Dad uses Facebook to teach daughter a lesson.

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Stalydan

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omega 616 said:
I will always think American's are bat shit crazy as long as they allow any moron who can pull a trigger the right to own a killing machine.

I say that with a heap of ignorance 'cos I am not sure what hoops you have to jump through to get hold of a gun. From the media coming out of said country the only hoop is waiting a few days to pick up the actual gun after buying it.

You also pick some really weird things to ban ...



I also heard wal mart banned a scissor sisters CD for it's lyrics, doesn't the same store also sell guns and CD's from artists like 50 cent and eminem, who swear, use words like "nigga" and aren't exactly woman friendly.

Anyway more on topic. Going redneck on a laptop is little "typical American" but FPSRussia does shit like this all the time.
In all fairness to FPSRussia though, he does have a Youtube channel about blowing shit up xD And well he does do it in places where there aren't a lot of (if any) people and does safety checks on it. At least he's responsible about weapon collecting. I just think it's so weird that a country can allow pretty much anybody buy a weapon though. It's so dangerous.
 

senordesol

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Stalydan said:
I'd like to give point about why this was the wrong way to punish. Disregarding everything I said before, the guy simply reads a post on her facebook wall (which I doubt he just "stumbled across") and decides rather than talk it out with her, he'll destroy her laptop. That's really immature and doesn't send across any sort of message to her other than "Don't complain or I'll destroy you stuff". I'll agree she's spoilt but I don't think he's got the right way with dealing with that.

Plus, why does she have to clean the house everyday? What kind of cleaner do they have that makes it so that the 15 year old daughter has to clean as soon as she gets home because it apparently the floors and surfaces are messy? I know a mop doesn't have to be run through an average house more than once/twice a week and a surface should really be wiped clean if it's been used. It honestly can't get dirty between the lady leaving the house and the daughter getting back from school.
If you watched the video he did 'talk it out' with her (apparently a similar incident had already occurred). It was expressed that the consequences would be most severe if something like that were to happen again.

With regard to her work schedule, that will vary family-to-family. The man likes a clean house, she lives under his roof rent free.

Classic 'don't bite the hand that feeds you' punishment. This will likely motivate her to get serious about getting independent (which is what I suspect he's really after). She'll be pissed, but if she buckles down and gets that job, earns her own money, and learns to appreciate what's involved with regard to purchasing and maintaining one's own laptop; then the lesson will have been learned.
 

Stalydan

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Mortai Gravesend said:
Stalydan said:
Mortai Gravesend said:
Ramzal said:
Mortai Gravesend said:
Ramzal said:
senordesol said:
Ramzal said:
I believe it's an issue because so many people agree with the method he used. A gun is flat out a lethal tool. No one was in danger nor was he protecting anyone or himself. The fact that so many find this acceptable is deplorable. So we use lethal weapons and tools now to prove a point? And at worse, it's childish? Why don't we fire a nuclear weapon into an unpopulated area to show North Korea that we aren't accepting their terms of testing nuclear weapons.

I can understand a blunt object not being as bad or a hammer, or running it over with a car. Granted that all of the above can be lethal, but they weren't made with lethal intent. Honestly, I find as many people as I saw agreeing with this method disturbing. Borderline frightening.
We've tested plenty of nukes in unpopulated areas so...yeah...we did that.

Second, why does the fact that the weapon being a 'lethal tool' have any bearing whatsoever? I've shot paper targets, soda cans, and beer bottles with firearms; what makes a laptop any different? He selected his target area so that there would be no collateral damage and chose his ammunition for same.
I'm not saying firing at an object is wrong. He's discharging it simply out of anger at his daughter. It's one thing to do something like that for practice, or even as a hobby. This was done out of anger. A gun should not be used like that.
It was done in a manner that was sufficiently controlled. Maybe he was angry, but it doesn't matter if he was. What matters is that his anger was well enough controlled that he did that stupid show in a safe manner.

