T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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212.1 | Movies rated PG. | MCIS2::NOVELLO | I've fallen, and I can't get up | Wed Jun 20 1990 12:42 | 17 |
|
This is an interesting topic. My son will be 4 this fall.
My wife and I were watching a graphicly violent movie and
thought he was asleep, but had seen the whole thing.
Now, whenever he get's mad at me, he says he will kill me with
a gun and watch blood come out of my head. I'm not too pleased
with this kind of talk.
Also, we don't let him see the "Night of the Living Dead" type
of movies because we live next door to a cemetary and don't him
getting mightmares. *I* get the nightmares :-(.
Guy
|
212.2 | my 2 cents | CSSEDB::TOBIN | higher primates? by whose standard? | Wed Jun 20 1990 13:09 | 22 |
| My wife and I consciously tried never to shield our kids from the
reality around them. We spoke to them when they were little just as we
would speak with other adults. We would never try to hide or cover up
alcohol and drug abuse by family members, instead we'd ask them what
they thought, or how they felt about it. We brought them to wakes and
allowed them to see the dead person. Gay friends and relatives felt
free to speak of their relationships. We tried our best to be
emotionally honest in front of them.
The results, so far- they seem more adept at making decisions than
their average peers. They have astute powers of observation, and
are shrewd about the world around them. They call a spade a spade,
though they realize that to be tactful, they may have to do it
privately at home. Drugs and alcohol have little allure. They
adjusted quicker to the deaths of my wife's parents, who we lived very
closely to, than we did. They cry when they're upset, and laugh when
they're happy. The repressive school system they are now in sees them
as polite people who generally speak their minds. I'm very happy with
our choices, and thrilled to have such great people as my family.
Society gives kids few or no rights, but the parents don't have to
behave that way. The more respect you show them, the better off they
are.
Tom
|
212.3 | | NAVIER::SAISI | | Wed Jun 20 1990 13:17 | 9 |
| Tom,
I am really curious about how you explained the "in order to be
tactful, do it at home" part to your kids. If kids are brought
up in unconventional ways, do you tell them to do what they have
to to fit in, or to avoid offending other people's sensibilities,
or do you tell them to say what they would say at home, and if they
lose a few friends or get censured for it, it's worth it. I'm very
interested in this topic.
Linda
|
212.4 | Little People does not mean Little Adult | SPARKL::BUEHLER | | Wed Jun 20 1990 13:29 | 40 |
| Well.
I am infuriated by the modern concept that children are little
people who rights are denied to them by the big people. First of
all, children may be little people but that does not make them
little adults. No child should have to bear the burden of having
to make adult-like decisions. For instance, no four year old should
have to decide when he or she is ready to go to bed, what he or she
should eat for breakfast, or wear to school. You see, children
are children -- *they do not have the maturity needed to make
decisions, and by forcing them to "have responsibility," is in
effect, abusing them.* I know of parents who are just oh so
sophisticated that they let their little children decide what to
eat, where to go on weekends, etc. etc. and almost always, these
are the children who throw temper tantrums and feel overburdened
and overworked. Yes, I know 4 year olds who are overburdened and
overworked, and they do not look like "abused" children, nor would
anyone say that there parents abuse them. BUT, they are abused
for they are too young to have so much responsibility.
Does the term adult child ring a bell? Well, this term refers
to children who grow up in alcoholic homes, but it can refer
to any child who grows up having to make decisions that are
too adult too *early* in their lives. And for small children,
practically everything is too adult.
Another biggie is that children are physically immature to
understand that what they see is not always reality. For instance, all
the brouhaha about violent cartoons is valid; a 4 year old
cannot separate what he/she sees on TV from real life -- to a
small child, TV is reality -- in other words, there is a merging
or they don't have the ability to set up boundaries yet; so you
can be sure that if a 4 year old watches a Freddie kill some one
on TV, this 4 year old can expect to see Freddie come to his house
and do the same to him. Their little brains are simply too immature
to know the difference.
Do a kid a favor and treat him like a kid.
Maia
|
212.5 | no dilemma here | TOOK::CURRIER | | Wed Jun 20 1990 13:41 | 28 |
| I have told my 6 year old daughter that she must have respect for other
people's feelings. That she should try to avoid hurting their
feelings.
That she should therefore think before she speaks.
In other words - we're big on compassion. This is fine with her - she
has no problem with it. She doesn't feel that she is being
duplicitous.
With rights come responsibility. She must accept the responsibility
for the effect that her words and actions have upon others.
She is learning that she is not the center of the universe and that she
does not exist in a vacuum.
I don't tell her what to think or what to say. But I tell her that she
MUST think.
The result - \
She is a compassionate person. She is a steadfast friend. She is an
advocate for those who are singled for ridicule. She has a mind of her
own. She dares to be different. She doesn't feel compelled to fit in
At times it hurts her when she is singled out because she is different
- but she doesn't consider following the crowd to be an acceptable
course of action. There are all her own choices.
|
212.6 | Little People | AUNTB::DILLON | | Wed Jun 20 1990 13:49 | 20 |
| re: .4
I have to agree. Children have the right to be children! How often
have you heard adults complain about "never having a childhood" or
"I was born an adult" because for whatever reason they assumed too
much responsibility too quickly and feel robbed of childhood
experiences.
As far as any age where children suddenly have the rights associated
with being adults, that depends entirely upon the child. As a
child is able to accept responsibility and deal with the results of
making their own choices, then that's the age for *that child*.
I'm certainly not an advocate of "children should be seen and not
heard" or parenting like a dictator. But *my* experience has been that
the children *I* know who have been given a free hand at making their
own decisions is that they become self centered, self indulgent, often
overbearing...and for *a child* who is not born with adult maturity,
maybe that's a normal response to having to, in essence, become an
adult before their time.
|
212.7 | on a particular phrase | ULTRA::ZURKO | Feel your way like the day before | Wed Jun 20 1990 14:09 | 7 |
| I'm pretty sure you're wrong about "Children as Little People" being a modern
concept, Maia. Several books I have read state in an authoritative manner that
separation of children from adults, and their activities from adult activities,
started around the same time chivalry did (maybe someone can add more?). Then
came separating children from each other, based on age, and dressing boy
children in 'feminine' clothing (like dresses), until they were 'men'.
