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Culture War Roundup for the week of May 11, 2026

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Uh.. Probably more lax than in the West? The important exams, like the NEET/JEE or the post graduate NEET for higher training in medicine are heavily proctored and surveilled. Cheating there is extremely difficult, and usually takes incredible levels of gumption or a dedicated cheating ring and bribery. That is not the norm. If you're caught, you're screwed. Barred from the test. Legal action.

It's far more heterogeneous when considering all institutes of higher learning. I have only attended one med school, after all, and I can tell you that people were caught and subject to disciplinary action for cheating on the test. Of course people try to cheat. I can only point out that they can and do get caught and subjected to serious punishment.

Funny story, a very good friend of mine was unfairly accused of cheating during our med school finals. She'd taken a box of stationery with her into the test, and forgotten that she'd left in a tiny strip of paper with a list of things to revise (chapter names and page numbers) from last night. She was subject to a random search during the med school finals, this was detected, and she was sent to a disciplinary committee with accusations that she'd been carrying a literal cheat sheet. I wrote a letter defending her, which she shared with the board. They were flabbergasted and asked her if she'd hired a lawyer. Nope, just me. I suppose you'd use ChatGPT for something like that today, but back then it was just ChatGP-me.

If it makes you feel better I actually cheated on behalf of a younger cousin.

Years ago before ChatGPT was a thing, she approached me one day yelling, “Cousinnn! Please I need your help!,” begging me to write her finals essay that was due literally the very next day (that she hadn’t even started… at the end of the school year…), which took the form of arguing a position on a particular issue. So I sat down at her computer that night and spun out a 12 or so page essay, properly formatted, footnoted, the whole 9 yards for her to turn in tomorrow.

Turned out she didn’t even read the original assignment at all; she was too busy partying the whole school year. One of the requirements of this specific essay was that it had to be read, explained and argued out loud, in class, on the day. When the day came and her friends were all sharing what they wrote, they looked at hers and said “there’s no way you wrote this…” She was insistent that she did. But she got up to read hers aloud, she was slowly pronouncing words, and later texted me and says, “what the hell are you saying!?” I told her “Just hold your head high no matter what! Act like nothing, 😤.”

The teacher wanted her to stay after class and demanded to know where she plagiarized it from. She said she didn’t, she wrote the whole thing and it took her a lot of time. Then they said they’re going to thoroughly research where she got it from and she was going to get an F. The word I later got back was that the teacher was frustrated and mad as hell because they couldn’t figure out where it was plagiarized from (it wasn’t plagiarized, it was original work; I wrote the whole damn thing), and he gave her an F on it anyway. She was so upset she took it to the administration and got it reversed so she was able to get a passing grade for the class; but I was pissed off if the teacher was going to fail me, I wanted to walk in there myself and demand a passing grade; because I was damn proud of my work.

I have to ask, in hindsight, were you trying to fail your cousin? Because it's pretty funny.

No, I was seriously supporting her to get her to pass (which she did); since her lax attitude throughout the school year left everything hanging in the balance with how she performed on this final assignment. I’d already been out of high school for years at this time, but I was just winging it and found the assignment a breeze. It didn’t even occur to me to write it in such a way that would seem like it came out of her mouth. When she read it she was pronouncing words like “genes” as “gen… iss…,” etc.

Just curious then, why help her at all? Does enabling a family member who partied all year and asks for your help the night before on an important paper seem like it would be good for her in the long run? What would be the worst case scenario for her without help, being expelled from her high school or repeating her grade level?

It seems you reinforced a lesson that lying and plagarism can make up for a consistent work ethic? And that when she gets caught she should double down in denial no matter how obvious the deception?

The inability to pronounce genes is just terribly funny though.

Just curious then, why help her at all? Does enabling a family member who partied all year and asks for your help the night before on an important paper seem like it would be good for her in the long run? What would be the worst case scenario for her without help, being expelled from her high school or repeating her grade level?

Short answer (don’t seek a justification in this response, only an answer), because biology overwhelms logic at every turn. I have no logical argument against that because I agree with you. But she’s my cousin and I love her; and that overrides everything else. We’ve always had a very close relationship and I’ve viewed her as a younger sister I was bailing out. We’ve been partners in crime like this all of our lives and had each others backs, so to speak. Does it help long-term? Not at all. My strongest support for her has been to support her family and kids (now some of my youngest cousins). And she’s quite successful professionally now. I’ve helped her through school, building resumes, coaching her, etc. So she’s learned a ‘lot’ over the years.

Makes sense. Women do good with an older brother figure, especially if the dad is checked out or otherwise absent. That she was allowed to even party hard in the first place makes it seem as if one or both of her parents were not that involved in her education.

My friend's cousin in the strip club, her dad killed himself early on in her life and her mom is also a party girl. There was no older male relative to have her back, so her life got messed up. Last time I saw her she was clearly on meth and dropped out of a full scholarship in state college to strip for a customer base of lonely, desperate men. The men she met there were mostly of low quality (gamblers, dealers, etc), and the higher quality men were not looking for something long term with her.

Her father was not someone I particularly liked and her mother was like a big sister to me when I was younger but as she got older, she took to behaviors that I felt were too neglectful of her kids; and I didn’t like it. We grew more distant with time. With her kids though, we’ve been rock solid since they could speak. I never saw it as a woman’s job to undergo serious intellectual labor unless they wanted to choose that path; in which case I’d also have supported her full speed ahead. But that wasn’t the route she wanted. She wanted to be a mom. Make no mistake, she’s a very intelligent and capable girl, but, she was also like a lot of other girls her age. Bailing her out of one particular trying circumstance didn’t lead me to think she wasn’t getting an education, because I knew she was even if she wasn’t focused on it like the geek that I am. If she wasn’t family and was a stranger that lived across the street, our social circles likely never would’ve crossed paths with each other, but ours were always an integral part of the other because we’re family, I’ll sideline everything for my family. When one group calls on the other, you answer the call.

Really sucks for your friend’s cousin. She likely would’ve benefitted with positive male role models. That’s why I have negative attitudes of people who grow up with family but don’t seem to respect the institutions that sanctify it because they take it for granted. I would kill to have biological children of my own and when I see parents not active in their kids lives it’s depressing because they should be directly at the center of it, trying to uplift and support them.

You do everything for family. You support them no matter what. I agree with that. But when it comes to your support doing more harm than good in the long run, you stop. You don't enable them.

And that's what you're doing here. You're living vicariously through her and her family, but does she feel the same about you? You talk about her being like a younger sister, but that was the same with you and her mother: "she was like a big sister to me". That became more distant with time, so the same emotional investment wasn't there for her as for you, and it sounds the same with this younger cousin - she gets you to do the grunt work, she benefits by it, and you get to feel useful and appreciated since you don't have a family of your own.

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