makes a mistake, they offer a patch. But most people dislike corrections; when presented with one, they distort it instead of updating. So they end up with two mistakes instead of one. This leads the corrector to emit another correction, making things worse. Therefore, the interlocutor sees someone who constantly tells them they're wrong, but is never right (because their words get distorted before reaching consciousness) - someone who refuses to lose debates ("who always want to be right").
This is interesting. In particular, it explains why I often get called this by people who seem, both to me and to others, to "always want to be right" (make obvious mistakes, refuse to admit them). If it were just Dunning-Kruger (people who think "Oh, I'm so good at changing my mind in response to evidence!" being worse at it, and getting called out), we shouldn't expect such a pattern.
Alternately, maybe they're accusing us of being clever arguers.
This situation is common - Alice cares about being right, verifiably changes her mind unusually often, including saying "You're right, I was wrong" during debates, likes to look at the evidence; Bob (according to several outsiders) often defends propositions like "The sky is green" in the face of contrary evidence, and gets angry when corrected; yet Bob accuses Alice of always wanting to be right.
It can't just be about status. Bob would just call Alice a jerk or something. The hypothesis I linked is the best I've seen so far. What's going on?
I can't present much in the way of evidence, but I think it is about status, and 'you always want to be right' is a more-specific way of calling someone a jerk.
It may be about status in a way that's not immediately obvious, though - my model suggests that it's less about who's got higher status and more about something like equanimity, and that the question is whether or not Alice is trying to make a power grab; if not, the common wisdom is that she won't consider it worthwhile to fight about something just for the sake of being right.
Actually on further reflection, this reminds me of a model I read about a while ago that suggests that uncertainty in relative status is important for group cohesion - that only the group alpha and the group omega can have approximately-known status, and between those two extremes someone making their relative status clear will be a destabilizing influence, for reasons that either weren't presented well or I've forgotten. I'll see if I can find that; it was a rather complicated model, of which this is just a small part, but it seemed potentially useful.
ETA: Found it. That's actually the last post in the series, and it uses some specialized definitions for deliberately semi-offensive words, so it might be better to start at the beginning.