Don't be stupid. Firing a nuclear weapon has actual consequences. Like nuclear fallout. Also it provokes even if it didn't have such consequences. What was the harm in him doing it? You're complaining out of some kind of misguided outrage it sounds like. There are no consequences except the laptop is destroyed. You haven't provided anything solid.
And if he were drunk, would you still have that same opinion?
No because being drunk is not a state to do anything remotely dangerous in.

People have been killed because of misused of a firearm under anger and rage.
And? He clearly wasn't out of control.

How is this leading by example for his child? "If you're mad, or you need to prove a point, go shoot something?"
Stop playing stupid. No one's going to learn that from it anymore than they're going to learn to kill people from a game. The difference between shooting a laptop in a controlled situation and shooting whatever is bothering you at the moment is obvious.

And yes, my example is strong but it has a point.
Your example was weak as hell. I tore it apart, it doesn't compare at all.

You shouldn't use something lethal to prove a point.
Congratulations on not proving that point. I pointed out the real reason it wouldn't be used instead of the reason you want to pretend it wouldn't occur.

I'm sorry, did you say "misguided?" I've learned my discipline with weapons and firearms from the U.S. Navy as well as martial arts.
Ooooh now I'm going to agree with you. Oh wait I'm not. Idgaf where you learned it, that doesn't make your stupid outrage any less misguided. You have NOT answered where the real consequences are. We just have a paper thin argument that it'll teach kids the wrong idea.

Both taught that it is not--by any means, right to use a weapon to prove a point.
I don't care. I don't take people's words for such things.

You are arguing from a point of consequence, many crimes come without proper consequence, does that make them alright? People lose their homes and lives due to corporate interest, does that make it alright?
If people are losing their homes there's a fucking consequence. Now come back with a bit more integrity instead of dishonest questions like those.
Never seen someone so hardheaded in my life. I'd have better luck arguing with a wall.
Well you'd have better luck if you could make a decent argument instead of blatantly terrible analogies. Like the North Korea one that I showed was totally wrong and you insisted on trying to push on with anyways.

Or if you had integrity. You know instead of asking stupid scenarios that involve consequences and pretending me focusing on consequences allows for such scenarios make you could ask a question that showed an actual interest in something besides confirming how ignorant your argument is.

Hell maybe you could do something like give a real reply instead of whining that someone is hard headed for pointing out why your argument is stupid.

But in the end, maybe being unfairly dismissive is how you cope with being unable to give a real reply. You should just deal with it though.
I'd like to give point about why this was the wrong way to punish. Disregarding everything I said before, the guy simply reads a post on her facebook wall (which I doubt he just "stumbled across") and decides rather than talk it out with her, he'll destroy her laptop. That's really immature and doesn't send across any sort of message to her other than "Don't complain or I'll destroy you stuff". I'll agree she's spoilt but I don't think he's got the right way with dealing with that.

Plus, why does she have to clean the house everyday? What kind of cleaner do they have that makes it so that the 15 year old daughter has to clean as soon as she gets home because it apparently the floors and surfaces are messy? I know a mop doesn't have to be run through an average house more than once/twice a week and a surface should really be wiped clean if it's been used. It honestly can't get dirty between the lady leaving the house and the daughter getting back from school.
In my first post in here I said it did seem immature and childish. Taking it away makes sense, how far he went is just stupid. The chores seem a bit much as well, but then my parents never made me do much so I don't know how to compare it.

But anyway, my point was not that what he did made much sense, it was that it isn't a big deal that it was a gun used like the OP is trying to make it out to be. He's acting like this is so horrible the guy shouldn't be allowed a gun anymore based on what he did.
Well personally I'm on the stance of stricter gun laws anyway because it's a bit weird that anybody can buy a gun in the US. I don't even think you'd need one to defend your house. Under what situation would you be in enough danger that something like a baseball bat wouldn't suffice as a rational means of self defence? I can't think of any. It's just so bizarre for me.

