MemoLePewPew5 t1_j4c7lcd wrote
As I grew up, I realized one of the greatest weapons we can use is not infliction of pain or punishment - Its humiliation.
Humiliating someone publicly is a very good way to destroy ones ego/dignity and deter anybody else from committing anything similar in the future. Stuff like that goes viral, watch a whole number of individuals say “oh hell no” & put themselves in their own corner
dma10014 t1_j4cdlrf wrote
I think you would be right except that the kids involved, from what I've read elsewhere, don't seem to be embarrassed by the notoriety. After all, they are getting their 15 minutes of fame. It doesn't matter if it's really infamy. It's a matter of one's perspective. They are receiving attention and for many teenagers, that's all that matters, especially in this viral-and-meme web we live in.
MemoLePewPew5 t1_j4cgrgk wrote
Depends. When I was in HS, this annoying group of chicks who tried too hard to be popular, got exposed for trying to steal chips and sh!t from the beloved bodega right across the street from the school by a School Safety officer.
They got roasted and picked on to the point of obscurity - They stopped doing cringey, show-offy shit in Lunchroom and the school grounds overall. Got to the point where one picked a fight with the wrong girl, got her ass handed to her, and just stopped being relevant, losing all types of friends and shit. High school shit, but that humiliation did its thing 🤷🏻♂️
jdolbeer t1_j4lxmz9 wrote
I like how you edit shit the first time you use it, but not the next 3.
DjBodegaCat t1_j4egf74 wrote
I don't think so gang, stealing shit is broke boy behavior and that could never be me could you imagine? Ain't nobody wanna be put on blast for that 😂 shame is a powerful too when used properly
fieldysnuts94 t1_j4ch3i9 wrote
Sometimes these fools have no shame so that wouldn’t work on them
MemoLePewPew5 t1_j4chj81 wrote
True. Ehhh, life will sort those little fools out later, when theyre questioning dumbass choices like stealing👍🏼
drxnkmvnk t1_j4etq8d wrote
That only works if shame exists, which it doesn't anymore
10b-5 t1_j4fiphf wrote
> Humiliating someone publicly is a very good way to destroy ones ego/dignity and deter anybody else from committing anything similar in the future.
Just out of curiosity, do you have anything to support this? My experience as a lawyer would tell me otherwise, and that by destroying someone's ego will rather make them more brutal, apathetic and nihilistic than any kind of rehabilitation. But that's just my data sample of one, so I'd love to understand more.
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