Dad puts a bullet through her daughter's laptop

<p>ArKhAiK:
“Oh c’mon really?! It literally takes 5 minutes to do all that she was assigned to do. I don’t do jack**** around my house and wouldn’t even complain about having to do what she does.”
Well, if you’ve done nothing around your house, then you don’t know how it feels to do it. And you must remember that this is the dad’s perspective; he is talking. For all we know, he could be understating the chores his daughter has to do. In her letter, she wrote that she had cleaned the floor and then they were insensitive enough to come in with mud all over the cleaned floor. Doesn’t that frustrate you if you have cleaned the floor? I know it would to me.</p>

<p>“Okay then when you get into an argument with a close-minded bigot or racist, don’t expect to win it. You are justifying their attitudes.”
I said it’s hard to break away from it, but not that I agree with it. How long did it take for slavery to end in an environment that had slaves everywhere? Didn’t people try again and again against those racists and bigots all those years for the end to slavery? And didn’t they finally win? I don’t see how I am justifying their ways.</p>

<p>Yes, the daughter didn’t buy her laptop, but the dad, who shot it himself, said that she had to pay him back for the upgrade and whatnot, when he is the one who wasted the money. Why not take away her laptop and tell her to work and pay for it to get it back? That would be a fairer method of dealing with her. And people want all the time; so the daughter begging for Ipods, cameras, and phones is normal. He doesn’t have to buy it for her.</p>

<p>@rsingh13 Your privileges are showing, mate. A+ job on your thinking everyone’s lives are just like yours.</p>

<p>@visom1 As I said before, it’s been said elsewhere that she bought it herself. We really have no proof whether it was her or her father, so we can’t judge her.</p>

<p>@TheVisionary Well, yeah, because before knowing the whole story, I’d rather side with the potential victim rather than the potential abuser. Playing devil’s advocate in these scenarios worsens the situation if it’s true. And I repeat: “This probably wouldn’t be a big deal if it were an isolated event, but it probably isn’t.” That’s what I said, not that a poor girl losing her laptop must be traumatized forever.</p>

<p>Don’t have a job. Senior in high school buddy</p>