Our habit of doing anything unethical or even blatantly illegal like this is blamed on being “young”. Young is young. Being inexperienced doesn’t mean you don’t have to take responsibility for your actions.
I dumped that discomfort on my colleague at the coffee table on the weekend. He slapped his thigh and slapped him: “You can’t take your age The child makes a stake to justify his mistake. But in the case of “guy” Quyen, there is clearly something to think about.
< /p>
“He entered the Song Lam furnace at the age of 13. There was only 13 years old mother and child People drag him to play in this tournament and that tournament because of his province’s achievements.
When the team wins, you gloat openly. At that time, no one thought that a 13-year-old boy still needed to study. Quyen’s condition today is largely their fault. A 13 year old certainly doesn’t know what’s good or bad. It’s even better if people don’t educate him.
>
17 years old Quyen became a “star. From being a poor country kid to suddenly having money and being praised, it’s easy to understand why he went bankrupt so quickly. Quyen doesn’t have a brake.
None It has no cultural background so it can’t hold itself back. Dads are even more happy to see him become a star. Also joined in cheering. His face bloomed jubilantly. So create a “mechanism” for Quyen to let her know that she is in control of you guys.
>
Now that it’s like this, why is everyone so “angry” “unexpected” “at the knees”?
Even though it’s true that everyone is at fault. Quyen is over 20 years old and must take responsibility before the law for her mistakes. But to be honest, it feels like you guys are “squeezing the lemon and peeling off the skin” with it. I’ve never seen anyone say: “I’m so sorry that we didn’t teach Quyen properly before Quyen became a star.”
Just seeing everyone: “I knew right away this guy would be like this and that…”. You guys “knew” it in advance but didn’t teach him when he was a 13 year old barefoot boy who didn’t know anything. When Quyen 16 emerged in the U16 Asian Finals, it was still clear and flexible. But at that time, they were still busy making it their achievements and had no time to teach anymore.
< p class=”MsoNormal” style=”MARGIN:0 0 0″>I believe that Quyen said: “I thought it was a match but Vietnam still won, but I didn’t know the consequences would be so serious” that she also partly thought so. It sounds funny to me, but if his awareness and awareness of legal culture is still just like that of a 13 year old, then maybe he’s not crooked.
>
Tell him that he committed the crime “for the sake of the children” and it makes my ears itch because young people are normally not allowed to blame Such a cowardly error.
>
But Quyen still knows where to hold on when the very people who were once torn up because the “nephew” brought them fame (and even pieces of food) are now falling apart like leeches with nothing left to do. Well, just “because I’m young”. That’s just a very instinctive statement.
There will be many more players from heroes to criminals like that if there is no strategy to properly educate them in the club environment. If you don’t know what to do, you have to go to school. Ronaldo Ronaldinho… all superstars come from the streets. Sooner or later, this game of squeezing lemons and removing peels will lead to tragedy.”
According to Duc Long
Vietnamese Student
“