Mez
|
212.8 | start 'em young... | SPARKL::KOTTLER | | Wed Jun 20 1990 14:23 | 10 |
|
Well I definitely think that the glorification of violence, the
association of sex with violence, and the objectification of women
can't be internalized too early. If this isn't accomplished by
toddlerhood at the latest, our economy is going to suffer.
While we're at it, why not engage the Little People in the actual
production of these images? Cheap labor, y'know.
Dorian
|
212.9 | I didn't say kids were *adults*! | TLE::D_CARROLL | The more you know the better it gets | Wed Jun 20 1990 14:29 | 40 |
| > people who rights are denied to them by the big people. First of
> all, children may be little people but that does not make them
> little adults. No child should have to bear the burden of having
> to make adult-like decisions.
Did you read what I said?!?! I said I did *not* think that children should
be treated as full adults. I said they should be treated as *people*.
This means treating them with respect! No where, not once, did I say we
should make four year olds responsible for their own life. But even a
four year old deserves respect! This mean listening to what s/he says,
evaluating it as you would the statement of an adult, taking it into
consideration and not writing it off merely because it comes from the mouth
of a child. It means when you make decisions for the child, you should
to the best of the child's ability to understand, explain your reasons.
And yes, it means that some decisions children should make for themselves.
> effect, abusing them.* I know of parents who are just oh so
> sophisticated that they let their little children decide what to
> eat, where to go on weekends, etc. etc. and almost always, these
> are the children who throw temper tantrums and feel overburdened
Letting a child *run* the family is very different than letting the child
have a part in family decisions. Temper tantrums are a result of spoiling
a child - but spoiling doesn't mean you are giving the child rights. Quite
the opposite, spoiling a child means hiding them from the reality that
you can't always get what you want (with apologies to the Stones.)
> Another biggie is that children are physically immature to
> understand that what they see is not always reality.
*Physically* too immature? Sources, please?
> Do a kid a favor and treat him like a kid.
The the kid a favor and treat her like a person. Grant to her all those
"unalienable rights" and "self-evident truths" that merely being human is
supposed to guarantee.
D!
|
212.10 | look again people! | DPDMAI::DAWSON | THAT MAKES SENSE.....NONSENSE! | Wed Jun 20 1990 15:11 | 22 |
| re: topic
*Thank you D, this is a subject that *NEEDS* to be hashed
out!
RE: .4 & .6
Let me tell you about a small part of my childhood and see
if you still feel as you do. The very first funeral I was *ALLOWED* to
attend was my own mothers when I was 16 years old. I didn't know how
to morn, I didn't even know how to act. Today I am still paying the
price for that "bit" of shielding from reality and I am 37 years old!
When are children allowed to take *some* responsibility for being an
adult. Parents will not be perfect or even close until we begin
teaching perenting in the schools, home and church. Childhood is a
time where you are able to "try" out being an adult without the
consequences when you fail. I always thought, that was the reason for
childhood....a preperation time and *NOT* a 17 or 18 year vacation!
Dave
|
212.11 | | DPDMAI::DAWSON | THAT MAKES SENSE.....NONSENSE! | Wed Jun 20 1990 15:24 | 12 |
|
One more thing before I let this topic go. If our children
are not allowed to see reality (in small doses) they won't be able
to cope with the reality of this world when they have to. This idea
that you should "allow children to be children", only fosters
immaturity and sets the child back in his or her development process.
RE:.0 D, you are very right...children have no rights in this
society.
Dave
|
212.12 | what specifically would (generic) you change? | ULTRA::THIGPEN | You can't dance and stay uptight | Wed Jun 20 1990 15:44 | 21 |
| it can be just as destructive to require children to accept
responsibility before they are able to shoulder it. A man I know, now
in his 60s, at 8 yrs old, was made to choose whether to live with his
mother and her new husband who did not like him, and with whom he no
doubt had some problems, or to live with and be raised by his
grandmother. He chose his grandmother. He has never stopped being
angry at his mother, rightly so IMO; no 8-yr-old child should be made
to take responsibility for such a choice. In his mind, the mother
chose her new husband over her child, and made the child bear the
burdon of responsibility for the choice.
So all this topic seems to be about is that people differ over what is
appropriate for children at different times. You may see the above
example as child abuse, or as piffle. Bottom line is, the working
assumption of our society seems to be that parents have the best
interest of their children at heart, and are best able to decide for
their children. (within some limits, of course, generally defined as
abuse, but these limits are admittedly fuzzy.) Parents are humanly
fallible, but are better at it for their own kids than the state is.
Are there specific proposals to change this?
|
212.13 | | DPDMAI::DAWSON | THAT MAKES SENSE.....NONSENSE! | Wed Jun 20 1990 15:53 | 9 |
| RE: .12
What would I change? Well for one give children a "bill of
rights". Let them know that they "count" in our society. As for your
example.....We see judges at divorce trials asking the same questions
of kids the same age. Allowing a child to decide is not IMO abuse. It
only makes them relize that reality is a part of growing up. If, I
were to divorce (not just a possibility but a probability) and my kids
were to choose another parent other than me I would try to understand
and not make them feel guilty in any way.
|
212.14 | | ROLL::FOSTER | | Wed Jun 20 1990 17:10 | 45 |
|
I am happy with the way I was raised. I was shielded from some things,
but not everything. I saw weddings and funerals. I saw my parents
split. I did not get "input" as to my parents splitting. I don't think
it would have been very appropriate. Our family went on a vacation when
I was 5. I didn't choose where to go or how or what to do. I went along
with the game plan. I think that's appropriate.
Mom wasn't big on letting us see gore, Dad felt swearing was
inappropriate. I swear my face off these days, but not in front of
Dad. I still don't like gore. The amount of people who die in this
world is a part of "reality", but not one that I can affect very
easily. I don't like being shown people's deaths. Not in life, not on
screen. I was shielded from that as a child, and I'm very happy about
it.
I had to eat my vegetables - they were good for me. Right now, that
sounds like a pretty good reason. It was in my best interest. Could I
understand that as a child? Probably not. But I have my health today in
part because of the nutrition "forced" on me as a child. I would have
eaten Fritos for breakfast lunch and dinner! I think Mom made better
choices than I would have.
