Parents Who Raise Monsters, Then Blame Society and Schools
Welcome to the latest Malaysian horror series — “My Child Cannot Be Wrong,” Season 2025. In this drama, teenagers roam around schools like mini dictators, assaulting classmates, bullying juniors, forming rempit gangs, and in some extreme episodes — committing rape, murder, and calling it “youthful mistakes.” But the real plot twist? Their parents arrive on scene not with guilt — but with excuses, denial, and a lawyer.
Because clearly, when a child becomes a bully, mat rempit, or a violent delinquent — it’s never the parenting, right? It’s always the school. Or society. Or the teachers who “failed to understand their feelings.” Yes, teachers — those underpaid superheroes expected to educate, counsel, discipline, raise moral citizens, and apparently now also perform exorcisms on kids who were raised by YouTube and TikTok.
These are the same parents who hand their kids smartphones at age 7, but never hand them values like empathy or respect. They refuse to say “no” to their children, then act shocked when their children grow up thinking rules are optional, and consequences don’t apply if Daddy shouts loud enough. Their parenting style? Wi-Fi and wallet — unlimited connection, zero control.
Their kids skip school, vape in the toilet, bully classmates, record it, upload it for views — and when the video goes viral, the parents deliver their legendary line:
“My son is a good boy. He wouldn’t do this.”
Correct. He wouldn’t — if you actually raised him.
And where are they when their kids are burning motorcycles at 2 a.m. becoming mat rempit legends of TikTok? Sleeping peacefully while the neighbourhood suffers from illegal racing symphonies. But when their child crashes into someone’s car? “Society failed our youth. The government didn’t build enough racing tracks.” Because obviously, parenting requires highways and racetracks, not discipline and supervision.
Schools try to punish the child. Suspend him. Counsel him. Call the parents in. What do the parents do?
“Why punish my child? You think your school so perfect?”
“You embarrass my family. I’ll report to the Ministry.”
They protect their kids from consequences like they’re shielding royalty. But every monster starts small — until someone feeds it with denial and ego.
And the best part? These parents love posting “Family values” quotes on Facebook while their sons are busy terrorizing classmates and daughters are running bullying rings in the hostel. They say things like “Children are innocent, society corrupts them.” No, sir. Children are blank pages, and you handed them a permanent marker dipped in ignorance.
Let’s be honest — teachers are educators, not parents. Schools provide knowledge, not character. Society influences — but parents form the foundation. You can’t raise a child on neglect, ego, gadgets, and fast food — then be shocked when he grows up with no moral compass and a passion for violence.
Final Lesson (Since some parents skipped theirs):
If you raise a tiger at home and feed it arrogance instead of ethics, don’t blame the zoo when it bites someone.
So yes — parents who raise monsters shouldn’t point fingers at schools or society. They should buy a mirror.
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