We all know that person who treats expiration dates and hygiene rules as “suggestions” rather than science. But there is a big difference between eating day-old yogurt and chopping a fresh cucumber on a cutting board slick with raw chicken juice.
Usually, when adults make bad choices, we let them learn their lesson. But does that apply to health hazards?
A 24-year-old visitor recently faced this exact moral dilemma when his mom’s boyfriend, who claimed food poisoning was a myth, decided to prepare a “salmonella salad.” The OP warned him, but stepped aside. The aftermath was exactly what you’d expect.
Now, read the full story:















Honestly, you have to feel for the OP here. It’s maddening to argue facts with someone who simply “doesn’t believe” in science. Saying you don’t believe in Salmonella is like saying you don’t believe in gravity, you’re going to fall down eventually regardless of your opinion!
The boyfriend is a grown man of 55 years. At some point, agency takes over. If you are told, “That knife is covered in raw meat juice,” and you choose to slice your tomato with it anyway, that is an intentional choice.
The Mom’s reaction is also frustrating. She blames her son for not being “cruel” enough to stop him, yet she also knew about the danger and didn’t stop him either? It sounds like she wanted the son to be the “bad cop” so she didn’t have to deal with the boyfriend’s temper.
Expert Opinion
This is a textbook case of Confirmation Bias meeting Biological Reality.
The “It Never Happened Before” Fallacy
The boyfriend’s logic, “I’ve never had it, so it doesn’t exist,” is a cognitive bias known as the “Survivorship Bias.” Just because he has been lucky in the past doesn’t mean the risk isn’t real.
According to the CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Salmonella causes about 1.35 million infections, 26,500 hospitalizations, and 420 deaths in the United States every year. Chicken is a major source of these illnesses.
Cross-Contamination Dangers
What the boyfriend did, using an unwashed board and knife for Ready-To-Eat (RTE) foods like salad, is the number one way cross-contamination occurs in home kitchens. The USDA specifically advises to use separate cutting boards for fresh produce and raw meat to avoid exactly this scenario.
The Ethics of Intervention
From a psychological perspective, trying to control another adult’s behavior usually leads to conflict, not compliance. The OP previously tried physically removing tools (which is extreme for dealing with another adult!), and it didn’t work.
By stepping back and letting “Natural Consequences” take over, the OP actually employed a common parenting and management technique. Sometimes, experience is the only teacher people will listen to.
Check out how the community responded:
Most readers agreed that a 55-year-old man shouldn’t need to be treated like a toddler.



![A Man Refused To Wrestle The Dirty Knife Away From Him: Now He’s Sick And Mom Is Mad [Reddit User] - This man has had 55 years on this planet to learn basic information... What else are you gonna have to educate him on...](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1763884965496-4.webp)


Commenters pointed out the hypocrisy of the mother blaming her son when she also knew and said nothing to the boyfriend.




Some users found satisfaction in the instant karma.



How to Handle Reckless People
It is terrifying when a loved one (or a loved one’s partner) engages in dangerous behavior. But you have limits.
The Warning is Enough: Your responsibility ends at the “Informed Consent” line. Once you say, “Stop, that is dangerous and here is why,” you have done your job. You are not a bodyguard.
Protect the Vulnerable: In this case, the OP did the most important thing: He warned his Mom so she wouldn’t eat the contaminated salad. If there were children involved, physical intervention would be necessary. But for a competent adult? You step back.
Let the Lesson Stick: Now that he is sick, resist the urge to say “I told you so.” Let the misery do the talking. Biology has made the argument for you far more eloquently than words ever could.
Conclusion
Some lessons are learned in books, and some are learned in the bathroom at 3 AM.
The OP warned, pleaded, and argued. He did everything a reasonable person could do short of tackling the man. It’s unfortunate the boyfriend got sick, but maybe now he will finally believe in germ theory.
The Reddit community vote is overwhelmingly NTA (Not The A-Hole).
What do you think? Is there ever a time you should physically force an adult to stop making a bad choice?