TV was pretty much banned in our home. It meant that I couldn't follow
half the conversations in the schoolyard. But at this point in my life,
I still find reading more enjoyable than TV, and I can appreciate my
mother's feeling that the mind should be active and entertain itself,
not let itself be entertained. That wasn't how I felt then. Frankly, I
think my feelings on TV were not well informed, and don't count much in the
big picture.
I think that in general, the decisions that my parents made for me
were based on a lot more information and experience than I had, and I
don't think that much of it would have sunk in if they'd tried
explaining everything to me so that I could make a choice. And the time
it would have taken would have been a waste. The times that I did make
my own decisions, I often made those of a spoiled brat. Many of them I
truly regret.
Not everyone has a wonderful set of parents. But I think mine did one
heckuva job considering what they had to work with. The best thing they
did for me was treat me like a child. A smart one, but definitely a
child.
|
212.15 | Respect .NE. control | TLE::D_CARROLL | The more you know the better it gets | Wed Jun 20 1990 17:34 | 57 |
| I think most people here are badly misinterpretting what I said/what
I want to talk about here.
I *never* said that kids shouldn't have rules, that they should be treated
like adults, that they should go out and get jobs and pay rent, that they're
permission should be requested for every family decision or anything else
absurd.
I was pointing out that kids have no rights. Children shouldn't necessarily
have the same rights as adults but they should have *some* rights.
My parents had particular rules in the house - like when we could watch
tv, what we could and couldn't eat, etc. I have no problems with this.
I think this is important - an unstructured environment isn't healthy
either. That's not the point.
The point is that we, as a society, don't treat them as people. their
opinions carry no weight. (This doesn't mean you have to obey your
kid. If your kid has the opinion that spinich is horrible, s/he has
the right to that opinion; you, as a parent, have the right to make hir
eat it anway. But I think their opinion should be taken into account,
and when deciding whether to make hir each spinich, you should consider
whether s/he likes it.) They aren't protected by any of the laws that
supposedly apply to all people.
So where does childhood differ from slavery? Children are truly property
to their parents, whether their parents choose to raise them as such or
not. I am not trying to critisize the individual choices any of youhave
mde in how you raise your children. I am trying to point out their place
in society that I think is wrong.
I think respect for children doesn't mean obeying them, or letting them
run *your* life. It means listening to what they say with an open mind.
It means evaluating their decisions and opinions on their own merits,
rather than writing them off. It means being honest with them. Does this
preclude deciding that they *will* eat their vegetables? No.
I guess, think about it this way. you work for your boss, and you are
obligated to do what s/he says. However, you at least have the option of
leaving. There it differs from slavery/indenturement. If your boss
told you to do something but wouldn't answer questions about why you
had to do it, you'd be justifiable upset. But parents say that to kids
all the time. If you tried to give your boss some feedback, and she
said "What do you know, you are just an employee, keep your mouth shut"
you would also be justifiably upset. You could take it to personnel. But
forkids, there *is* no personnel to complain to, and they have to stick
to their jobs for 18 years with no vacations.
Finally, many of you are saying things like "3 year olds shouldn't have
decide the family budget." No, they shouldn't. Why choose extreme
examples. Replace 13 with 3! 13 year olds are a lot more responsible
and a lot more mature than 3 year olds, and yet they have no more rights.
Children evolve gradually toward full-personhood, and yet gain none of
the rights until one day they happen to be 18 years old, and them *boom* they
are handed all of them (almost.)
D!
|
212.16 | Pointer to another dicsussion and my reply | TCC::HEFFEL | Bushydo - The way of the shrub | Wed Jun 20 1990 17:56 | 39 |
| This issue was discussed in V2 of Parenting note 1202.
Hit KP7 or select to add this conference to your notebook.
My, my, I must be getting old. I swore I'd never say things like this,
but my first reaction to the basenote was "This person is NOT a parent! Let her
come back and talk to me after she's had a child."
After jerking my knee back into place... :-)
While I don't mean to say that you can't have a valid opinion in this
matter if you're not parent, I do think you'll feel at least a bit differently
when/if you become a parent. (I could possibly have written a note similar to
the base note before being a parent.)
While it is true, that the legal age of consent is arbitrary, my opinion
is that this is a least common denominator that functions for the protection of
the *child*. If the system works right, (ie. if the parents are doing a good
job) children get exposed to responsibilty and knowledge when it is appropriate
for them as individuals. At this point, I know my child better than anyone else
does. Nobody, not her daycare teachers, not my parents, not (generic)you,
knows better than I what she can handle. I'm fortunate in that (so far) Katie
seems to be bright and adaptable and I think that we'll be able to introduce her
to "things" and limited responsibility at an early age. But I've seen children
with good parents, whose siblings could handle exposure to "things" at an early
age, yet they can't. Being given responsiblity at early age stresses them out.
The way you deal with a child like that is gently. Just as you deal with a shy
child *not* by throwing her into the spotlight, but be encouraging her and
helping her development self-esteem.
Deciding when and how to expose a child to responsibilty and "adult"
issues is a continuing tough decision for parents. If you're a responsible
parent it can be terrifying. But I don't think there is anyone more qualified
than the parents. Certainly, the child is NOT qualified.
Tracey
|
212.17 | They're Little for so Short a Time | USCTR2::DONOVAN | cutsie phrase or words of wisdom | Thu Jun 21 1990 05:45 | 16 |
| Sure children have rights: the right to food, clothing, and shelter.
They have the right to an education from the age of 5. They have the
right to live without physical abuse, emotional abuse or neglect. Kids
do have rights. It's just too bad the government can't afford to pay
those people who fight for children's rights.
My mother was the oldest girl of 6. She had an alcoholic father and a
mother who worked herself to the bone. Mom had to make decisions. The
sad part is that she never remembers being a child. Now that's sad.
Some kids seem so mature. They act like they know everything and can
handle the world. Well, I remember a pretty insecure 14 year old girl
about 1,000 years ago. But I would put on a good front of
self-assurance.
Kate
|
212.18 | | FSHQA1::AWASKOM | | Thu Jun 21 1990 11:22 | 39 |
| I would also argue that the legal system *does* recognize that kids
mature over time, and hands over responsibility in a more graduated
fashion than we generally recognize. I've become more aware of
this in the last few weeks, as my almost 17-year-old has hit a couple
of these milestones.
Examples:
You get a driver's license (big responsibility) at 16.5, but can't
drive between 1:00 am and 4:00 am until 18.
