ilovejack02
<font color=peach>what do you all think?<br><font
- Joined
- Aug 8, 2006
- Messages
- 7,837
I think I don't care .
He's a man, a man who has the ability and the power to do with this libido whatever he can. Imagine a kid in a candy store with an unlimited income.
He's not new, special or unique. He just got caught.
And because of the nature of much of our society, his transgressions, such as they may be, will be subjected to often-times vicious public exploitation. I often find the manner in which the media and its audience deals with private situations like this as despicable as the transgressions themselves. It seems to me that it should be 100% up to the victims of such transgressions, if there are any, to determine how much public attention is paid, and what type of public attention is paid, and if the transgression is victimless, then no broad public attention of any type should be paid.
Am I the only person who is sick to death of the term "sex addict"? When life gets embarrassing people try to garner pity by calling it a disease. Give me a break. Let's try to distance our poor character by playing on people's sympathy. Poor addict! Let's call a spade a spade: He WAS SELFISH.
Oh and people are analysing whether Tiger can make a comeback? Is his wife going to make a comeback from all of this? If she has an STD, is SHE GOING TO MAKE A COMEBACK???
Well I don't know President Clinton's adulterous history at the time he met Hilary, but it has now been established that Tiger was stepping out on Elin from the time he met her. This shall not pass.We've had a First Lady who stood by her husband / President during somewhat simular times. This too shall pass.
William Shakespeare, Much Ado About NothingSigh no more, ladies, sigh no more,
Men were deceivers ever,
One foot in sea, and one on shore,
To one thing constant never;
Then sigh not so,
But let them go,
And be you blithe and bonny.
He's a man, a man who has the ability and the power to do with this libido whatever he can. Imagine a kid in a candy store with an unlimited income.
He's not new, special or unique. He just got caught.
Well I don't know President Clinton's adulterous history at the time he met Hilary, but it has now been established that Tiger was stepping out on Elin from the time he met her. This shall not pass.
Well I don't know President Clinton's adulterous history at the time he met Hilary, but it has now been established that Tiger was stepping out on Elin from the time he met her. This shall not pass.
#1, and #3 are things that you would have no idea whether or not he's actually doing, so you cannot say he's not doing them. #2 he actually did do. #4 is something he's always done.OK, I'll give you a reasonable summary of what he should do now:
The privacy isn't for him... it is for his family -- victims. Don't they deserve any consideration in your summary?Sorry bicker, but someone who makes millions of $$$ off his public persona does not get to say "I'm sorry and I want privacy".
I think he has issues.
His life was planned out for him from birth. He was on a golf course at age two and spent his entire childhood on one.
I believe when his Father died, it brought up a whole mess of childhood trauma and he went a little crazy.
So I'll say, sick. Maybe.
Possibly Michael Jackson syndrome.
Then you shouldn't have any problem with what I wrote.Sorry Dr. Spock, but humans criticize other humans all day long without needing to legitimize it. That's just the way we are.
#1, and #3 are things that you would have no idea whether or not he's actually doing, so you cannot say he's not doing them. #2 he actually did do. #4 is something he's always done.
The privacy isn't for him... it is for his family -- victims. Don't they deserve any consideration in your summary?
Yes, I agree with that all, as well as what I said earlier, about the need to show total deference to the victims. Picking up on your point, here, though, I think we all are best served by thinking about how abridging a celebrity's privacy in this manner serves or damages the greater good. What such vitriolic invasiveness on the part of the press does is essentially prompt smart people to reserve themselves away from the public arena. That's why our politicians are generally considered by most to be a lower-class of human.To me--when someone uses the "but they are a public figure excuse", it is simply a cop out excuse to their need to be a voyeur.
Privacy doesn't get eliminated with celebrity. But for some reason, there are folks who believe the right is lost if they make lots of money and are a public figure.
I do believe he is entitled to some degree of privacy even if he is shown to be a lying cheating snake.
Yes, I agree with that all, as well as what I said earlier, about the need to show total deference to the victims. Picking up on your point, here, though, I think we all are best served by thinking about how abridging a celebrity's privacy in this manner serves or damages the greater good. What such vitriolic invasiveness on the part of the press does is essentially prompt smart people to reserve themselves away from the public arena. That's why our politicians are generally considered by most to be a lower-class of human.It's a serious issue though. I've met some incredibly excellent people in my life. One is the COO of the most successful software development company in the world. He's a private man, and I suspect would eschew the public arena, not because he worried about doing something wrong and getting caught, but just because even if he does everything right in his life it is likely that the more center-stage he is the more his life and the life of his family will be degraded by public scrutiny. The best people -- the smartest people -- avoid the public spotlight, thereby depriving society of some of what they would offer us if our society was not so invasive. And the more tabloid journalism invades every aspect of our society, the more gossipy we all become, the more good people will withhold their best gifts from society.
Yes, I agree with that all, as well as what I said earlier, about the need to show total deference to the victims. Picking up on your point, here, though, I think we all are best served by thinking about how abridging a celebrity's privacy in this manner serves or damages the greater good. What such vitriolic invasiveness on the part of the press does is essentially prompt smart people to reserve themselves away from the public arena. That's why our politicians are generally considered by most to be a lower-class of human.It's a serious issue though. I've met some incredibly excellent people in my life. One is the COO of the most successful software development company in the world. He's a private man, and I suspect would eschew the public arena, not because he worried about doing something wrong and getting caught, but just because even if he does everything right in his life it is likely that the more center-stage he is the more his life and the life of his family will be degraded by public scrutiny. The best people -- the smartest people -- avoid the public spotlight, thereby depriving society of some of what they would offer us if our society was not so invasive. And the more tabloid journalism invades every aspect of our society, the more gossipy we all become, the more good people will withhold their best gifts from society.