Comments by "L.W. Paradis" (@l.w.paradis2108) on "Sky News Australia"
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@curiouscanuck Well, my father and my mother's only brother were WWII British Army veterans, and I singlehandedly took care of my father in his old age, at great personal sacrifice, for five years. So maybe you should reconsider what ugly things you said to me. I doubt you've done more than emote. Your ugly words sound like they're from someone with zero perspective on real life, and a rather bizarre fantasy life, to boot.
I don't see reasonable posts, like "it was wrong to speak publicly about their family matters, especially now." (I think that's true. I would never have done it, or suggested anyone do it.) Instead, I see tit-fot-tat, extremely vicious and escalating personal attacks on them. How is that taking a stand? It's joining in by taking sides and doing the very same thing. This is a social media disease. Get well soon.
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@helengunter378 I'm so sorry for your loss. This was a very short time. I know how it is. No words for it.
As for this gossip, all of these people are complex, with complex lives and unusual struggles. We can't know what happened, or how it was understood or misunderstood at the time. Meghan was treated badly from the beginning, before saying or doing anything, by people who thought she was wrong for Harry. Some people who are treated badly rise to the occasion, some don't, and most try hard for a long time, then break and lash out all the more. Some people take being blamed for a minor misstep by their staff in stride, calmly and with a noblesse oblige attitude. Others feel it as a personal slight, assume it reflects on them, and crumble right away. No reason to hate anyone. Obviously the noble attitude is better, but no one is perfect.
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@CroisMoi In ordinary, non-medical, colloquial speech, "cancer" has two meanings. The first is basically the same as the medical/scientific meaning: cancerous cells were discovered under the microscope. The second is that there was an initial tumor and it spread to some extent. Cancer cells from it metastasized.
You might know you had the first, but there is, still, no evidence of the second. A lot of ordinary speech assumes cancer means the second, and without the second, that you don't "really" have cancer. Er, yes, you do. The first alone is still cancer.
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