Checking/savings accounts are free of fees until 19.
You can vote at 18.
You can legally buy alcohol at 21.
Generally, 12 is the age when a court will let a child decide which
parent to live with in a divorce, and the child's opinion carries
the majority of the weight.
There is some age, around late grade school, certainly by 12, when
a child can be left home alone and it is not considered abusive.
18 is a biggie - but consider that it also closely corresponds with
graduation from high school. Until recently, that was the end of
formal education for a majority of the citizens of the US. The
anticipation was that at that point, the individual was ready to
step out on their own and start their life's work.
I have always recognized that my son is a person in his own right.
I respect his opinions and make allowances for his immaturity when
it is appropriate. As he has grown, the structure of the decisions
he is allowed to make has changed and grown - always with the thought
in the back of *my* mind that the consequences must be things that
won't hurt him and that I can survive.
Alison
|
212.19 | visitation rights | CSC32::HADDOCK | All Irk and No Pay | Thu Jun 21 1990 12:55 | 11 |
| Another "right" that children have that I'd like to point out is
the right to visit and know their Non-custodial parent no matter
what the custodial parent may think of the nc parent. Whether
the child-support is paid up or not is also not an exucse to violate
the child's rights even further by preventing him from seeing his
nc parent.
Violation of visitation rights is a violation of the child's rights
as well as those of the nc parent.
fred();
|
212.20 | | ASHBY::FOSTER | | Thu Jun 21 1990 13:06 | 32 |
|
The way I tend to look at this, as a non-parent, the idea of giving
children too many more "rights" on paper is not doing children nearly
as much of a service as giving parents more assistance in raising them
would.
It seems that the problem that D! is pointing out has to do with
quality of parenting. Putting children's rights on paper just makes
parenting more complicated. Making sure that you're taking "the rules"
into account when raising children. On the other hand, if we as a
nation made an effort to help the people who have chosen to raise
children, perhaps with better social services, more preparation for
parenting in the school systems, etc, I think we would come closer to
achieving the overall goal of dealing with children with respect.
The best way, in my view, to respect a child, is to be the best parent
you can. Some weird mixture of love, understanding and discipline.
I don't know the ratios.
To shield or not to shield is not something I think an outsider should
really tamper with. I think the bottom line is more: what kind of
relationship do you want with your child. If you know yourself, and you
know that you can't discuss certain things or explain them, then you
have to go from there. And its going to affect the child, but it may
also help you keep your sanity.
Many people had parents who couldn't discuss sex or death, etc. And
sometimes, it caused some estrangement, the child learned not to bring
up these things. But these people as adults aren't automatically
crippled, and as children, I don't think that they were any less loved.
I'm rambling again...
|
212.22 | yea but | CSC32::HADDOCK | All Irk and No Pay | Thu Jun 21 1990 13:38 | 10 |
| reply 212.21
Yes there are legitimate times when the child really does not
want to visit his/her non-custodial parent.
Unfortunately the decision to visit or not to visit is STRONGLY
influenced by the custodial parent. Can you say RETALIATION.
Can you say BRAINWASH.
fred();
|
212.24 | | TCC::HEFFEL | Bushydo - The way of the shrub | Thu Jun 21 1990 14:20 | 13 |
| RE:20 ASHBY::FOSTER
Thank you. Very close to what I was trying to say but ran short of
time and eloquence.
The way I feel about "legislating" more rights for children that parents
have to deal with whether or not the child is ready, is similar to way I feel
about the government getting involved in reproductive decisions. Yes, it's a
tough decision and people make mistakes, but ultimately, no one is in a better
position than myself to decide.
Tracey
|
212.25 | *** co-moderator flag *** | LYRIC::BOBBITT | the universe wraps in upon itself | Thu Jun 21 1990 14:28 | 9 |
| I am aware that the right to see or not see custodial and noncustodial
parents is pertinent to this discussion, but if people feel very
strongly about it it may also deserve a topic of its own, where it can
be explored more fully.
Just a suggestion....
-Jody
|
212.26 | Reality vs WishLand | SUPER::REGNELL | Smile!--Payback is a MOTHER! | Tue Jun 26 1990 15:08 | 51 |
|
You know, I think there is a difference between what I, as a parent,
might *wish* for my child and what I, as a parent, must provide for my
child.
I might *wish* that childhood could be a time of fantasy and roses
where young people can develop in their own times and their own ways
and can be gradually introduced to the hard facts of reality.
I might *wish* that.
However, unless I keep him locked in his room sans TV, sans friends,
sans all contact with the outside world...I *must* provide him with the
amunition to make decisions about the input he is going to recieve.
And I *must* strive to let him be as much a child at the same time that
is possible.
Eric is a precocious little bugger...he makes some startlingly sangine
decisions about the input he recieves, but we do have our odd moments.
And, I must admit, that *sometimes* I see him as a child but there are
other times that he is, in fact, merely a small person.
We could debate the issue of what 'should be' until the cows come home.
But what *is* is a mutlifaceted world that abounds in audivisual input
that debunks that theory for any 3 year old with his eyes open. Geven
the *reality*, I think parents need to provide the protection that
understanding can impart.
Just a very short story.
I have a wonderful friend who has two little daughters who she has
protected from nasty things [her definition...but then, we all have to
use our own...] I loaned her some video tapes. She returned them
because they were too violent for her children...they cried and were
afraid because it was so real. [We are talking 'Amercan Tale' here..
for the unintiated a cartoon about mice...with the prerequisite cats,
of course...in which nobody gets hurt...]
Eric, upon being mistakenly treated to Alien at a friend's house
reported that the monster was scary but it was obviously 'blue-screen'
here and here....
Sure, if I had been there...Eric would not have allowed to see Aliens.
But I wasn't...and he did. But he knew it was make-believe...and knew
it was a mechanical monster. Those are his weapons.
I have carried on long enough here...just my view as a struggling
parent.
Melinda
|
212.27 | They should have adopted a 30-yr old... | COGITO::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Fri Jun 29 1990 11:31 | 17 |
|
D! Can you say more about what you think children aren't getting
that you think they should be getting? I've been away at school this
week, so I just read all 26 replies to this note in a row, and it
struck me that some folks jumped to all sorts of conclusions about
what you meant about rights and respect for children.
