About Relationship Sanctity....

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Yureina

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May 6, 2010
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I usually stay away from people who are already in relationships. With that said, I could potentially see myself trying to at least implant the idea into the minds of those who I am interested in. Or, at least I would if I wasn't with someone already. :eek:

So basically... I wouldn't try to break people up to get one person in that relationship, but I probably would make it known to the person I was interested in that other options are out there. :eek:
 

DoomyMcDoom

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Jul 4, 2008
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Well to put it bluntly, if she's more interested in you than her boyfriend, let it all come crashing down! He's probably being predictable boring and lazy, and allowing this through his own shittyness as a boyfriend... his problem bro not yours.
 

Dastardly

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Apr 19, 2010
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UsefulPlayer 1 said:
What I want to know is how wrong is it to get involved with someone who has a partner. Or am I just being alittle conservative and it's not wrong at all to be that guy on the side or that mistress?
To go all cliché on you, if she'll cheat with you, she'll cheat on you. But if all you're looking for is sex, then I guess you're golden... because that goes right along with viewing other human beings as a resources for your amusement.

If you do this, here are the truths you're speaking:

1. You do not value commitment.
2. You do not value the feelings of others unless they relate directly to you...
3. ...And really, you're not too concern with the feelings of people who do.

It's not about breaking some Grand Law about relationships. It's about the breaking of the basic moral codes that are the reason we have that "law" in the first place.
 

mikespoff

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Oct 29, 2009
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I wouldn't recommend getting physically involved with someone outside of a committed relationship. And those can't happen while one person is already in another relationship.
 

Frost27

Good news everyone!
Jun 3, 2011
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The decision on how to progress is in the hands of the individual who is currently in a relationship. In the first scenario, I would not back off at all, but I wouldn't pursue. She needs to decide if she is interested in you, is it worth making the switch? The ball is in her court but I would never insinuate myself into the relationship.

In the second example, if the guy who already has a girlfriend is moving toward cheating on her, I would tell her to back off. He is trying to have his cake (or in this case pie) and eat it too. Not relationship worthy.
 

bpm195

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May 21, 2008
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Is admittedly polyamorous and he knows he's not her only boyfriend, or is she feigning monogamy and she doesn't want him to know that she's not exclusive. If it's the former, I'd pursue, but not to seriously because I prefer one girl at a time. If it's the latter, I'd berate her and make sure to let her boyfriend know her intentions.
 

Digitaldreamer7

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Sep 30, 2008
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Mortai Gravesend said:
Digitaldreamer7 said:
Kyrinn said:
"BUT YOU HAD SEX MAN YEAH! DO WHAT YOU WANT FUCK YEA SEX! YOUR DESIRES ARE ALL THAT MATTER!". Do you really want to be one of those people?
As a matter of fact, I liked being a sex toy. It was fun. I learned a lot about my own sexuality and a lot about the opposite sex. It's something adults can do, not children. Adults can have consensual sex for pleasure alone. It's called a fuck buddy and during times in your life where you can't have a relationship for one reason or another. It's great. Just saying.
You think you should believe that only your desires matter?

Now on to the OP's question.

It's not my responsibility to police someone else. She's responsible for her own actions. If she want's to cheat, it's her business. If it's with me for a great night of sex. Plus to me. As long as I make my intentions clear to her and she accepts (consents) I have no moral dilemma. I asked, she said yes, all signs point to go.
Well I'd say that it is an ethical responsibility not to join them and aid them in doing something that is wrong. If she wants to cheat, well then she's being scum and to aid her in that says something rather awful about the one aiding her.

If it happened to me, i'd be upset, but, at least now I know what she really wants. It's not as emo or crazy as it sounds. Once you get out there and realize that people are bastard coated bastards with selfish bastard filling for the most part it's not such a big deal.
Well the thing is not everyone is a selfish bastard, and nothing justifies joining them

1. What part of CONSENSUAL did you not get? 2 people having sex for pleasure. I didn't rape her nor did I guilt trip her into sex. It's a decision that's made by BOTH parties.

2. Ethics and morals can be situational. What you believe to be "right and wrong" are not what everyone believes and should not be imposed as such.

3. Again, as in number 1, you didn't read what I said correctly. I said FOR THE MOST PART. I didn't say all or everyone as you are implying.
 

LetalisK

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May 5, 2010
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Thinking about this from my perspective, if a guy had sex with my fiancee I'd want to rip his balls off. However, if he had sex with her and then soon after gave me proof of it, I'd thank him and buy him a beer. He just exposed her as a dirty whore who would have eventually done this anyway and possibly multiple times and has saved me time, money, possibly some doctor visits, and as painful as it is in that moment, eventually even more heartache.

