T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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829.1 | THE WHOLE COUNTRY IS IN A STATE OF DENIAL!!! | MPGS::CHRISTENSEN | | Wed Sep 09 1992 08:50 | 12 |
| Are US parents so bad? I don't think so BUT did anyone else catch the lady on
Donahue yesterday who claimed about the US..."this is a WHOLE COUNTRY in DENIAL"
What she was trying to CLAIM, is that EVERY US natural parent is a natural child
abuser and that they ALL are in a state of DENIAL. Now I KNOW that child abuse
is a BIG BIG BIG HUGE problem, but My Personal Opinion is that this lady on
Donahue went just a BIT too far with her generalizations...
So what about it all you parents reading this reply? Are you ALL abusing your
children? What's that?...be careful...someone might jump to the conclusion that
you are in a state of DENIAL. Of course we KNOW that everyone abuses their kids
so OF COURSE you ALL are in denial!!! (and therefore you don't even KNOW that
you're abusing your children)
|
829.2 | "The whole country is in denial" | REGENT::WOODWARD | I'll put this moment...here | Wed Sep 09 1992 09:36 | 3 |
| The lady on Donahue was Patty Davis, Ron and Nancy Reagan's daughter,
and she was on Oprah.
|
829.3 | denial? | DNEAST::DUPUIS_STEVE | ABC, it's easy as 1-2-3 | Wed Sep 09 1992 11:29 | 17 |
| Good topic for discussion.
My second wife and I are expecting our first child in February.
I have two children from my first marriage, a girl, aged 11 and
a boy, aged 9. I have joint custody with my ex and the children
spend 50% of their time with me. I am not always the best parent
that I could be, but I always strive to do the best that I can.
I make mistakes and I try to learn from my mistakes. I would like
my children to be the best that they are capable of doing. They,
like me, make mistakes and hopefully will learn from their errors.
One thing that is emphasized in our house is that you have choices
and you need to take responsibility for your own actions. As many
people that have gone through a traumatic experience such as divorce
can atest to, it's real easy to place the blame for some issue you
have on someone else. I've done it. You control your future. Don't
'deny' yourself that.
|
829.4 | Truth at all costs | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Wed Sep 09 1992 12:17 | 7 |
| Anyone interested in parenting would find Johnn Bradshaw's books to be
extremely useful. "The Family" was one of his first and is the best
I've read when it comes to understanding The dynamics of family systems
and how the parenting "mistakes" of the past are perpetuated to present
and future generations.
dan d
|
829.5 | Are UK parents so bad? | ESGWST::RDAVIS | A bore is a straight line | Wed Sep 09 1992 13:54 | 9 |
| "Granta" is a quarterly magazine published by Penguin (still U.K., I
believe). Their special issue on "Families" was subtitled:
"They f**k you up"
minus the asterisks. (I have to put the asterisks in just in case Mom
reads this.)
Ray
|
829.6 | this is why abuse still happens | LUNER::MACKINNON | | Wed Sep 09 1992 15:44 | 15 |
|
re 0
re 1) a significant proportion of men are judged unfit parents....
WRONG. They are not judged to be unfit. If they were to be
judged unfit, the judge would not allow any contact whatsoever.
Joint custody seems to be the norm today,but it is mostly only
on paper. Joint legal custody is very different than joint
physical custody. The judges need to put the needs of the
kids first and do so without letting their own prejudices get
in the way. Only a very small percentage of parents both
male and female are ever judged to be unfit. This is why
we see so very many cases of child abuse.
|
829.7 | taken in the context of the statement it was right | LUNER::MACKINNON | | Wed Sep 09 1992 15:52 | 21 |
|
re .1
Taken in the context of what she said re the whole country being
in denial she was correct. This country (at least the folks in
power) still insist there is no recession. They still insist
there are no social woes. That is the denial she was speaking
of. The political forces don't care to see the homeless families
and the jobless families. That is denial of a very real and
tragic problem. To not try to help them is denial.
I do not think she was trying to claim that every us natural
parent is a child abuser. Rather what she was trying to bring
to light that for the folks who did survive dysfunctional families
(and every family is dysfunctional to a point ie no family is perfect)
the parents often deny that any problems existed. I was raised
by two alcoholic parents. I was lucky though as no physical
abuse or emotional abuse took place. It was the hiding the
truth bullshit that left its mark. That clearly was denial.
|
829.8 | most are ok | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Wed Sep 09 1992 16:43 | 55 |
| re .0
I believe that the view of the American family, like nearly all
of American society, is slanted by the publicity. You hardly ever
see a "good" family featured. Like one person said once "kids
don't come with instructions". I think it was Bill Cosby that said,
"No parent sets out to deliberatly screw up their kids". So each
parent just has to muddle through the best they can. Yes we have
our share of crud, and yes, there are areas that could stand some
improvements, but by and large the vast majority American kids manage
to grow up reasonabley well adjusted good citizens.
With all due respect to those who _have_ grown up in disfunctional
situations (I am probably more one of these than not) I think there
is a bigger problem with kids being undiciplined, self-centered,
spoiled brats than there is with "disfunctional" parnts. Again
not to excuse parents that _could_ use some improvemnt.
>1) A significant proportion of men are judged unfit parents in a
>divorce case, and are not granted joint custody. My estimate from the
>anecdotes would be about 20%, but I wouldn't be surprised if someone
>could correct that.