Then again, I'm from the UK. We don't have guns so it could just be a culture barrier for me.
 

senordesol

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Stalydan said:
Well personally I'm on the stance of stricter gun laws anyway because it's a bit weird that anybody can buy a gun in the US. I don't even think you'd need one to defend your house. Under what situation would you be in enough danger that something like a baseball bat wouldn't suffice as a rational means of self defence? I can't think of any. It's just so bizarre for me.

Then again, I'm from the UK. We don't have guns so it could just be a culture barrier for me.
Range of a baseball bat is limited, plus you need room to swing (which may be difficult in a hallway).
 

Terminate421

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He was creative, what else would he use? A shovel? He had every right to do it, calm down, he shot a computer, not a living being
 

Stalydan

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senordesol said:
Stalydan said:
I'd like to give point about why this was the wrong way to punish. Disregarding everything I said before, the guy simply reads a post on her facebook wall (which I doubt he just "stumbled across") and decides rather than talk it out with her, he'll destroy her laptop. That's really immature and doesn't send across any sort of message to her other than "Don't complain or I'll destroy your stuff". I'll agree she's spoilt but I don't think he's got the right way with dealing with that.

Plus, why does she have to clean the house everyday? What kind of cleaner do they have that makes it so that the 15 year old daughter has to clean as soon as she gets home because it apparently the floors and surfaces are messy? I know a mop doesn't have to be run through an average house more than once/twice a week and a surface should really be wiped clean if it's been used. It honestly can't get dirty between the lady leaving the house and the daughter getting back from school.
If you watched the video he did 'talk it out' with her (apparently a similar incident had already occurred). It was expressed that the consequences would be most severe if something like that were to happen again.

With regard to her work schedule, that will vary family-to-family. The man likes a clean house, she lives under his roof rent free.

Classic 'don't bite the hand that feeds you' punishment. This will likely motivate her to get serious about getting independent (which is what I suspect he's really after). She'll be pissed, but if she buckles down and gets that job, earns her own money, and learns to appreciate what's involved with regard to purchasing and maintaining one's own laptop; then the lesson will have been learned.
That's the thing, I don't think it will be learnt. In the last paragraph of my other post, I said this:

Stalydan said:
The worst thing about this is the video is sadistic to the core. He's hurt that she posts something on Facebook about him and his wife but here's the thing. Nobody pays attention to Facebook. It might be the talk for about a week tops but then it's gone. Dusted over, never to be heard from again. Sure, I'd be angry if somebody posted hurtful stuff about me on the internet but it's not as widespread as people think. Who cares about one 15 year old girl annoyed with her chores? It's so pointless. But rather than talking to her about it, he prints off her post, reads it aloud in a video and shoots her laptop about ten times and expects money for damages. He then says he's going to post it to her wall where she won't be able to see it but all her friends will. So not only does he know it's going to hurt her when she finds out what he's done to her stuff but it'll also embarrass her at her school when other people find out. It's wrong on some many levels, I'd be tempted to call it abuse if went one or two steps further.
Whilst taking something away from her is a good idea (it's worked for me when I've been punished), he takes it to a big extreme. It's wrong that he invaded her privacy anyway but he doesn't just sit her down and say "I told you what would happen if I found you posting something like this one Facebook again", he makes a full video telling her and the rest of the world without her being able to defend her statements. Yes, she's wrong but if she's not given a chance to explain her feelings, how's he going to know how to react to them?

My solution to this would have been "You're grounded. You're not having your stuff back until you get a job and pay me back for the upgrades I made to your laptop". If by the end of that she hasn't learnt something, I don't know what to do.
 

Stalydan

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Mortai Gravesend said:
Well stricter gun laws, I don't mind that idea. But I don't think this situation would be a reason to call for them or have anything to do with them really. There was nothing really dangerous about it.