I know that in my own childhood, I had lots of responsibility and
was very independent, but I didn't really feel respected. I didn't
feel that my pain and issues and problems were taken very seriously
because I was a child, so my job was to act like a little adult
so I would be taken seriously. I wish it had been possible for me
to feel respected and still be a child. I spent a lot of energy
hiding who I really was from my own family.
Justine
|
212.28 | babbling on the meaning of 'personhood' | TLE::D_CARROLL | The more you know the better it gets | Fri Jun 29 1990 12:13 | 74 |
| > D! Can you say more about what you think children aren't getting
> that you think they should be getting?
Well, for starters, respect. To be treated like people.
There is a lot of talk in this conference about how people should
be treated, what "rights" (in a moral, not legal, sense) people have,
etc. I can't *count* the number of times people have said things
like "Well, we disagree, but I have a right to my opinion and your have
a right to your opinion, and niether of us should devalue other people's
opinions." But it seems children are often excluded from the definition
of "people" in the above.
A couple of people in here have told me I basically have no right to
defend children in here because I'm not a parent, I don't know what I
am talking about. I say I know *more* what I am talking about, because
I am closer to *being* a child than just about anyone else in here.
At the grand age of 22, I can remember my childhood, especially my
teenage years, a lot more vividly than you folks with teenagers who
are telling me that you *know* what it is like to be a teenager.
I figure if I am going to defend children's rights, it has to be *now*.
As time goes by, I think people loose perspective on their own childhoods.
It becomes idealized ("Oh, for the joyful carefreeness of childhood!")
or horrilized ("I had a dysfunctional childhood and never had one minute
of happiness and my parents were monsters.") But I am fresh out of
teenagehood and I remember what being a teenager is like and I identify
strongly with teenagers.
Specifics are hard to give. Despite what people have said, I do not
advocate giving full legal adulthood status at birth. "Respect" is
a very vague term, the kind of "I'll know it when I see it" type of
thing. I could give examples from my own childhood but that would
come across as if I have some sort of crusade against my own parents
or authorities in my past, which I don't. (Looking back I am amazed
at the level of respect for my personhood my parents gave me while
I was growing up.)
>I didn't
> feel that my pain and issues and problems were taken very seriously
> because I was a child, so my job was to act like a little adult
> so I would be taken seriously. I wish it had been possible for me
> to feel respected and still be a child.
*Bingo*.
I guess what I really want is to remind people, *especially* parents,
that kids are people too. There is more kid deserve than to be fed and
not to be beaten up. (Though they, like the rest of us, deserve that too!)
Teachers, parents, adults who interact with kids, remember while you are
doing it that you have a *captive* audience. That childhood is legally
slavery. That you are in a positin of utter control merely by being
older. Kids have to live with it every day, being at the bottom of the
heap.
On a more legal aspect, something has to be done about this ridiculous
idea of "the age of consent". It's bogus. I'm not sure what the practical
solution is. Ideally, I think there should be some sort of test, that
*everyone* must pass to be given the rights/responsibility of certain
aspects of adulthood, just like a driver's test. But that leads for too
much room for abuse, where certain segments of the population (like women,
if this had been implemented earlier in the century) would never be granted
adult status. So that isn't practical. But the "solution" in effect now
is *not* right. (We give people the power to shape the country [vote]
but not to drink!!)
I know a lot of 16 year olds who are more capable of making decisions
than a lot of 24 year olds I meet.
[BTW, when I say "age of consent" I really mean more than ability to have
sex. I mean ability to sign a contract, to own property, etc.]
D!
|
212.29 | | SELECT::GALLUP | rock me down like a slot machine | Fri Jun 29 1990 13:55 | 29 |
|
Children are going to be adults someday.
Either we can prepare our children for what they will encounter
as an adult....or we can protect them from it.
Were I to ever have a child, that child would face all the things
I face as an adult, and we will work together to understand those
things. My child, should I ever decide to have one, will learn
to make her/his own decisions and will live with these decisions,
because that is what they will do as adults. I will not
hide anything from my child.......nor will I deny them the chance
to explore and to grow.
I will offer my child guidance, based on my values and will present
the values of others for voluntary consumption by my child. I will
not feel I've failed if my child decides not to accept my values
but rather applaud them for being their own person.
I will be a mentor to my child, I will guide my child and help
my child whenever possible. I will not "protect" my child from
being an adult.
kath
|
212.30 | Teach not Legislate | HYSTER::DELISLE | | Fri Jun 29 1990 14:00 | 22 |
| I mean this with no disrespect, but perhaps at the "tender" age of 22
you identify more with teenagers than with adults. As a 38 year old
adult with four children I know what it feels like to be responsible
for four very young, quite immature lives. And I can say it is a
feeling of incredible responsibility. Us parents I think quite
reasonable jump to the conclusion that you cannot know the
responsibilities associated with parenthood until you become one.
It is not like babysitting, being a daycare worker, an older brother or
sister, an infatuated aunt or just loving children. Being a parent
means YOU are the one in charge of providing for the health and
happiness of that child, and you do it in the ways you best see fit...
often based on your own upbringing, plus hopefully some things you've
learned along the road to adulthood.
Respecting children is wonderful. Respecting people is wonderful but
something you certainly cannot legislate. I too have known many quite
responsible teenagers/young adults. Also many irresponsible ones. But
somewhere our society must draw the line and say legally at this age
you are to be considered a minor/adult.
|
212.31 | ex | COOKIE::CHEN | Madeline S. Chen, D&SG Marketing | Fri Jun 29 1990 14:45 | 51 |
| Perhaps the reason for not having additional legally defined rights for
children is that those definitions are EXTREMELY difficult to
objectively define. I'd like to make a few miscellaneous statements
that might make you laugh, might offend you, or just might make my
point.
Whoever said we should not shelter children from "realistic" violence
on, say TV, probably never had to sleep with 2 kids and a dog in their
bed after a horror show on a dark and stormy night. Censoring is not
one of those things that I as a parent take lightly. But I do know
what disturbs my children unnecessarily, and I try to take into account
what they should and should not see or experience. (I don't do a lot of
this now - my children are 15 and 17. but I STILL don't let them see
"R" movies, etc... unless I know what they are getting into. I TRY
not to put restrictions on their music - ugh!) I do NOT feel that TV
or movies or music changes their values.
