Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The right thing can be very subjective!
Rape, murder, theft, setting fires, assault are wrong. Not subjective at all.
Cheating/adultery, knowingly and willingly sleeping with someone married or cheating in your own!!!!
I would be so disappointed in my kid if they did this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The right thing can be very subjective!
Rape, murder, theft, setting fires, assault are wrong. Not subjective at all.
Yeah, but the “right thing” is subjective in families who aren’t dealing with murder and rape.
When I was growing up, my neighbor had a younger sister with Down’s syndrome. Her parents always said she was going to take care of her sister when they grew up. She would have panic attacks about it. Her parents were livid when she applied to college across the country and even angrier when she never came back. They kept saying “They raised her to do the right thing!” and said they had no idea what went wrong. We weren’t even that close but I remember her crying in the backyard a lot when we were kids.
What a sh!t kid.
I watched love is blind UK and one of the men had a brother with downs that he loved and planned to help take care of.
Both parents should make the arrangements, trusts, govt program and aid, living squared away. Not dump it on the sibling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The right thing can be very subjective!
Rape, murder, theft, setting fires, assault are wrong. Not subjective at all.
Yeah, but the “right thing” is subjective in families who aren’t dealing with murder and rape.
When I was growing up, my neighbor had a younger sister with Down’s syndrome. Her parents always said she was going to take care of her sister when they grew up. She would have panic attacks about it. Her parents were livid when she applied to college across the country and even angrier when she never came back. They kept saying “They raised her to do the right thing!” and said they had no idea what went wrong. We weren’t even that close but I remember her crying in the backyard a lot when we were kids.
What a sh!t kid.
I watched love is blind UK and one of the men had a brother with downs that he loved and planned to help take care of.
Both parents should make the arrangements, trusts, govt program and aid, living squared away. Not dump it on the sibling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does this statement actually hold weight and matter? At what age? Where is the line for when every person is responsible for having their own mind, thoughts, and behavior?
Nothing to do with that.
It implies you didn’t do the moral or ethical thing. Societal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The right thing can be very subjective!
Rape, murder, theft, setting fires, assault are wrong. Not subjective at all.
Yeah, but the “right thing” is subjective in families who aren’t dealing with murder and rape.
When I was growing up, my neighbor had a younger sister with Down’s syndrome. Her parents always said she was going to take care of her sister when they grew up. She would have panic attacks about it. Her parents were livid when she applied to college across the country and even angrier when she never came back. They kept saying “They raised her to do the right thing!” and said they had no idea what went wrong. We weren’t even that close but I remember her crying in the backyard a lot when we were kids.
What a sh!t kid.
I watched love is blind UK and one of the men had a brother with downs that he loved and planned to help take care of.