Though I don't think a baseball bat is particularly good idea. What if they have a gun? What if they're armed with a knife? It doesn't make sense in my mind to rely on strength when they could very well be stronger.
senordesol said:
Range of a baseball bat is limited, plus you need room to swing (which may be difficult in a hallway).
I'm not too sure how you'd handle it but I think that's become one of the problems with trying to get tighter gun controls in the US is that firearms have become a very common solution to a crime in the home. Though I also don't know burglary rates either so I don't know what the chances are that your house would be broken into either.

I guess it really does depend on "Do you need one?" rather than "Do you feel you need to have one?". And I think the two are mixed up often. Like in the case of this video, the guy didn't need one to demonstrate the point about his daughter's misbehaviour. He just felt he needed one.
 

As Seen On 360

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I don't agree with his handling of the situation, he probably set back any sort of respectful relationship with his daughter by a few years, but I wouldn't say this is too extreme. Your assessment of the situation made it seem more over the top than it was, as if he kicked her door down and unloaded a gun into a desktop while his kid was sitting there.

If anything I'd argue there would have been a dozen far worse ideas for him to employ in reacting to the situation. It's not good, it's not bad, there's that middle ground where he went overboard (but in a controlled, mostly safe environment) but still addressed his daughter's statement soundly and with reason. This wasn't some rampaging, unintelligible mad man who used excessive violence on others to show dominance, thus ending the situation.
 

Edible Avatar

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Oh boy a gun thread, now i get to watch people get butt-hurt over the 2nd amendment
OT: The dad was in the right, tough parenting is what is needed these days. Parents should act more like this guy, and kids need to understand responsibility.
 

senordesol

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Stalydan said:
Mortai Gravesend said:
Well stricter gun laws, I don't mind that idea. But I don't think this situation would be a reason to call for them or have anything to do with them really. There was nothing really dangerous about it.

Though I don't think a baseball bat is particularly good idea. What if they have a gun? What if they're armed with a knife? It doesn't make sense in my mind to rely on strength when they could very well be stronger.
senordesol said:
Range of a baseball bat is limited, plus you need room to swing (which may be difficult in a hallway).
I'm not too sure how you'd handle it but I think that's become one of the problems with trying to get tighter gun controls in the US is that firearms have become a very common solution to a crime in the home. Though I also don't know burglary rates either so I don't know what the chances are that your house would be broken into either.

I guess it really does depend on "Do you need one?" rather than "Do you feel you need to have one?". And I think the two are mixed up often. Like in the case of this video, the guy didn't need one to demonstrate the point about his daughter's misbehaviour. He just felt he needed one.
Rather have and not need, than need and not have. ;)

OT: I suppose only time will tell whether it was effective. Sadly, each child is unique and doesn't come with an instruction manual, so varying degrees of harshness in punishment are just par for the course.

At the end of the day, the 'punishment' was doled out safely and in a controlled environment. That's all I'd ask of any parent.
 

Fishyash

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Dec 27, 2010
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...oh dear.

Shame on the girl to, instead of attempting to maybe try and express this issue over facebook, actually try and talk it out face to face. I think the father should have given her another chance though to talk things out, and... using a gun? Although he didn't exactly do it out of blind rage or something, it's definately not my style... and seems like a waste of a perfectly good laptop and I guess it's misuse of the gun. If it were me, I would probably put it up on ebay, and tell her to buy a new one.

Also... it kinda bugs me that people complain about uncompensated house chores in general. I am only assuming stuff, because who knows, either the father or the daughter is exaggerating how few/many chores she has to do. However, chores always fit the need of the environment. Generally the more space there is to manage, the more chores are needed to be done. The place isn't going to manage itself, and if you have two working parents, you need to help make sure that everything is in order.

If you have to spend over an hour doing chores every day of the week, I would personally reward my son/daughter for it, but as I said, it depends on how much work needs to be done to keep the house under working order.

