I think the problem with it being a text is that you can save it and read it at you own pace. You can dwell on it, which cannot be done if its spoken. If you get angry about a rant, but then print it out, and read it out loud, You aren't going to just get on with life very quickly. But yes, I also think the whole thing was an over-reaction.Mortai Gravesend said:Erm, did you see how he found out? It had nothing to do with IT and everything to do with pure chance. And if he had to actively look for it then she wasn't actively trying to show him anything. Not that he did have to go searching hard for it, but if he had had to...Hyperrhombus said:I'd say if she knew her father was into IT, trying to hide anything from him online is pretty stupid; I guess she knows that now.Mortai Gravesend said:That is the cost of saying something like that without thinking it through in the first place, now isn't it? If I make a misplaced threat the responsible thing to do is to admit it and take the consequences for it, not go through with the threat anyway to save my image. But then again I doubt he'd agree with me that it was a bad idea.Hyperrhombus said:Wouldn't this cause exactly the same vicious circle? She would then know the line her father will not cross, and will continue doing the exact same thing as she knows her father wouldnt increase the punishment. Punishment is meant to be a deterrent; by keeping the punishment in regulated doses, it doesnt work. Alternatively, he could try to discuss things with his daughter, but judging by her attitude, I'd say that would be extremely difficult. I feel he did this out of exasperation after the first punishment clearly didnt work on his daughter.Mortai Gravesend said:How about "I said I would, but that was a stupid overreaction so I won't"
Punishment doesn't seem warranted in this case. All she did was speak out against him to some friends.
Actively making sure you know they don't respect you? You mean by ranting to friends on Facebook and blocking it so that her parents couldn't see it? She was not actively making sure he knew she didn't respect him.true, that. But what are you, as a parent, supposed to do, if your child is actively making sure you know they dont respect you, nor will they ever do so? He's in a stalemate with his daughter as far as his relationship with her is concerned; perhaps this will sufficiently change their perspectives to make them get along better? The father may feel guilt/shame for what he did publicly in a day or so. Seeing his daughter's reaction to his actions may also make him regret all this. If he were to apologise, their relationship with each other could drastically change; one thing that isn't helping, however, are the several million people egging him on for his actions.It isn't a valid answer though, anymore than "Well I have a gun" is. All it really says is "People with power will abuse it". It doesn't say they were actually in the right, it just says they can get away with pushing other people around. And no one who tries to earn respect through consequences deserves to get it because it goes to show they don't understand what real respect is based on. If you treat someone with respect because they can do something to you that's called 'fear' not respect. Perhaps just a small amount, but it's not real respect if you need the ability to punish someone to get it.
Hmm, I don't really see the difference between those two in terms of how much I'd be offended by it. But it is more problematic to leave a record of the rant. I suppose he might find it more infuriating. But still in the end I don't think it was such a big offense.agreed. This is the reason I don't have facebook - small rants such as what this was massively blow up into what it is now. Also, although I don't like people talking crap about me, I find it infinitely worse if it is written down anywhere, because curiosity means I will read it, and get pissed from it. I guess the problem is that in the parent's generation, people couldnt rant like this in text, and display it in public; it would be spoken about as a group, or even over the phone. Now, people routinely rant online, and anyone not used to such a difference in communication will do stuff like this if they get angry, methinks.Furthermore as for what I would do... not sure. Not punish. If someone doesn't respect me it is stupid to punish them for it in that manner in and of itself. And if they're just ranting to their friends, all it will do is earn them ill will from me, I wouldn't find anything more justified. Of course as a parent that is a situation that needs to be dealt with, but such punishment is not the proper way to earn someone's actual respect. To earn respect he could talk to her about it perhaps. He could refuse to help her more than he needs to as a parent in the future. That is a reasonable response to someone showing a lack of respect to you, you do not go out of your way to help them after that.
Oh, and no, I didnt see how he found out. She stayed signed in?