AITAH for beating up my “friend” I caught sleeping with my gf of 3.5y?

Electrical-End-8306 3098 comments

The user describes finding his girlfriend engaged in s*xual activity with his best friend of ten years. This event, which he compares to a common movie scene, occurred over the past weekend.

Upon discovering the situation, the user physically attacked his friend, causing a nosebleed. He also verbally confronted his now ex-girlfriend.

The user is now left questioning the appropriateness of his violent reaction, specifically because his friend did not fight back.

AITAH for beating up my “friend” I caught sleeping with my gf of 3.5y?
‘AITAH for beating up my “friend” I caught sleeping with my gf of 3.5y?’

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Internet Users Didn’t Hold Back:

It didn’t take long before the comment section turned into a battleground of strong opinions and even stronger emotions.

The original poster (OP) is dealing with the severe emotional fallout of discovering in***elity, resulting in an immediate and violent physical response toward the partner's betrayer.

The central conflict lies between the understandable impulse for retaliation following a major betrayal and the ethical concern regarding the physical a*sault on someone who offered no resistance.

Given the physical attack on an unresisting party, is the OP an a*shole for a*saulting his friend, even though the friend's actions were the initial cause of the conflict? Or does the extreme betrayal negate responsibility for the resulting physical aggression?