Apologizing is like cleaning up a mess, if you do it wrong, no one feels better.
When governments say they're sorry, it's like when your friend spills juice on the floor and just says "I’m sorry" but doesn’t clean it up. It makes people think, “Are you really sorry? Or are you just saying it to get out of trouble?”
Why Apologies Go Wrong
Governments often say they’re sorry without doing anything to fix the problem, like a kid who breaks their mom’s favorite vase and says “I’m sorry” but doesn’t glue it back together.
Sometimes, they even apologize for things that weren’t really that bad. It's like if your friend tripped over a toy and you said "I'm sorry" for something much bigger, like breaking the whole house down.
And sometimes, governments say they're sorry so often that people stop believing them, it’s like when someone says “I’m sorry” every time they trip, but no one really cares anymore. Apologizing is like cleaning up a mess, if you do it wrong, no one feels better.
When governments say they're sorry, it's like when your friend spills juice on the floor and just says "I’m sorry" but doesn’t clean it up. It makes people think, “Are you really sorry? Or are you just saying it to get out of trouble?”
Examples
- A prime minister says 'I'm very sorry' after a major disaster, but the people just think it's another empty promise.
- A government releases an apology letter, but it’s full of jargon and doesn’t address what actually went wrong.
- An official says 'We take responsibility,' but no one knows who exactly is responsible.
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See also
- Does saying "sorry" after an accident count as legal admission of fault?
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