In a family where love seems divided by favoritism, the oldest brother watches helplessly as his younger twin siblings live in the shadows of parental bias. Jill basks in the glow of being the cherished daughter, while Joe bears the weight of being the unwanted “bonus baby.” Amidst the silent scars of inequality, the oldest brother steps in, offering Joe the companionship and kindness he’s been denied, forging a bond that defies the fractured family dynamic.
What began as simple acts of pity blossom into genuine friendship and loyalty, as the oldest brother finds himself drawn more to Joe’s authentic spirit than to Jill’s entitled world. In a home where favoritism rules, this unexpected alliance becomes a beacon of hope and resilience, proving that love and connection can flourish even in the harshest of environments.

AITA for favoring my scapegoat brother over his golden child twin sister?

















As renowned psychologist Dr. Laura Schlessinger explains, “A common trap is to try to fix the system by over-correcting. When you favor the underdog, you risk becoming the enabler, and you still haven’t addressed the core problem: the parents’ poor behavior.”
The OP’s actions stem from a natural protective instinct toward Joe, who is clearly the scapegoat in a deeply unequal family structure. By using their social capital (friends, time) to shield Joe, the OP provided essential emotional support that mitigated the parents’ damaging favoritism. This created a strong, authentic bond with Joe, leading to the OP genuinely preferring Joe’s company over Jill’s, whom the OP perceives as entitled due to her favored status. The OP’s subsequent effort to find Joe a job was a continuation of this protective dynamic, aiming to secure Joe’s independence from parental control.
Jill’s reaction, while potentially manipulative, stems from experiencing the flip side of the OP’s protection strategy. She has benefited from favoritism and now faces a sudden demand for independence (finding her own job) that her brother never had to face. While the OP is correct that their parents are responsible for Jill’s funding and support, the OP’s selective application of assistance—helping Joe escape parental strings while refusing to help Jill avoid parental nagging—exposes a clear bias. The OP’s actions were appropriate in supporting Joe’s autonomy, but the failure to maintain a basic level of impartial sibling conduct (i.e., refusing help based on personal preference rather than genuine impossibility) created the current conflict. Moving forward, the OP should focus on setting firm boundaries with the parents rather than trying to solve their siblings’ individual problems based on who they like more.
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The original poster (OP) is experiencing a conflict rooted in years of parental favoritism, which has led to a close bond with one sibling (Joe) and a strained relationship with the other (Jill). While the OP actively supported Joe against the family dynamic, their admission of preferring Joe’s company over Jill’s, and their subsequent refusal to help Jill find external employment, has directly ignited a major confrontation with their sister.
Given the OP’s established pattern of favoring the less-favored sibling, is it reasonable for the OP to deny Jill the same type of external support they actively sought for Joe, or does this favoritism, even when directed at balancing perceived parental neglect, constitute unfair treatment toward Jill?