My children are not "little people" - they are both much larger than
either my husband or myself. They still do not have all the rights of
an adult, or even all the rights of their sibling. Age has little to
do with it - demonstrated capabilities has a lot to do with privileges.
The legal system cannot define objectively at what age everything can
be handed over to a child, but as previous replies indicate, the courts
and lawmakers tend to make some good guesses.
We all know adults who behave like children, and children who behave as
adults. And one of the best rights children have (I believe) is to
allow them to stay with their family/parents. We all make mistakes
with our children (if you say you have not, then I respectfully reserve
the right to say I don't believe you have children - or they are just
too young to have demonstrated the results of your mistakes yet), but I
don't think a series of additional rights definitions would change that
much.
I, too, am happy with the way my parents raised me - but they didn't do
much of a job on my sister & brothers (that's a joke).
And just one more comment - I am not at all sure that a 13 year old is
more mature and capable of making rational decisions than a 3 year old.
Somewhere around puberty, rational decision making is replaced with
very passionate feelings of what's "fair". If you haven't experienced
this yet, you really don't understand what I am talking about.
So - if the ages of consent, right to choose parent, drivers licenses,
voting, etc... are not valid ways to define the rights of children,
how would you advocates of Childrens' rights define them? And how
would you enforce them?
-m
|
212.32 | Of *course* i don't identify with parents! | TLE::D_CARROLL | The more you know the better it gets | Fri Jun 29 1990 15:18 | 35 |
| > I mean this with no disrespect, but perhaps at the "tender" age of 22
> you identify more with teenagers than with adults.
Uh, you seem to have missed my point. My whole point *was* that at 22
I identify more with teenagers than parents. (I am translating your
"adults" to "parent adults" because I think that is what you meant. I
sincerely *hope* that is what you meant, because I *am* an adult...I
don't have to "identify" with them, I belong to and think like that group.)
That's my point. *You* know what it is like to have kids. *I* know what
it is like (more than you do) to *be* a kid. I'm at the in between stage
where I am (to a limited extent) able to be taken seriously by adults
and also (to a limited extent) to identify with children.
The things I am saying I am not saying from the perspective of parenthood.
I am not saying "I know how to be a parent better than you parents." I'm
saying "I know how to be a kid better than you parents, and this is what
I think kids need."
Yeah, only a parent can know the responsibility of being a parent. I
don't claim to know. Only a parent can know what it is like the first
time they let their adolescent daughter go out on a date. I don't know
what it feels like. But I know what it feels like to *be* that
adolscent daughter on her first date. (At least, more than a mother
of 35, who is many more years past her adolescence than I am.)
>But
> somewhere our society must draw the line and say legally at this age
> you are to be considered a minor/adult.
Why? (ie; not why can't kids take on the responsibility of being an
adult, by why should there be an arbitrary age determined by the state
as being that age?)
D!
|
212.33 | I'm biting... | ASHBY::FOSTER | | Fri Jun 29 1990 17:02 | 11 |
| Maybe I missed them D!. What are your suggestions for how to implement
the idea of "greater respect for minors" across the board. Is it
"yearly responsibility tests" for the right to vote or drink or drive?
Is it a test for whether you are mature enough to make decisions about
who to stay with if the parents divorce?
Or, is it something closer to home? Are there specific things that you
want parents to do with/for their children that you feel could be mandated
by a bill of rights? And what are you proposing if the parents don't
live up to their responsibilities?
|
212.34 | We the children... | TLE::D_CARROLL | The more you know the better it gets | Fri Jun 29 1990 17:12 | 35 |
| >What are your suggestions for how to implement
> the idea of "greater respect for minors" across the board.
I don't have them. i said in my last response I didn't have them. I want
to do things like get rid of arbitrary "age of consent" and "age of
majority". I said that I didn't think the "responsibility" tests was
a workable alternative, though I like the sound of it. What *is* a
workable alternative? I dunno...this topic seems like a good place for
ideas...
> Or, is it something closer to home? Are there specific things that you
> want parents to do with/for their children that you feel could be mandated
> by a bill of rights? And what are you proposing if the parents don't
> live up to their responsibilities?
I wasn't proposing legislative changes, as I said a few times. I didn't
suggest punishing parents for not doing what I think is right, either.
(In fact, I have argued against just such an idea in other topics in the
past.)
Yes, the ideas I have for change are closer to home. And how can I get
more specific than "treat children like people?" I can't be specific
because everybody treats people differently. What I said was more a
"something to think about" - ie: next time you say in =wn= - "...we
deserve this just because we are people" ask yourself if you apply the
same principle to the children in your life.
A child Bill of Rights is an interesting idea. I didn't suggest it, but
I could be convinced that it is a good thing. Ideas for what to put on
it?
[Our founding fathers who worked up the Bill of Rights in our constitution
did not do it overnight, nor alone.]
D!
|
212.35 | Respect me | FSHQA2::DHURLEY | | Fri Jun 29 1990 17:51 | 15 |
| I have a 20 year old son. I have always taught him to respect other
people and to respect older people. Teachers, parents, grandparents,
whoever. I have also taught him to expect the same type of respect and
treatment from those folks. Just because he is a child, teenager
whatever it never means not to respect my son's values, feelings,
ideas. Respecting how one feels tends to open up communication between
people. I'm not sure if this is what D means in her feelings about
respect but if it is I tend to agree with her.
My feelings about age of consent. Unfortunately it is hard to decide
who is ready for what and clearly the arbitrary "age of consent" does
make it easier but I think it should depend on the individual and the
maturity level.
denise
|
212.36 | children/adults? | COOKIE::CHEN | Madeline S. Chen, D&SG Marketing | Fri Jun 29 1990 20:35 | 30 |
| "Age of consent" may appear arbitrary, but I know of no other way to
protect the right of a minor to be free from undue influence (how many
of you believe that the age of consent is irrelavent in the case of
statutory rape, for instance?). This concept was not invented to keep
minors from accepting responsibility, it was developed to assist in
protecting them from "adults" who would take freedoms away from them.
This "arbitrary" law keeps them safe. It is no more arbitrary than the
length of the term of office for a senator, and it has more foundation
in real needs.
And as to a 22 year old who insists that he/she knows more about being
a teenager than I (who am over 40, anyway) - I am not sure I believe you.
