Q&A: If you caught your spouse cheating on you would you blame them of the person they cheated with?
Question by John Doe: If you caught your spouse cheating on you would you blame them of the person they cheated with?
Personally I would blame my spouse she is the one that made vows to be faithful.
That’s how I see government corruption & Wall Street, politicians took an oath to look out for the best interest of the US. They are also being PAID to do so.
So how can you not blame them for being corrupted by Wall Street? That makes no sense, they broke their oath and they are not doing what they are paid to do.
Why let the politicians off the hook, because Obama is in the White House?
Best answer:
Answer by Dawn of the Zombie g
I think both are responsible… and we have LAWS where banks have to follow them… and laws were politicians have to follow them…
but at the end of the day… who holds the power here… it’s not LEGAL to corrupt the gov. NO MATTER HOW MUCH YOU WANT TO IGNORE THAT POINT…
and they ARE THE CORRUPTORS… AND IT WILL CONTINUE UNTIL YOU STOP WALL STREET… change the gov. EVERY election, the results WILL BE the same…
the gov. is just the symptoms… wall street corruption is the disease…
What do you think? Answer below!


Both. Why should I have to pick one? Unless she had no idea he was married.
I agree, the spouse.
But, money is always going to have political influence. In the days of kings and queens, who had the influence? Those with money. It is going to be universal no matter what, those who have, have influence.
We are as much to blame, for electing corrupted individuals, going that route. Who puts them into office? They don’t put themselves there. How many in there have been in there 15+ years?
The other spouse is known as the “respondent.” Although it’s not required, the respondent can file a response to the petition saying he or she agrees. Filing a response shows both parties agree to the divorce. This makes it more likely the case will proceed without a court hearing, which could delay the process and cost more. Generally, if a response is not filed within 30 days, the petitioner can request that a default be entered by the court. The responding spouse can also use the response to disagree with information presented in the petition.