To: Victoria Delsoul
I agree. The thing is that invariably with these types of stories it's easy to take the side of the spurned party, since all else being equal they seem to deserve the sympathy.
Things are seldom so straightforward. Almost every person I knew who has been cheated on in a marriage was either a neglectful or otherwise poor spouse themselves. That's not to say that they deserved being betrayed, but it is to say that they appeared to take the 'for better or worse' vow as a license to drift to the 'worst.'
In any event, i don't care for these types of antics either. Nobody is a saint, and it's entirely possible that hubby (if he could still afford it) could fill a billboard with info about his wife, too.
Seems to me neither billboard is good, nor productive.
13 posted on
12/09/2006 5:56:56 PM PST by
HitmanLV
(Rock, Rock, Rock and Rollergames! Rockin' & Rolling, Rockin' with Rollergames!)
To: HitmanLV
(Following on my last reply, above in thread.)
Or when tourist marketing campaigns use morals-challenging slogans such as "What happens here, stays here!", eh, Mr. ChopJobLV?
16 posted on
12/09/2006 6:07:23 PM PST by
bvw
To: HitmanLV
In any event, i don't care for these types of antics either. Nobody is a saint, and it's entirely possible that hubby (if he could still afford it) could fill a billboard with info about his wife, too. Seems to me neither billboard is good, nor productive.
Good point.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson