Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's easy to give an opinion until it's your child. Having first had experience, no you don't disown them. You acknowledge what's happened, make sure the consequence is enforced, and love them through rehabilitation and repentance.
No
My cousin granted had a very hard upbringing. My mother’s brother and wife sucked as parents .
He went to jail for 15 years in Florida. There is no rehabilitation or repentance for a serious crime
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's easy to give an opinion until it's your child. Having first had experience, no you don't disown them. You acknowledge what's happened, make sure the consequence is enforced, and love them through rehabilitation and repentance.
No
My cousin granted had a very hard upbringing. My mother’s brother and wife sucked as parents .
He went to jail for 15 years in Florida. There is no rehabilitation or repentance for a serious crime
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Serial killer, rapist, 9-11, a Timothy Mcveigh bombing. Yes I would.
Also, I would disown a child who worked worked for the Trump administration and would divorce DH of he worked for this evil man.
It’s sad that your children will never know unconditional love and acceptance. I despise trump. Thankfully, my children do as well. I would not disown them if they supported him.
Question: is there a point at which "unconditional love and acceptance" of a child becomes a crime against someone else?
Is it ethical NOT to disown someone who: raped babies, raped a sibling, murdered someone else's child, committed an act of mass terrorism, etc.?
Does NOT disowning someone who raped babies say something (bad) about your own code of ethics/worth as a human being? I think it does.
Anonymous wrote:It's easy to give an opinion until it's your child. Having first had experience, no you don't disown them. You acknowledge what's happened, make sure the consequence is enforced, and love them through rehabilitation and repentance.
Anonymous wrote:It's easy to give an opinion until it's your child. Having first had experience, no you don't disown them. You acknowledge what's happened, make sure the consequence is enforced, and love them through rehabilitation and repentance.