I suppose this goes along with why I don't get pissed if I hear that someone was hitting on my fiancee when I wasn't there. Either she blows him off or I dump someone who evidently was a piece of trash and I move on to find someone better.
 

Digitaldreamer7

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Sep 30, 2008
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Mortai Gravesend said:
Digitaldreamer7 said:
Mortai Gravesend said:
Digitaldreamer7 said:
Kyrinn said:
"BUT YOU HAD SEX MAN YEAH! DO WHAT YOU WANT FUCK YEA SEX! YOUR DESIRES ARE ALL THAT MATTER!". Do you really want to be one of those people?
As a matter of fact, I liked being a sex toy. It was fun. I learned a lot about my own sexuality and a lot about the opposite sex. It's something adults can do, not children. Adults can have consensual sex for pleasure alone. It's called a fuck buddy and during times in your life where you can't have a relationship for one reason or another. It's great. Just saying.
You think you should believe that only your desires matter?

Now on to the OP's question.

It's not my responsibility to police someone else. She's responsible for her own actions. If she want's to cheat, it's her business. If it's with me for a great night of sex. Plus to me. As long as I make my intentions clear to her and she accepts (consents) I have no moral dilemma. I asked, she said yes, all signs point to go.
Well I'd say that it is an ethical responsibility not to join them and aid them in doing something that is wrong. If she wants to cheat, well then she's being scum and to aid her in that says something rather awful about the one aiding her.

If it happened to me, i'd be upset, but, at least now I know what she really wants. It's not as emo or crazy as it sounds. Once you get out there and realize that people are bastard coated bastards with selfish bastard filling for the most part it's not such a big deal.
Well the thing is not everyone is a selfish bastard, and nothing justifies joining them

1. What part of CONSENSUAL did you not get? 2 people having sex for pleasure. I didn't rape her nor did I guilt trip her into sex. It's a decision that's made by BOTH parties.

2. Ethics and morals can be situational. What you believe to be "right and wrong" are not what everyone believes and should not be imposed as such.

3. Again, as in number 1, you didn't read what I said correctly. I said FOR THE MOST PART. I didn't say all or everyone as you are implying.
1. What about consensual? You mean you don't understand that 'consensual' alone doesn't mean ethical? And oooooooh I see, it's personal. No wonder you're defending something so unethical.

2. LOL. How about I can impose them as I see fit? Who are you to tell me it's wrong to do so, you said it's situational and maybe I don't believe it's wrong to impose. Your argument is a self-defeating load of crap there. If you claim it shouldn't be imposed, well guess what? That's your supposed ethics and morals you're trying to push. Worst. Argument. Ever.

3. For the most part is irrelevant. It doesn't justify becoming one either.
1. You said "You think you should believe that only your desires matter?" Since it was consensual, she was enjoying her desires as well so no, I don't believe that only my desires matter. In that specific situation I remember her being very fulfilled. In my original post I did not say ANYTHING about the woman Who I enjoyed my consensual sex with being married or in a relationship of any kind. That's why, when i changed subjects to actually address OP's post I wrote "Now on to the OP's question."

2. You can oppose them how you see fit. It's your life. I'm offering MY opinion. If you don't want to sleep with some guy who is in a relationship, that's your business. JUST AS I SAID "If she want's to cheat, it's her business" about the hypothetical woman. If you DON'T want to cheat it's HER/YOUR business as well. I wasn't saying you are wrong or immoral for NOT sleeping with someone in a relationship. I wasn't imposing my morals or ethics on you, but clearly you are here quoting anyone who doesn't agree with you and condemning them because they do not agree with you. That IS imposing your moral and ethical values on others. To me that implies that you are not just content in having your own morals and ethics, you also feel the need to impose them on others. Had you just quoted someone and said something to spark a discussion, such as, "the other person will be hurt" or "what about the dangers of STD's when having multiple partners" or any other relevant topic besides "it's wrong" then you wouldn't have come off this way.

3. "for the most part" isn't irrelevant, it's the difference between me saying all people are bastards and only some people are bastards. That's a big difference with such a statement. A difference you just completely glanced over and replaced with your own interpretation of what I said.
 

Obsideo

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Jun 10, 2010
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Hm.

Due to a long history of being cheated on/cheating, I feel that my answer would be a firm "no". I get the deal about it ultimately being her choice to cheat or not, but you can't paint yourself as the innocent bystander when you're egging her on to make a bad decision. It's like saying "Well it's her choice to choose to use heroin or not!" and then secretly slipping her bags of heroin. Sure, it's her choice, but trying to coerce her to make a certain decision then turning around and putting all the blame on her for the decision is nothing short of cowardice.
 

