A discussion centered on how couples should handle public boundaries when approached by third parties. The scenario was simple: a man and his partner are out together when another man compliments her. While many responses focused on trust, communication, or calmly stepping in if necessary, the conversation took a disturbing turn.

One comment openly promoted violence: “I go fess give am hot upper cut for nose make blood full ground.” This statement does not reflect confidence or protection; it reflects uncontrolled aggression. A compliment, even if inappropriate, is not a justification for physical assault. Normalizing violent reactions to everyday social situations encourages reckless behavior and endangers lives.

Strength is shown through composure, clear boundaries, and respect—not by imagining or celebrating harm. When violence becomes the default response, it exposes insecurity rather than authority.

LINKS

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