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Talking to a 12 year old girl? (pg. 6)
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| jdat |
| quote: | Originally posted by DarkAngel
You're kidding, right? |
You do realize what puto means?
I guess not.
You're as fake as can be .... you're not "dutch" or anything. you're weak. |
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| DarkAngel |
| quote: | Originally posted by jdat
You do realize what puto means?
I guess not.
You're as fake as can be .... you're not "dutch" or anything. you're weak. |
I call a few of my fellow SPANISH SETAS Puto all the time, joking around of course. If Danny Ocean would have been offended by that, I think he would have let me know, and I would have apologized. I don't know what your is with me, but I suggest you either put me on ignore or get over it. |
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| jdat |
| quote: | Originally posted by DarkAngel
I call a few of my fellow SPANISH SETAS Puto all the time, joking around of course. If Danny Ocean would have been offended by that, I think he would have let me know, and I would have apologized. I don't know what your is with me, but I suggest you either put me on ignore or get over it. |
Oh you getting quite on the high horse there mister brace and pigtails lover :rolleyes: |
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| Danny Ocean |
| quote: | Originally posted by DarkAngel
If Danny Ocean would have been offended by that, I think he would have let me know |
were all putos deep inside so, thanks for reminding me! |
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| DarkAngel |
| quote: | Originally posted by Danny Ocean
were all putos deep inside so, thanks for reminding me! |
I apologize. |
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| DarkAngel |
| quote: | Originally posted by jdat
Oh you getting quite on the high horse there mister brace and pigtails lover :rolleyes: |
On a white horse. :o |
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| Danny Ocean |
| quote: | Originally posted by DarkAngel
I apologize. |
what for, i didnt take any offense, its all good
back to subject. 12 year old girls : to hit or not to |
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| Arbiter |
| quote: | Originally posted by Slylee
because there really isn't any good reason why a grown man (18 or older) should be all chummy with a 12 year old girl...i mean why? what could u possibly have in common with her? it's just not necessary and because of all the that goes on in society, it just looks wrong. whether or not you agree with it doesn't matter, because it will still seem weird to about 90% of the population. it's like the whole michael jackson thing. oh it's perfectly normal to have young teenage boys sleep over your house and have pillow fights when your a 40+ year old man. lol
i would like to see how you would react if you found out a 20 something year old guy was chatting with your 12 year old daughter online frequently.... |
I don't know about that. "Being friendly" is a good enough reason for a sane and worthwhile human being. I mean this girl obviously wants to talk to him, so if it makes her happy then it must be doing some good. If he can't take an interest in what she likes to talk about, that's fine - he shouldn't force himself to talk to her, but I'm just saying that the mere fact that she happens to be twelve years old is a damn stupid reason not to treat her with the same dignity and respect as any other person.
Besides that, he can set a good example for her, and if there's something going on in her life that her parents ought to be made aware of, he could bring it to their attention as well. It seems to me to be a perfectly reasonable arrangement, although it would be prudent in my opinion for him to make sure the girl's parents are aware that they're talking. If he's open about the conversations, friendly, and helpful, I don't think the parents would really have much reason to worry about anything unless they're psycho or something - if they are he'd obviously have to respect their wishes that he not carry on these conversations with their daughter, but at least they'd be the paranoid s instead of him.
To me it indicates something profoudly wrong with society that whenever an adult takes an active interest in a child's life other than his or her own child there's an immediate suspicion that something unsavory is going on. What ever happened to a strong sense of community? About caring about other people even if they aren't family? It's a sick and perverted attitude to take in my opinion that any adult associating with a child that isn't their own should immediately be viewed with the most pessimistic suspicion.
Is it a bad idea for parents to let their kids spend lots of unsupervised time interacting with unspecified adults? Of course it is - but if the parents are taking an active role in raising their children, then they should know what their children are doing and be able to judge the merits of each of their child's social contacts individually, not based on prejudice. |
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| Greedy |
| better be on the safe side and block her. Itll come back and haunt u. |
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| RedLunatik |
| the good thing is that she probably is a slow typer and takes her a whiel to type you out a message. |
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| fastmp3 |
sale pedoooooo hahahahahaha refere toi a l'ange des tenebres, ce pédé il aime bien les gamines de cet age :stongue:
non je rigole, mais bon t'as bien fait de la bloquer, on sait jamais |
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| kefkanium |
| quote: | Originally posted by Arbiter
I don't know about that. "Being friendly" is a good enough reason for a sane and worthwhile human being. I mean this girl obviously wants to talk to him, so if it makes her happy then it must be doing some good. If he can't take an interest in what she likes to talk about, that's fine - he shouldn't force himself to talk to her, but I'm just saying that the mere fact that she happens to be twelve years old is a damn stupid reason not to treat her with the same dignity and respect as any other person.
Besides that, he can set a good example for her, and if there's something going on in her life that her parents ought to be made aware of, he could bring it to their attention as well. It seems to me to be a perfectly reasonable arrangement, although it would be prudent in my opinion for him to make sure the girl's parents are aware that they're talking. If he's open about the conversations, friendly, and helpful, I don't think the parents would really have much reason to worry about anything unless they're psycho or something - if they are he'd obviously have to respect their wishes that he not carry on these conversations with their daughter, but at least they'd be the paranoid s instead of him.
To me it indicates something profoudly wrong with society that whenever an adult takes an active interest in a child's life other than his or her own child there's an immediate suspicion that something unsavory is going on. What ever happened to a strong sense of community? About caring about other people even if they aren't family? It's a sick and perverted attitude to take in my opinion that any adult associating with a child that isn't their own should immediately be viewed with the most pessimistic suspicion.
Is it a bad idea for parents to let their kids spend lots of unsupervised time interacting with unspecified adults? Of course it is - but if the parents are taking an active role in raising their children, then they should know what their children are doing and be able to judge the merits of each of their child's social contacts individually, not based on prejudice. |
+1
People are too paranoid to begin with, and it does make me wonder who the screwed-up ones are when the parents seem to automatically think that the guy's a pedo because he has contact with their daughter, no matter what they talk about. |
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