Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP (8:21) again -
after reading the above posts, I forgot that I would be concerned if DD was in a serious relationship with a muslim. That would really bother me.
Let me know her name so I make sure my son never asks her out. I don't care about race, but being stuck with bigoted in laws would really suck.
I so love the default argument - if you don't agree with me, you're a bigot/racist.
PP said that she would "be concerned," not that she would end it. She also referred to a "serious relationship," which I took to mean marriage is conceivable. Things I would be concerned about - would my DD be asked to convert? Would their kids be raised in the muslim faith? Are the prospective in laws supportive?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP (8:21) again -
after reading the above posts, I forgot that I would be concerned if DD was in a serious relationship with a muslim. That would really bother me.
Let me know her name so I make sure my son never asks her out. I don't care about race, but being stuck with bigoted in laws would really suck.
I so love the default argument - if you don't agree with me, you're a bigot/racist.
PP said that she would "be concerned," not that she would end it. She also referred to a "serious relationship," which I took to mean marriage is conceivable. Things I would be concerned about - would my DD be asked to convert? Would their kids be raised in the muslim faith? Are the prospective in laws supportive?
If she had a concern about any and all religions other than their own, I'd agree with you. But to single out one particular religion is bigoted. Those are questions to ask of every other religion.
Anonymous wrote:It's one thing to say of course and smile it's another thing to live it. When your daughter is dating a guy who lives in the ghetto, has seen and lived through things your sweet dd never even heard about before, and has access to all the free alone time in the world it becomes a whole different ball game. Sure you can try and not make it about race, try and say well he doesn't want to go to college, his mom doesn't have strict enough rules, we questions his motives but it ALWAYS goes back to the race card. It's exhausting, you look like a horrible parent and ppl look at you with disgrace like you should be taking this innocent boy under your wing...trust me he doesn't want any help or involvement from us period.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP (8:21) again -
after reading the above posts, I forgot that I would be concerned if DD was in a serious relationship with a muslim. That would really bother me.
Let me know her name so I make sure my son never asks her out. I don't care about race, but being stuck with bigoted in laws would really suck.
I so love the default argument - if you don't agree with me, you're a bigot/racist.
PP said that she would "be concerned," not that she would end it. She also referred to a "serious relationship," which I took to mean marriage is conceivable. Things I would be concerned about - would my DD be asked to convert? Would their kids be raised in the muslim faith? Are the prospective in laws supportive?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP (8:21) again -
after reading the above posts, I forgot that I would be concerned if DD was in a serious relationship with a muslim. That would really bother me.
Let me know her name so I make sure my son never asks her out. I don't care about race, but being stuck with bigoted in laws would really suck.
Anonymous wrote:PP (8:21) again -
after reading the above posts, I forgot that I would be concerned if DD was in a serious relationship with a muslim. That would really bother me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fat white girl with drugstore blond hair with poor black guy is the norm now.
This is exactly the stereotype that would be my only problem with it. People would assume my daughter has low self esteem or other issues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's one thing to say of course and smile it's another thing to live it. When your daughter is dating a guy who lives in the ghetto, has seen and lived through things your sweet dd never even heard about before, and has access to all the free alone time in the world it becomes a whole different ball game. Sure you can try and not make it about race, try and say well he doesn't want to go to college, his mom doesn't have strict enough rules, we questions his motives but it ALWAYS goes back to the race card. It's exhausting, you look like a horrible parent and ppl look at you with disgrace like you should be taking this innocent boy under your wing...trust me he doesn't want any help or involvement from us period.
Your problem is not that your daughter's boyfriend is black, it's that he is a derelict. Those are two different issues.
The point is that it can't be separated. It's always going to be a white/black issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most of these replies are the politically correct answers.
If it happened in real life, especially your white girl and his black boy, you would have a fit.
Count on it.
THIS. Yes, we know you are ok with your DD dating the Asian from her math club.
Anonymous wrote:Fat white girl with drugstore blond hair with poor black guy is the norm now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's one thing to say of course and smile it's another thing to live it. When your daughter is dating a guy who lives in the ghetto, has seen and lived through things your sweet dd never even heard about before, and has access to all the free alone time in the world it becomes a whole different ball game. Sure you can try and not make it about race, try and say well he doesn't want to go to college, his mom doesn't have strict enough rules, we questions his motives but it ALWAYS goes back to the race card. It's exhausting, you look like a horrible parent and ppl look at you with disgrace like you should be taking this innocent boy under your wing...trust me he doesn't want any help or involvement from us period.
Your problem is not that your daughter's boyfriend is black, it's that he is a derelict. Those are two different issues.
Anonymous wrote:It's one thing to say of course and smile it's another thing to live it. When your daughter is dating a guy who lives in the ghetto, has seen and lived through things your sweet dd never even heard about before, and has access to all the free alone time in the world it becomes a whole different ball game. Sure you can try and not make it about race, try and say well he doesn't want to go to college, his mom doesn't have strict enough rules, we questions his motives but it ALWAYS goes back to the race card. It's exhausting, you look like a horrible parent and ppl look at you with disgrace like you should be taking this innocent boy under your wing...trust me he doesn't want any help or involvement from us period.