TL;DR Kids need to stop complaining about chores, and using a gun is unnecessary overkill.
 

mad825

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Stalydan said:
I guess it really does depend on "Do you need one?" rather than "Do you feel you need to have one?". And I think the two are mixed up often. Like in the case of this video, the guy didn't need one to demonstrate the point about his daughter's misbehaviour. He just felt he needed one.
Perhaps he has the gun because he likes going down the shooting range, firing a few rounds and meeting people? Maybe he used it because it was already in his possession?

Don't be too quick to judge others who have "weapons" in their possession, many people I know have weapons to participate in their favourite sport and compete with others who are alike .
 

Vuliev

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While I don't condone unloading an entire 9mm clip into a laptop, his exposal and rebuttal is perfectly fine. Every teen needs to have the "don't be a spoiled brat" lesson, and this way is particularly effective.

I would have snapped the laptop over my knee on camera instead.

EDIT: Now that I think rationally about it, I would have confronted my daughter, than snapped the laptop over my knee in front of her. No YouTube.
 

renegade7

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Well I have to say that some of the things that girl said were rather bitchy...come on, chores? Guess what: everyone does chores. That part where she said 'We have a cleaning lady, just have her do it' did not endear her to me. And bedtime at 10pm? Wow, I used to work at night and didn't get home until 3 in the morning, I would have LOVED to be in bed by 10. If she had such a big issue with it she could have just, I don't know, talked to her parents about it.

As for his reaction...well...no. You want your kids to do chores? Get them to respect you. Even if you're the parent, you still have to earn respect, especially with teenagers. And I don't mean like pandering, but there's a difference between being a relentless hardass and being a good parent. You know how you lose the respect of your kids (or anyone for that matter)? Shoot their stuff. How he managed to get a job in IT I may never understand...
 

Samurai Silhouette

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Good parenting, but public humiliation in front of millions for your 15 year old daughter because she's ignorant and immature? That's a bit overkill. How is she going to handle this growing up?
 

Kvaedi

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He's awesome. I watched the video, he was not out of control, he handled the gun safely and respectfully. I think it's somewhat funny people are talking more about him shooting a laptop than his method of punishing his daughter with public humiliation....

Honestly, I would find it disturbing if he just went apeshit on it with a hammer or shovel as people are suggesting, that would show much less control than him calmly putting a couple bullets into it.
 

McMullen

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Ramzal said:
I believe it's an issue because so many people agree with the method he used. A gun is flat out a lethal tool. No one was in danger nor was he protecting anyone or himself. The fact that so many find this acceptable is deplorable. So we use lethal weapons and tools now to prove a point? And at worse, it's childish? Why don't we fire a nuclear weapon into an unpopulated area to show North Korea that we aren't accepting their terms of testing nuclear weapons.

I can understand a blunt object not being as bad or a hammer, or running it over with a car. Granted that all of the above can be lethal, but they weren't made with lethal intent. Honestly, I find as many people as I saw agreeing with this method disturbing. Borderline frightening.

Edit: Although, I think we can all agree to a father punishing his daughter for what he believes to be disrespect.
I've never owned or fired a gun, and don't expect to ever own one, but I think you are a little crazy. Where did you get this idea that using guns on inanimate objects is inherently wrong? In any other conversation, I'd be committing the straw man fallacy by asking if you felt the same about firing guns at paper targets at a firing range, or ballistics gel, or for the various purposes the Mythbusters use them for. Considering what you've said so far though, it actually seems that you might really feel that those things are wrong. That is what you sound like. Think about that for a second. You are making arguments that, in any other context, would be used as straw men.

I don't even.
 

Canadish

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Samurai Silhouette said:
Good parenting, but public humiliation in front of millions for your 15 year old daughter because she's ignorant and immature? That's a bit overkill. How is she going to handle this growing up?
I don't think he guessed it was going to get over 2 million views.
Either way, it's not really "humiliation". There are worse things he could of done.
Every teen has been embarrassed by a parent at some point or another.

This guy was awesome regardless. That's parenting, in style.

Also: Gun Thread. OH BOY.