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re: I’m proud of Tyler Robinson’s father for doing the morally & ethically right thing

Posted on 9/12/25 at 11:26 am to
Posted by Klark Kent
Houston via BR
Member since Jan 2008
74864 posts
Posted on 9/12/25 at 11:26 am to
quote:

So the son in your mind should not shoulder any personal accountability?


the world really is coming to an end. I’m upvoting a c on z post.
Posted by clamdip
Rocky Mountain High
Member since Sep 2004
21521 posts
Posted on 9/12/25 at 11:28 am to
quote:

screw his dad for raising a POS son

You either don't have adult kids yet, and/or you're a moralist Baptist type who thinks everyone just needs to follow a formula and our kids and lives will turn out nice and neat.

His son made his own choice to go down a hole.
Posted by NorCali
Member since Feb 2015
1734 posts
Posted on 9/12/25 at 11:29 am to
quote:


He also has 2 other sons he needs to raise and likely protect


I didn't know this. Probably makes it harder to help the one at the risk of losing the ability to raise the others. Sounds like a typical 22 yo, probably didn't think about cameras being able to catch him and just go home and live normally. Clearly no master plan if he just went home.
Posted by St Augustine
The Pauper of the Surf
Member since Mar 2006
72130 posts
Posted on 9/12/25 at 11:31 am to
quote:

But at the same time, screw his dad for raising a POS son who is capable of committing such a heinous crime.


What’s it like to see the world in such a simplistic way?
Posted by LSU Neil
Springfield
Member since Feb 2007
3551 posts
Posted on 9/12/25 at 11:32 am to
quote:

Our brains are different at that age


Wait, the left think kids can make decisions about what sex they are at age six ?
Posted by Dire Wolf
bawcomville
Member since Sep 2008
40355 posts
Posted on 9/12/25 at 11:34 am to
quote:


I know many people who did not turn into murderers that changed ALOT once they got to college. Some for good, some for bad.

Our brains are different at that age.


i am not letting the kid off of the hook

but he is around the age that men slip into mental illness

i know first hand of some pretty smart, normal dudes (relatively speaking in one case) that had some mental issues around there early 20s. one of which was schizophrenia and that ended very tragically. I won't elaborate because it is too specific
Posted by The Baker
This is fine.
Member since Dec 2011
20253 posts
Posted on 9/12/25 at 11:35 am to
Isnt early 20’s the prime age for a ton of mental illnesses in men to show up?
Like schizo and bi polar disorders.
Posted by LSU Neil
Springfield
Member since Feb 2007
3551 posts
Posted on 9/12/25 at 11:37 am to
quote:

moralist Baptist type who thinks everyone just needs to follow a formula and our kids and lives will turn out nice and neat.


I don’t disagree with the last part of your post about accountability, but kindly think about this: the Ten Commandments are the formula. If everyone followed them, how nice of a world would that be.
Love your parents
Love your neighbor
Do not commit adultery
Do not murder
That’s just four we could all stand to use
Posted by Bestbank Tiger
Premium Member
Member since Jan 2005
80909 posts
Posted on 9/12/25 at 11:38 am to
You can have a bad seed from a good family.

Look up John Edgar Wideman. He was a writer and English professor. His brother was a drug dealer and gangbanger.

He decided to raise his family in Wyoming and one of his sons turned into a POS anyway. His daughter went to Stanford.
Posted by tigersbh
Baton Rouge
Member since Oct 2005
13153 posts
Posted on 9/12/25 at 11:38 am to
Bannon says the FBI was closing in on the kid anyway, so the father turned him in just to get himself off the hook for possibly being an accomplice. Don’t know if that’s just his theory or if he has some information.

heck, he might’ve done it for the $100,000. lol
Posted by Chaz95
Dallas, Texas
Member since Nov 2007
19697 posts
Posted on 9/12/25 at 11:39 am to
Getting downvoted to shite, but I actually think the father should bear some responsibility for a child that he raised and brought up to be capable of such a heinous act.
Posted by DustyDinkleman
Here
Member since Feb 2012
20029 posts
Posted on 9/12/25 at 11:40 am to
quote:

But at the same time, screw his dad for raising a POS son who is capable of committing such a heinous crime.


What an incredible accusation.

Y’all need serious help
Posted by schwartzy
New Orleans
Member since May 2014
10028 posts
Posted on 9/12/25 at 11:41 am to
His son committed the heinous crime. You can’t harbor a criminal anyway
Posted by Clyde Tipton
Planet Earth
Member since Dec 2007
40817 posts
Posted on 9/12/25 at 11:43 am to
quote:

I’m proud of Tyler Robinson’s father for doing the morally & ethically right thing


As a 27 year veteran of the Sheriff's department he was mandated to report or he would have been in ultra deep shite himself.
Posted by boosiebadazz
Member since Feb 2008
85685 posts
Posted on 9/12/25 at 11:44 am to
quote:

she's a 250 lb socialist lesbian.


Pics
Posted by clamdip
Rocky Mountain High
Member since Sep 2004
21521 posts
Posted on 9/12/25 at 11:46 am to
quote:

I actually think the father should bear some responsibility for a child that he raised and brought up to be capable of such a heinous act.

FFS.
This post was edited on 9/12/25 at 11:47 am
Posted by The Torch
DFW The Dub
Member since Aug 2014
29615 posts
Posted on 9/12/25 at 12:04 pm to
quote:

turning his son in


After the kid admitted it the dad could have been charged with accessory after the fact if he did nothing.

As a law officer he didn't want any part of that bullshite:

What Constitutes an "Accessory After the Fact"?

Knowledge of a Crime: The person must know that a crime has been committed.

Intent to Hinder Prosecution: The person must intend to help the perpetrator escape legal consequences.

Action to Assist: The person takes some action to help the criminal.
Posted by MemphisGuy
Germantown, TN
Member since Nov 2023
14695 posts
Posted on 9/12/25 at 12:22 pm to
quote:

That says something about his upbringing.

It does no such thing.
Posted by MemphisGuy
Germantown, TN
Member since Nov 2023
14695 posts
Posted on 9/12/25 at 12:24 pm to
quote:

but I actually think the father should bear some responsibility for a child that he raised and brought up to be capable of such a heinous act.
Posted by Gravitiger
Member since Jun 2011
12453 posts
Posted on 9/12/25 at 12:26 pm to
quote:

Good for his father, but you want to know what's braver? Turning your son in before he kills somebody. Of all of the shootings done by teens, there would have had to be many, many red flags where parents could have intervened in a number of ways.
We have no idea what interventions were or weren't attempted before this. Clearly they did not realize he was this level of radicalized, and there's nothing so far to suggest they should have.

I'm also guessing you're not a parent?
This post was edited on 9/12/25 at 12:27 pm
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