
“Hi, kiddo! I saw that you posted about me and stated that I am the pinnacle of inhumanity—the pinnacle of inhumanity. Now listen, kiddo: I’ve just got home, I’m walking through the door, I’m going to kiss my wife and give my four-and-a-half-year-old son a kiss. I’m going to my family, because I have one, you know? They’re waiting for me, they love me. And do you know why? Because I would never—never—betray them. My ex-wife doesn’t say about me that I’m some kind of ‘entity,’ and I’m not the one whose own son refuses to speak to him.”
“That’s all you, kiddo.”
“You’re just getting what you deserve.”
“Have a nice evening with Ilike—please pass on my hand-kiss!”
“Hello, little one” – not an argument, but hierarchy-building.
👉 The goal: to push the addressed person into a subordinate position.
2️⃣ Performing moral superiority
“I kiss my wife, I kiss my son”
👉 Not a response to criticism, but emotional blackmail:
“Whoever has a family is right.”
3️⃣ Private-life character assassination
Dragging in the ex-wife, the child, family relations
👉 Classic distraction tactic:
instead of addressing the accusations, he talks about the other person’s alleged “worthlessness.”
4️⃣ Projection
“This is all you”
👉 He redirects his own aggression onto the opponent.
5️⃣ Closing, threatening framing
“You’re just getting what you deserve”
👉 Normalizes verbal aggression as “justified punishment.”
One-sentence exposing reply (as you asked):
“When someone parades their family instead of making an argument, it usually means they know they can’t answer the criticism on a professional level.”