Not only have I also been a teenager, I have two of my own, and have
observed and assisted in raising others - troubled and otherwise. And
my experiences as a teenager (I do remember being a teenager) are
tempered with a knowledge of consequences of my actions. My kids
aren't perfect, but that's the point - when they make mistakes, they
need help, not additional "rights" and "privileges" that put more pressure
on their lives. One note in this conference talks in an extremely
sensitive manor about assisting a woman who is suicidal, with lots of
responsibilties/pressures, etc... I believe we should be equally
sensitive to our children - don't put MORE pressure on them. They have
enough. I Just don't believe that giving children more responsibility
disguised as rights will help society or children within society. The
pressure is on them NOW - and removing the laws that protect the
children's right to be children serves little purpose.
-m
|
212.37 | Here's a start... | NUTMEG::GODIN | Summertime an' the livin' is easy | Mon Jul 02 1990 10:15 | 36 |
| As a professional fence-sitter, I can agree with points being made on
both sides of this issue. Perhaps it is because of my "middle"
position that I have to wonder if the two opposing sides aren't missing
some of the good being proposed by the other side. For example, I
agree with D! that children deserve a bill of rights of their own. I
suspect, however, that my bill of rights wouldn't be quite as liberal
as hers. At the same time it might be more acceptable to Madeline than
she would expect, since it wouldn't add undue responsibilities to our
children, but rather responsibilities to their parents and to society.
Just as an example, and to start some discussion around the rights our
children should have, let me propose the following:
1. Each child has a right to a loving and supportive home.
2. Each child has a right to sufficient food and medical attention to
ensure his/her healthy growth and development.
3. Each child has a right to a quality education that will prepare
her/him to assume the duties of being an adult in her/his society.
4. Each child has a right to ethical training that will teach the
difference between right and wrong and the reasoning behind these
distinctions so that, when faced with a moral dilemma, he/she will
be able to make an appropriate choice.
5. Each child has a right to loving discipline while young so that
there will be a solid foundation for self-discipline when older.
6. Each child has a right to a positive regard for self, so that when
mature she/he will have the confidence and the courage to be
self-sufficient.
I'm sure there could/should be additional rights added to this list.
Those with a strong religious leaning would probably want to add
something about spiritual training and growth, for example. I offer
these as a beginning point.
Have at 'em.
Karen
|
212.38 | I'm confused by the tangent | JAMMER::JACK | Marty Jack | Mon Jul 02 1990 11:43 | 3 |
| I may be missing something here but I think D!'s points are that
children's opinions should be given more weight, not that they should
be given more rights or responsibilities.
|
212.39 | the one that punches my buttons | ULTRA::ZURKO | I walk down another street. | Mon Jul 02 1990 12:10 | 5 |
| Actually, what I thought of when this topic began was the invasions of privacy
allowed in schools. It's one thing to have your parents look in your drawers
(heck, anyone I live with has access to my belongings); it's another to allow
searches in a public building the kids are forced to attend anyway.
Mez
|
212.40 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | treasures....most of them dreams | Mon Jul 02 1990 13:02 | 9 |
| Marty
I think that is exactly what she is saying..not to 'pooh, pooh' or
dismiss thoughts and ideas just because they are from a child, not
to be rude to children in a fashion you wouldn't be to adults..
ect.
Bonnie
|
212.41 | good example | TLE::D_CARROLL | Assume nothing | Mon Jul 02 1990 13:02 | 22 |
| >It's one thing to have your parents look in your drawers
>(heck, anyone I live with has access to my belongings); it's another to allow
>searches in a public building the kids are forced to attend anyway.
They search kids lockers at school? Oh ick, ug.
Well, I guess I can't argue too hard, because the lockers are the posession
of the schools. DEC cuts locks off lockers and empties them in the Wellness
Center if you leave locks on overnight - they can, because they own the
lockers. But you have a point, we aren't *forced* to go to the Wellness
Center, whereas kids are forced to go to school.
But you brought up an *excellent* example of exactly what I am trying to
say. Parents looking through kids drawers. I think it sucks. I thinks
it is a violation of their privacy, and one of those "rights" i keep
insisting kids have is privacy. I am not talking about the parent who
is still folding and putting away clothes for a 7 year old, but the parent
who searches hir 13 year old's drawer for "illicit material". That is
*exactly* the sort of thing I mean when I talk about adult disrespect for
the personhood of their children.
D!
|
212.43 | So what? | TLE::D_CARROLL | Assume nothing | Mon Jul 02 1990 14:40 | 19 |
| > What if you are pretty sure that despite your daughter's denials, she is
> taking drugs. You feel pretty certain that you will find her stash in a
> couple of minutes of looking through her things.
Yeah, what then? I still don't see the point. What can you do if your kid
is on drugs? Do those things (I don't know what they are.) It seems to
me that, just as with an adult, if the kid doesn't *want* to get help for
hir drug problem, forcing hir won't help the situation.
If you think s/he is on drugs, ask hir. If s/he says no, and you *prove* s/he
is lying, what good will that proof be? A drug program will be no more or
less effective for your having painted hir into a corner with hir lie.
Anyway, I realize that there are balances and extremes involved. But s/he
hs the right to privacy, as does an adult. There are some things so extreme
they might cause you to violate an adult's right to privacy. If you judge
the situation to be such, then go ahead and do what you think is necessary.
D!
|
212.44 | | CADSE::MACKIN | It has our data and won't give it back! | Mon Jul 02 1990 14:57 | 8 |
| Ah, but that's where I think you're taking too strong a stance, D!.
Forcing a kid to confront a problem and get "help" can/does work. Ok,
maybe not always but enough of the time that I'd consider this the
approach of choice.
Its one thing to treat kid's opinions etc. as adults and give them some
feeling of control over their own destiny, but I don't think that
should translate into a "do whatever you want" strategy.
|
212.45 | extreme situation requires extreme response | COGITO::SULLIVAN | Singing for our lives | Mon Jul 02 1990 15:32 | 39 |
|
I don't think D! is saying "do whatever you want" In the last
paragraph of her .43 (emphasis mine) she says:
>> Anyway, I realize that there are balances and extremes involved.
>> But s/he has the right to privacy, as does an adult. There are
>> *some things so extreme* they might cause you to violate an adult's
>> right to privacy. If you judge the situation to be such, then go
>> ahead and do what you think is necessary.
