Culture Ask Amy: We told him not to come to the wedding, but we still wanted his money

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Dear Amy: Four months before my daughter’s wedding, she told me that her uncle (my brother, “Dave”) would make her feel unsafe if he was a guest. She asked me not to invite him.

My daughter is very politically progressive, as are many of her friends, and although she and Dave have always had a good relationship (I thought), he is a conservative voter and has supported candidates we all abhor.

Dave has always been very nice, so my daughter’s request surprised me.

I wrote Dave a very nice note, telling him that we would not be comfortable with him at the wedding and that he would not be invited.

Dave did not respond and did not attend.

Afterward, I sent him a card and pictures from the wedding, all in an effort to make him feel like he was not being totally left out.

I have not heard from Dave since then. When my siblings found out what I had done they were angry with me.

That is just one problem.

Another problem is that Dave has not sent my daughter and son-in-law a wedding gift.

In the past, Dave has given family members wedding checks in excess of $1,000.

She says she was counting on receiving the same type of gift.

My husband says I should drop it – but I can’t. Dave’s behavior is upsetting and embarrassing to me.

How can I get my brother to recognize and change his petty behavior?

Please don’t tell me that I’m the one who started this by not inviting my brother to the wedding. After all, he’s a grown man, while my daughter is young and just starting out.

– Angry in Philadelphia

Dear Angry: Let’s recap: Your delicate daughter is too frightened to be near a conservative voter to allow her uncle “Dave” to attend her wedding.

She then asks you to do her dirty work for her, and (of course) you do!

Fine – so far, we have only a bride’s prerogative to create her own guest list, and her mother’s choice to protect her from any consequences, which is your prerogative.

You then rub the excluded guest’s nose in this wedding by sending him photos of the event to which he has pointedly not been invited.

But it’s your second “problem” which I believe will enter the Bridezilla Hall of Infamy.

In short: Brides who are too afraid of family members to invite them to a family wedding don’t then get the pleasure of receiving their money.

You seem almost as afraid of your daughter as she is of your brother, but I hope you’ll find a way to courageously tell her that the Bank of Uncle Dave is closed, at least to your branch of the family.

So far, your silent brother is the only family member who is behaving appropriately. He’s steering clear, which is exactly what you have asked him to do.

https://www.chicagotribune.com/advi...0230629-tdz3lad4a5dthgi5d35v4lsgzq-story.html (Archive)
 
so they banned him form the wedding not because they were afraid he would do something but simply because he voted for trump? it's both funny and sad to see how frequent leftists will do things like this. you voted different form me? well simply being around you makes me feel unsafe.

also peak woman moment if you think it is okay to ban him from the wedding but still have an expectation that you are owed him giving you an expensive wedding present. i hope this woman and her daughter get botulism.
 
In the past, Dave has given family members wedding checks in excess of $1,000.

She says she was counting on receiving the same type of gift.

My husband says I should drop it – but I can’t. Dave’s behavior is upsetting and embarrassing to me.

How can I get my brother to recognize and change his petty behavior?
Dave must have the patience of a saint, because if it were anyone else these people would have caught a bullet.
 
I wrote Dave a very nice note, telling him that we would not be comfortable with him at the wedding and that he would not be invited.

Dave did not respond and did not attend.

Afterward, I sent him a card and pictures from the wedding, all in an effort to make him feel like he was not being totally left out.
How in the *fuck* did you get to that conclusion!?

Good thing Amy here called her out
 
How in the *fuck* did you get to that conclusion!?

Good thing Amy here called her out

It seems as though the card and the wedding photos were a fake olive branch, similar to completely memory-holing all the COVID/jab segregation and atrocities, where the mother wanted to pretend like nothing happened now that the segregation event had passed.

And also served as a reminder "We're still awaiting your overdue customary 1k cheque, please".
 
I was expecting a different & sympathetic response from the second half of the article, it genuinely surprised me.

These kinds of fluff pieces are allowed, in moderation. They go hand in hand with actual journalism thanks to the way newspapers made them bedfellows to sell more issues & create engagement. If there's ever a sudden uptick of them, let us know your thoughts in the meta thread at the top of the subforum.
 
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