+23 How much of a social expectation there is for you to forgive should be proportional to how much power you have and what you do with that power, amirite?

by Early-Scarcity3741 15 hours ago

Some of what you say is regarding professional responsibilities and ethics. A doctor in an emergency room cannot refuse to treat a dying patient if that patient insults the doctor in a non-threatening way. A teacher has ethics on how they treat students as does a day care worker who cannot ignore a child if the parent is rude. Some of what you say is about age and maturity. An adult should grow in time to be more mature than he/she was at a younger age.

by Anonymous 14 hours ago

Literally crazy you couldn't focus long enough to read a paragraph, that you needed to use ai to help you..

by Anonymous 14 hours ago

Okay, I am really confused with what you are trying to say. But forgiveness shouldn't be dependent on one's social status or power.

by Anonymous 14 hours ago

that's a lot of words to say "rich people shouldn't be allowed to hold grudges". also, it's kind of a ridiculous opinion. how tf are we supposed to control that?

by phagenes 14 hours ago

This is confusing as all hell.

by Krystelankundin 14 hours ago

I agree in the context of parents and children for sure. But as a judge or a teacher I feel like this falls under ethics like the other person said. However, most people are unethical, but furthermore extremely petty, and they can't be expected not to hold a grudge against a student, defendant, etc. Especially women, who operate almost entirely emotionally

by Anonymous 14 hours ago