I think you fail to take into account the outright biggotry of
most judges that "mother is best". Althought the laws have
changed a little to make it easier to award joint custody, the
judges have been slow to change.
>2) A smaller (but not minute) proportion of women are judged unfit
>parents. With the same qualifications I would estimate 5%.
May be about right. A mother has to be _proven_ unfit before
custody is removed. However, in _contested_ custody cases, only
about 1 in 10 goes to the father. We had a case in Colorado Springs
last week where a woman was *convicted* of murder during a drug deal.
She was the dealer. The deal went bad and her customer ended up
dead. The judge in the case released the woman on bond until the
appeal process is exhausted (extimated to take 2 to 3 years) so
"she could care for her child". That is just about as far out of
whack this system really is. Could you imageine what would have
happened if a *man* had been released under these circumstances and
had custody of his child returned?
>3) From the case in which a mother reclaimed a child from foster
>parents, natural parents are always given the benefit of the doubt.
Not always, but in the vast majority.
> Any comments on the idea of about half a million U.S. children
>being moved to state "orphanages"?
I think that that is just about all American parents need is yet
anther government agency looking over their sholder.
fred()l;
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829.9 | | DSSDEV::BENNISON | Vick Bennison 381-2156 ZKO2-2/O23 | Wed Sep 09 1992 17:11 | 11 |
| >With all due respect to those who _have_ grown up in disfunctional
>situations (I am probably more one of these than not) I think there
>is a bigger problem with kids being undiciplined, self-centered,
>spoiled brats than there is with "disfunctional" parnts. Again
>not to excuse parents that _could_ use some improvemnt.
I think to a large degree, if the kids in a family are undisciplined,
self-centered, and spoiled, then it's a sign that the parents are
dysfunctional.
- Vick
|
829.10 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Wed Sep 09 1992 17:28 | 6 |
| In order to have an accurate picture of the state of the American
Family we need accurate and un-biased statistics. The public is
continually inundated with data and forms a "perception" based on this
data. To deal with a problem it has to be properly defined and IMO
the picture is being distorted by "government stats" and the media's
"sensationalization" of human issues.
|
829.11 | | DSSDEV::BENNISON | Vick Bennison 381-2156 ZKO2-2/O23 | Wed Sep 09 1992 20:12 | 6 |
| I thought there were only lies, damn lies, and statistics. I've never
heard of an "accurate un-biased statistic." I don't recall anyone ever
successfully using a statistic in this or any other notesfile to prove
a point to everyone's satisfaction.
- Vick
|
829.12 | abuse...or at least symptoms of abuse | WFOV11::LAFLEUR | | Wed Sep 09 1992 23:04 | 17 |
| some stats:
Every 8 seconds of the school day a child drops out
Every 26 seconds a child runs away from home
Every 47 seconds a child is abused or neglected
Every 7 minutes a child is arrested for a drug offense
Every 36 minutes a child is killed OR injured by a gun
Every day 135,000 children bring their guns to school
|
829.13 | meaningless without MUCH background | SMURF::BINDER | Ut aperies opera | Thu Sep 10 1992 10:10 | 10 |
| > Every 47 seconds a child is abused or neglected.
Abused by whose definition? Swatted on the rear for stealing a cookie?
Neglected by whose standards? Ignored because Mommy or Daddy was
trying to contain the boilover of dinner?
Statistics can be - and are - used to prove whatever point the person
using them desires to prove.
-dick
|
829.14 | "here's your lunch...your gun is on the bottom" | WFOV11::LAFLEUR | | Thu Sep 10 1992 11:42 | 12 |
| RE: 13 Agreed.
What about the other points?
Dropping out of school, running away, drug use/sales , carrying
guns to school, is probably neglect If not child abuse on the part of
the parent(s). Granted, dropping out of school or running away is not
always an abuse problem, BUT where the heck are the parents while their
kids are doing/selling drugs? How do kids acquire, keep, hide and sneak
in and out of the house with firearms, without the parents being aware
of whats going on?
|
829.15 | i disagree | LUNER::MACKINNON | | Thu Sep 10 1992 16:02 | 44 |
|
re -1
I would venture to say that half of the kids who run
away do so because they don't want to deal with the
rules and regs of the house. Two of my siblings did
this with regular frequency and they always returned.
The rules were not difficult to live by. They just
didnt feel they had to live by them and thought they
could make the choice not to. They found out that
it just didnt work. Reality is a real eye opener.
These two particular siblings also dropped out of school
upon turning 16. Other than having my mom quit her job,
which she couldnt do because it was the only source of
income for the family, and take them by the hand to each
and every class, there was little she as a parent could
do. Thankfully they both got their GEDs and are doing
quite well in their lives today.
Carrying guns to school is not neglect. In most cases
now it is used as protection. Yes there are some schools
where walking through a metal detector is a regular morning
ritual to get in the building. Is that the parents fault?
Or is it the fault of the folks who supplied the guns to
the kids?
Drug use/sales. This is a good one. How many parents
who trust their kids WANT to believe that THEIR kids
would be doing such a thing? When I was in high school
you could get any kind of drugs you wanted right on
campus. Funny part is that the kids selling were ones
who went on to college. Only a handful were burnouts.
There is just so much a parent can do to control the
lives of his or her children. They can instill values
and morals and the only thing they can do is hope that
the kids will heed the advice. A parent really only
has control up until such time as the child starts
hanging out with friends away from the home and family.
Parents can only set a good example and hope for the best.
|