Rin Little

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Jul 24, 2011
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If someone's taken who I'm attracted to, the attraction gets switched off almost instantly. If they guy/girl is willing to cheat on their significant other for me, what are they odds they won't do the same thing to me if they spy another person who catches their attention? Not that great...
 

Aprilgold

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Apr 1, 2011
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It'd be no. Its not only dickish, but a relationship is more then sex. Far more then sex. You know in movies to where the husband is having a affair, and somehow his wife finds out, she isn't OK with it because he literally went behind her back, betraying her trust. Saying "I love you honey" when his heart belongs elsewhere.

Dishonesty is not good, and distrust shouldn't run through a society rampantly.
 

Maze1125

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Oct 14, 2008
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senordesol said:
Because I don't see anything wrong with it. I thought we'd already covered that.

So one person is doing evil and the other isn't? That don't pass the smell test.
Hardly evil, but yes, one side is doing something wrong and the other isn't.
Only one person in the affair is breaking their agreement, the other had no such agreement in the first place.

Imagine there's a group of writers writing a magazine, they sign a contract with a publishing company to publish the magazine.
Those writers then, before the contract is up, refuse to let the publishers carry on publishing the magazine and instead switch to an entirely different publisher.
Now the writers are liable to some extent, they'll owe damages to the original publisher for breaking the contract. The publisher they switched to, however, isn't guilty of a thing, they did nothing wrong, even if they knew the writers were breaking their contract.

Now you'll probably say that a relationship isn't the same a contract law. But I disagree, I see no real difference at all. If anything, breaking a contract is more often worse, as a broken relationship usually causes no more than emotional pain, while breaking a contract can cause someone's career to fail.

Ok, so you see no moral dilemma in assisting someone in breaking a promise; the result of which is likely to cause pain?
No. It's their promise to keep, not mine. As for doing an action that benefits myself but causes pain to a stranger, we all do that all the time. Have you never taken the last spot in a restaurant? Or the last item off a shop shelf?
Or, as someone said before, have you never attended a job interview?

I am not absolving the party in the relationship of responsibility, I have said before that they are, indeed, the *most* culpable. But knowingly doing your part to undermine a relationship for your own personal gain strikes you as a quite upstanding thing to do?
I never said it was upstanding, just that it wasn't wrong.

Whoa, whoa, whoa. She doesn't *get* the choice to treat me as a toy, I have too much respect for myself. It takes two to tango.
Fine, but that a selfish reason to not go after her, not a moral one.

If she chooses to betray her partner, that is her choice but it does not mean I have to be party to it.
As I say, often it's not that simple. What if she's in an abusive relationship and what she needs is an out? No amount of friends will help, as she won't admit anything. What she needs is someone else who looks like they want her in the same way so she can realise there is another option. But you refuse to even let her know you want her, and thereby refuse to give her a way out.

That doesn't seem very moral to me.

It is not my duty to sort out her relationship troubles by means of undermining them.
I never said it was, but it's not your duty to not either.
You shouldn't be offering yourself to every girl out there "just in case", but neither should you be refusing to try when you do find someone you want simply for the sake of a stranger. You don't know this stranger at all, he might not deserve the relationship he has. It isn't your judgement to make. It's hers. The only reasonable thing to do is to let her know how you feel, though words and actions, so she can make the choice for herself, fully informed.

Refusing to let people know how you feel "for their own good" is treating them like a child, not an adult.

If I knowingly and willingly facilitate immoral action resulting in pain and heartache (whether I know the person or not is irrelevant), I bear at least some portion of the responsibility.
But the action isn't immoral. So that's moot.

I'm not saying that those who do so are buddies with Hitler, I'm saying it is not the right and noble thing to do.
I never said it was.
Most of your argument seems to be "This isn't good." while my argument is "This isn't bad."
Those two points of view are not incompatible.
 

Thyunda

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May 4, 2009
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DoomyMcDoom said:
Well to put it bluntly, if she's more interested in you than her boyfriend, let it all come crashing down! He's probably being predictable boring and lazy, and allowing this through his own shittyness as a boyfriend... his problem bro not yours.
Then why doesn't she choose you? Why are you the one-off and he the constant?
 

Spy_Guy

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Mar 16, 2010
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First of all, I would never cheat on my girlfriend, just to have that clear and I ask that she doesn't either (not that I believe she ever would).

If you're in a relationship, then it's your job to not go out flirting with others and they can't be expected to ask "are you seeing someone?" whenever hooking up.
This is of course assuming that the cheating party is a total stranger.

If they know the person in question is in a relationship, however, it's morally reprehensible to try something.
Personally I'd find infidelity a major turnoff, on the simple logic that:
"If she cheats on this guy to be with me, then she'd cheat on me to be with someone else."

Once a turncoat, always a turncoat.