Anonymous wrote:Marriage is a contract. It’s a publicly available contract.
If you break a contract or you aided somebody in breaking a contract, those somebodies should be sued for what breaking that contract cost the offended partyand pain and suffering just like every other contract.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I look at that woman I see a home wreaker and a cheater. She just gives that vibe. I am happy the woman is going after her just to embarrass her. It won't go beyond embarrassment. We hope we never ever see that POS in the Senate again.
The person who "wrecked" the home is the person who took a vow to be loyal to the person they made that home with.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Marriage is a contract. It’s a publicly available contract.
If you break a contract or you aided somebody in breaking a contract, those somebodies should be sued for what breaking that contract cost the offended partyand pain and suffering just like every other contract.
If you breach, sure. But if you aren't married, you have no contract to breach. The idea that the non-married AP has some sort of duty to care for the party being cheated on is a wild overreach. The cheater is the liable party. Anybody going after an AP is an idiot. Go after the person you have a contract with, sure. Who they breached with is immaterial (unless it's, like, your sibling or something egregious). That they breached is the relevant matter.
Anonymous wrote:When I look at that woman I see a home wreaker and a cheater. She just gives that vibe. I am happy the woman is going after her just to embarrass her. It won't go beyond embarrassment. We hope we never ever see that POS in the Senate again.
Anonymous wrote:Marriage is a contract. It’s a publicly available contract.
If you break a contract or you aided somebody in breaking a contract, those somebodies should be sued for what breaking that contract cost the offended partyand pain and suffering just like every other contract.
Anonymous wrote:Marriage is a contract. It’s a publicly available contract.
If you break a contract or you aided somebody in breaking a contract, those somebodies should be sued for what breaking that contract cost the offended partyand pain and suffering just like every other contract.
Anonymous wrote:What is the point of ‘going after’ an affair partner? If You think you can buy your spouse’s loyalty by filing lawsuits against mistresses then you are wasting your energy - she needs to let go of that spouse. She talks about him like he’s a child. It’s creepy. That said women who date married men are generally crazy and probably have daddy issues.