Workplace chatter can be harmless until it veers into personal territory. One office conversation started with a question about whether women should become single mothers through a sp**m donor. Before the original poster (OP) could answer, a female coworker jumped in, declaring children “need a mom and a dad,” and extended that logic to say same-s** couples shouldn’t have kids.
For OP, who has friends in same-s** relationships raising happy, thriving children, the remarks didn’t sit well. So, he decided to show her the flaw in her reasoning. Applying her own logic, he pointed out that she herself is newly divorced, meaning her children don’t have a mom and dad together all the time either.
The comment brought the discussion to an abrupt end, but some colleagues thought OP had gone too far, given her difficult divorce. Was this a fair rebuttal, or a personal low blow?
One man’s quick wit turned a workplace debate into a personal showdown when he called out his colleague’s divorce to counter her biased rant








Calling someone out using their own life as an example can be powerful, but it can also be risky, especially in a professional setting. In this case, the coworker’s comments were openly discriminatory toward single mothers by choice and same-s** parents.
According to the The Guardian, decades of research show children raised by same-s** parents fare just as well as those raised by different-s** parents in emotional, social, and academic outcomes. Her stance wasn’t backed by evidence, it was based on personal belief.
By applying her argument to her own circumstances, OP used a classic rhetorical strategy: reductio ad absurdum, showing how a principle, taken to its logical conclusion, becomes unreasonable.
Dr. Valerie Manusov, a communication studies professor at the University of Washington, notes that “mirroring someone’s argument back to them can make inconsistencies visible,” but warns that “doing so with personal examples may cause defensiveness rather than reflection.”
The complicating factor here is the sensitivity of the example chosen. Divorce can be emotionally raw, especially if recent and contentious. While OP’s intention was to highlight hypocrisy, colleagues perceived it as targeting a vulnerable spot.
Workplace etiquette expert Alison Green (Ask a Manager) emphasizes that “personal critiques, even when valid, can easily backfire in professional environments. It’s often better to address the general principle rather than individual circumstances.”
There’s also the broader question of whether this conversation should have happened at work at all. Discussions involving judgment on people’s identities or family structures can alienate coworkers, create a hostile environment, and risk HR involvement. Several commenters suggested that shutting down the topic entirely, or redirecting it to a more neutral subject, would have been the safest move.
Still, there’s an argument for addressing harmful ideas when they’re voiced. Letting discriminatory statements go unchallenged can normalize them. The key is finding a balance, challenging the belief without crossing into personal territory. In OP’s case, his point was valid and logically sound, but the delivery may have overshadowed the message.
These are the responses from Reddit users:
These Redditors cheered his takedown, saying her hypocrisy deserved to be called out, especially for her harmful views













These users leaned ‘everryone was wrong’, noting the discussion was unprofessional for work and his divorce jab was personal, though warranted












This clash wasn’t just about parenting philosophies, it was about how we challenge ideas we believe are wrong, and whether personal examples are fair game. OP’s logic was airtight: her argument against single and same-s** parents applied equally to her own family situation. But in the workplace, timing and tact can be as important as truth.
Would you have taken the direct route and used her example, or kept the rebuttal general to avoid personal offense? And should certain debates be off-limits in professional spaces altogether?








