Mineral Wells Area News

Editorial: Enough is Enough! Can We Make America Kind Again?

Editorial: Enough is Enough! Can We Make America Kind Again?

Editorial: Enough is Enough! Can We Make America Kind Again?
January 22
12:05 2026

By Amy Meyer | Publisher | Mineral Wells Area News

Editorial Note: The following is an editorial column. The views expressed are those of the writer and reflect perspectives on community culture and civic life.

It’s 2026 — Stop Using the “R” Word. Our Kids Notice

In neighboring Parker County, Fins Patio Bar & Grill in Weatherford has built a massive online following with more than 40,000 followers at the time of this writing. That following didn’t emerge by accident. Fins leaned into shock-driven content, publicly shaming dine-and-dashers and mocking customer misbehavior. Over time, the posts drifted from snarky to mean-spirited, including fat-shaming, sexist digs, and racially charged memes. Many brushed it off as edgy marketing.

In late November, Fins announced its annual $10,000 scavenger hunt which is a contest followed by hundreds of families across Parker County and here in Palo Pinto County. In a time when money is tight for many, the prize drew a broader audience than the bar crowd that typically consumes Fins’ content.

Suddenly, the audience wasn’t just bar patrons. It was families, teachers, coaches, and parents following along for the prize.

And that is where the problem came into full view.

As participation grew, so did the hostility. Comment threads filled with a mix of legitimate questions, harmless clarifications, and occasional complaints. It’s exactly what any business should expect when running a public contest. In response, the restaurant’s Facebook account replied with memes, slurs, and degrading images, including those featuring disabled individuals and Special Olympics participants.

One mother of a child with Down syndrome wrote:

“These memes and words may seem like jokes, but they are so much more. They feed the cultural pattern that turns disabled individuals into punchlines and grow unrecognized bias.”

But instead of pausing to reconsider, the restaurant doubled down. In a recent post, Fins responded to the criticism by repeatedly using the r-word itself (even describing critics as “r-worded humans”) while encouraging followers to leave five-star reviews to drown out backlash and keep the treasure hunt alive.

Screenshots of Fins Patio Bar & Grill Facebook posts and comments

What defenders called “just jokes” became a spectacle of humiliation and some in the crowd applauded. We would never tolerate someone mocking a disabled child at a grocery store, Little League game, or church potluck. Yet online, cruelty becomes entertainment.

This behavior doesn’t stay contained by county lines. Many residents here in Palo Pinto County are following and actively participating in Fins’ scavenger hunt. This same abhorrent behavior tone is bleeding into our own local forums.

Facebook’s newer features of anonymous posting and nickname posting have only added fuel. Anonymity removes accountability, and without accountability, cruelty spreads.

We also need to talk about language. The r-word was once a clinical term, but it was removed from diagnostic manuals and federal law more than a decade ago. Today it survives mostly as slang and not always directed at disabled individuals, but used to describe situations, frustrations, or mistakes. We hear it daily in our community, from adults and children alike. Kids use it because parents use it.

Words shape culture, and culture shapes how we treat people. If disability becomes shorthand for “broken” or “stupid,” we should not be surprised when kids grow up viewing disabled individuals as punchlines rather than neighbors.

This isn’t about political correctness. Retiring the r-word is about basic human decency and our kids deserve to grow up in a community that understands the difference. If we want our kids to be kinder than we were, we have to model better language. Not for social media, but for our children.

The incentives for bad behavior online are real. Attention converts to visibility, and visibility converts to advantage. Outrage travels faster than empathy. In that environment, cruelty wins.

But small towns are supposed to be the last places where neighborliness still matters. When someone gets sick, we deliver casseroles. When a family loses their home in a fire, we fill donation boxes. When a child needs surgery, we hold benefit fundraisers. These are not old-fashioned customs, they are acts of kindness that hold communities together.

So we must ask: what happened to “Love Thy Neighbor”? In communities like ours, we are all neighbors whether we act like it or not.

We are not naïve about the broader culture either. A political era that rewarded humiliation as entertainment taught the public that empathy is weakness and cruelty is strength. When disability is mocked from political podiums and met with laughter and applause, we should not be shocked when that performance trickles down into everyday life. Children absorb what we normalize.

