Responsibility

JaniceM

Well-known Member
I'm hoping other members can input: is this a modern trend, a local thing, or something altogether different? (the approach that nobody's responsible for what they do, nor are they responsible for the consequences)

MY viewpoint:
1. Human beings are not perfect, so anyone can make an honest mistake. However, a person should own up to it, and then at least try to set things right.
2. When it's not an "honest mistake" at all, individuals should be held accountable for their actions.

One example: a contractor did a job with extremely shoddy workmanship, complications were left that I've needed to deal with. While this happens frequently with various individuals, this one particular incident has been really messy: he tore a hole in the outer wall, so whenever it rained it came in and flooded the room.
After this occurred four times I approached landlord to request supplies to fix it.
As I didn't receive enough supplies, the same problem happened a couple of days ago. So what I'm doing now: gritting teeth and hoping the repair job I did yesterday was sufficient- that the caulk is dry enough to prevent more flooding.
It's only one of the many instances in which not doing it isn't an option, but nobody's ever said thank you, and certainly never paid me for the time and work I've put in doing other people's jobs or correcting their mistakes.

Another example: a tenant committed repeated acts of criminal mischief in the laundry room- vandalism, etc. The way the landlord responded to this: put a new lock on the door, and would not give any of us tenants keys. Instead of taking the sensible course of action- to turn the individual in to law enforcement, make him pay for the damages, and ban him from the property- he simply left all the rest of us without laundry facilities that we need. (and it was only quite recently I learned this is against the law).

Another example I've heard referred to as "flaking." Individuals say they'll do something or be somewhere, and without an excuse or reason simply shrug it off.

Is the concept of responsibility something few people these days believe in, or is there some connected factor that I'm not aware of?
 

I'm hoping other members can input: is this a modern trend, a local thing, or something altogether different? (the approach that nobody's responsible for what they do, nor are they responsible for the consequences)

MY viewpoint:
1. Human beings are not perfect, so anyone can make an honest mistake. However, a person should own up to it, and then at least try to set things right.
2. When it's not an "honest mistake" at all, individuals should be held accountable for their actions.

MY viewpoint:
1. Human beings are not perfect, so anyone can make an honest mistake. However, a person should own up to it, and then at least try to set things right.

That is what a person with integrity would do. But as we all know integrity has been declining over the years. The why of that might be a topic or thread to explore.



2. When it's not an "honest mistake" at all, individuals should be held accountable for their actions.

That is why lawyers are making their living filing lawsuits.
 

I don't think it was all honesty and goodness in the good ol' days. I really don't know when this heavenly period existed. It seems we were always pretty shifty, and dishonest. We've always known the difference between an error, and a sin. And to be human is to do both.
 
I especially love the ones who come down hard on someone else for screwing up, but for themselves it's, I'm only human so I make mistakes. Uh huh.
 
Janice these kinds of things are even happening in the workplace. We have a set of employees that do their jobs and a set that does nothing. They admit they don't care if they get yelled at because they don't get in trouble for it. So for them it's ok to be irresponsible if there's no punishment. No action just reaction = it's ok to slack off and let someone else be held responsible.

I feel like this is more and more the way it is because people simply don't give a crap anymore. They think it's ok to do and say whatever they want to whomever they want because there's no punishment for it. They get away with it because people can't afford to fight over it. If I go in for example and argue about the fact that John Doe didn't do his prep for today's meal service they will tell me they will talk to him and that's it. If I have to go in all the time then I get told things like perhaps I need to figure out some other way to be satisfied on the job which is read between the lines speak for there's the door.

Otherwise we gotta drag lawyers or police into situations and it's just a dang mess. Because you can't tell anyone anything anymore or ask nicely or do anything about anything without a big to to about it. And most people can't afford that and don't want to go to all that trouble.
 
It's seems to be a modern trend not to take responsibility for anything these days. I think governments are doing this deliberately, creating a 'nanny state', so that people feel weak and powerless. It makes the population easier to control.
 


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