k450ofu3k-gh-5ipe
Senior Member
It seems that you've added a new category to the catalog of abuses.
From here on out, I don't think that anything else you can ever say will have any merit for me.
But he never said it was abuse. You are completely misunderstanding him. He just said that that a person's psychological response is categorically similar. He's absolutely right.
Basically, what he's saying is that if people are treated a certain way (and that way can be nicely, meanly, abusively or anywhere else on the spectrum of ways to treat people), then they come to expect that treatment even if they don't necessarily deserve it. For instance, if you treat someone nicely all the time, then that person will come to expect that you and others will treat him nicely all the time, even if he doesn't deserve it. Similarly, if you treat someone abusively all the time, then that person will come to expect that you and others will treat him abusively all the time, even though he doesn't deserve it. See, I just compared treating someone abusively with treating someone nicely because the psychological response to both forms of treatments follows the same pattern.
Similarly, Chaz is stating that if men are treated with man-bashing culturally and are used to it, then they won't bat an eye and in fact might be drawn to the sort of man bashing that Driscoll preaches. The same is true of children who grow up in abusive environments. A child who grew up abused is more likely to marry an abusive person because that is what they know and that is what they are familiar with. A child who grew up in a loving, stable environment is similarly more likely to marry a loving, stable person because that is what they know and that is what they are familiar with. It's simply a psychological response to what a person mentally considers to be the norm. It's his or her psychological response to what he or she knows.
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