We cannot stick our heads in the sand any longer. This is not about censorship. It is not about political correctness. It is not even about one restaurant. It is about whether we choose dignity and humanity over spectacle in the places we call home.

The pushback against this kind of behavior has already begun from parents, especially parents of disabled children, who have quietly decided that enough is enough. They are not asking for special treatment. They are asking for respect.

If Fins truly believes this is all just “a game,” perhaps they will see the error of their antics and take the $10,000 grand prize and donate it to the Special Olympics or another charity that supports people with intellectual disabilities.

That would look a lot more like the Texas I know.

The question in front of us is simple and deeply American: Can we make America kind again?

Our kids are watching.



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9 Comments

  1. bluesalad551f3c7d2d
    bluesalad551f3c7d2d January 21, 13:01

    You are so right. Where has basic morality gone?

    Reply to this comment
  2. Alexandra Aycock
    Alexandra Aycock January 21, 14:34

    Thank you for giving this even more attention! ❤️ I am the mother of the child with Down syndrome who created the original post and quoted here. Thank u for using your platform to speak out against ableist content!

    Reply to this comment
  3. Raena
    Raena January 21, 15:21

    This is retarded. Don’t be so sensitive about the word that has nothing to do with a person.

    Reply to this comment
    • alexandra Aycock
      alexandra Aycock January 21, 17:43

      I know alot of peeple dont understand the importance of using the “R” word. I think alot of it stems from simply not knowing the history of the word. The word “retard” originated from the latin word “retardare” which translated to the meaning “to hinder” or “make slow”. Adopted into English it meant slow or delayed. When intellectual disabilities started to gain names they were umbrellaed under the category of “mental retardation”. Then it was not seen as inherently negative through literal translation by physicians but around the 1960’s the word “retarded” had become a high use derogatory insult meant for demeaning and insulting other by calling them the “R” word. As awareness grew of the negative meaning FAR overshadowing the clinical purpose for literal translation the disabled community fought and through Rosa’a Law in 2010 the medical terminology legally changed from “mental retardation” to “intellectually and developmentally disabled”. This is from the factual standpoint. There is no changing facts. Now from a moral standpoint my view is that the “R” word” first used as literal translation then changed into a disgusting insult is very close to the same as the “N” word which originated for and changed under the same conditions. The only difference is oppressed and marginalized african amaricans had the ability to speak and fight for themselves causing and acceptance and langue shift (not enough obviously) sooner than the Intellectually Disabled community of which statistically 50% suffer language difficulties and 25-30% have severe difficulties making advocating for themselves challenging or impossible. My daughter is non verbal. Only myself, her father, and her siblings can understand her so as her mother it is my responsibility to be a voice for her and i make sure my voice is educated, calm (most of the time) and clear. The only difference is society has recognized the impact of using the “N” word and criminalized it as hate speech (which it most certainly needed) and our community hasnt broken through the roof of that room yet. Fighting for use of a word you morally and consciously know is wrong is like stabbing someone and saying “dont be so sensitive u havnt even died yet”. Your still hurting that person and the outcome is pain whether u stop stabbing them or continue till they r dead. Im the person in the ally witnessing it and screaming stop even if it means u stab me too. Its simple. After hearing this…from now on u choose whether to stab or not before u open your mouth, type the word, or share the meme. Its not something u have to publicly declare either its a personal choice in your mind. The only thing standing in your own way is pride.

      Reply to this comment
  4. txfotocowboy2
    txfotocowboy2 January 21, 15:56

    Still digging out of your coverage area, so you can get those clicks. Have fun playing newspaper.

    Reply to this comment
  5. K
    K January 21, 16:10

    Fins needs to be shut down. They lie about their scavenger hunt.

    Reply to this comment
  6. Down syndrome supporter till the end!!!
    Down syndrome supporter till the end!!! January 21, 18:33

    Raena comment is fins! They posed a response to this on Facebook same time that comment came and of course came up with a new word. They post this on anyone that disagrees with their bigot view.

    Thank you for writing this!!! 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏

    Reply to this comment

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