I think D! acknowledges that there may be situations where
confrontation is necessary -- just as it is with some adults.
I'm uncomfortable with the idea of anyone saying, "I'm x years old,
so I know better" (that always made me mad when I was a kid). But
I suspect that at 22 D! may be in closer touch with some of the
pain of adolescence (than some of the rest of us are) -- pain which,
thank goddess, does seem to fade with time.
I don't think D! is suggesting that we should stand by and do nothing
while our children become drug-addicted criminals, but doesn't it
make you cringe to see how some parents treat their kids? I don't
mean just the ones who scream at or "spank" their kids in public
but the ones who don't seem to *see* their kids, who don't listen
to them or consider their needs, wants, likes.
D!, I suspect that I might be more conservative than you with regard to the
issue of consent for sex. I think young people (young men and women)
are apt to be exploited by adults -- especially because children
are treated with so little respect. I think if children felt respected
and loved and valued, they could make wiser choices about whom to
trust. An older person could really take advantage of a young person by
just appearing interested in their ideas. You might think that's a fair
exchange, that it is a mutual relationship -- but I have a problem with
say a 14 year old having sex with an adult (18, 19, 20) no matter how
poised and mature s/he might seem.
Justine
|
212.46 | arg, arg, arg, argc, argv[]! | TLE::D_CARROLL | Assume nothing | Mon Jul 02 1990 15:37 | 41 |
| > Forcing a kid to confront a problem and get "help" can/does work. Ok,
> maybe not always but enough of the time that I'd consider this the
> approach of choice.
But I still say, why do you need the "proof"? If you know your kid is doing
drugs, you can confront them without their stash in your hand. The only
thing "evidence" is need for is if you are going to prosecute them in a court
of law, which you aren't. My point wasn't that you shouldn't do anything if
the kid has a drug problem, bt that I don't think in most cases it
is necessary to violate their privacy, or any other right. In the Doctah;s
hypothetical situation, I still don't see the necessity of going through
hir things.
Besides, the existence of grey areas and fine lines between rights and
protection doesn't invalidate my stance. I say, kids have rights like
adults do. But areas of contraversy about the rights of adults have always
existed! Whether it is drugs, right to die, what consenting adults do
behind closed doors, capitol punishment, "commiting" so-called insane
adults, etc, etc. There have *always* been conflicts between an individual's
rights, and the rights of society and the responsibility of protecting
individual. That doesn't mean those rights aren't real.
> feeling of control over their own destiny, but I don't think that
> should translate into a "do whatever you want" strategy.
AAAAAAAAARRRRRRRRRRRGGGGGGGGGGGGGG!
Sorry, Jim, don't mean to jump on your in particular, but I am TIRED OF
THIS.
No where, NO WHERE!!!! in this whole discussion have I said, insinuated,
hinted or implied that children should have the right to "do whatever
they want", that parents should never make decisions for or about their
children, that children should be given the full legal status of adults,
that children should take on the burden of raising themselves, or anything
else. And you are about the fifth person to imply that I *have* said it,
and I have denied it as many times!!!!!!
Arg!
D!
|
212.47 | | CADSE::MACKIN | It has our data and won't give it back! | Mon Jul 02 1990 15:59 | 9 |
| Sorry, I must have read it into your response.
I'm not so old to not remember my teen-age years either; suppose the
parent did talk with the kid because of a suspected drug problem and
the kid denied that s/he did drugs. Then what? At least with Mark L's
approach the parent does have proof supporting the suspicion and
therefore something does have to be done, regardless of the denials.
Without the proof, do you assume that the kid is guilty because they
"seem like someone who's doing drugs?"
|
212.48 | well, actually.. | COBWEB::SWALKER | lean, green, and at the screen | Mon Jul 02 1990 16:10 | 23 |
|
> In the Doctah;s
> hypothetical situation, I still don't see the necessity of going through
> hir things.
Actually, in this particular hypothetical situation, I think it would
be necessary, at least some of the time. The key is that you are
"pretty certain" your kid is doing drugs. You are *not* positive.
Depending on why you are pretty certain (their friends? lifestyle?
odors coming from their room?), it might be a better idea to check
first before you alienate them by steering them into a drug treatment
program they don't need, because of something they've already told
you they don't do.
This is known as "trust but verify" (dover'at' no prover'at'), and is
frequently used by adults, in arenas varying from people hiring private
detectives to check out prospective spouses to superpower foreign policy.
The idea is not necessarily to confront the other party with the
"evidence", but to make your own decisions based on the best evidence
available.
Sharon
|
212.49 | If they're in your house, they can get *you*! | BLUMON::GUGEL | Adrenaline: my drug of choice | Mon Jul 02 1990 16:41 | 20 |
|
re .46, D!:
>In the Doctah;s
>hypothetical situation, I still don't see the necessity of going through
>hir things.
Well, I do see the necessity.
You should know that anyone who lives in a household where there are
illicit drugs are can be held accountable!
For years my husband had to go out of his way to find roommates who
didn't do illegal drugs and he had to insist on not having any of it
in the house. Why? Not because he's a pious fanatic. But because if
found in the house, the police would legally be able to confiscate all
of Steve's firearms, even though the drugs were *not* his and he hadn't
used any!!
|
212.50 | That's a different issue | TLE::D_CARROLL | Assume nothing | Mon Jul 02 1990 16:47 | 14 |
| > You should know that anyone who lives in a household where there are
> illicit drugs are can be held accountable!
Ah yes, I can see the logic of that!
However, it makes no difference if 1) the persons being searched are
children, or 2) whether you happen to be their parents. If you feel
at risk for being charged with drug posession, and you feel that this
justifies a violation of another's privacy, then that applies equally
to children and to adults, right?
That isn't really the situation under discussion.
D!
|
212.51 | Maybe I'm taking this too personal... | ASHBY::FOSTER | | Mon Jul 02 1990 17:08 | 67 |
| I think the problem that I'm having is that since I was respected as a
child, I don't want anything more for myself than what I had. My fear
is that someone would misinterpret the things my parents did out of
love and take away their right to "pull rank". I think that right was
and is important.
I don't know what its like to be a kid on drugs, guarding my privacy,
hoping my parents won't go through my things. I can't relate. I grew up
in a home where we all shared clothes. Rifling through underwear
drawers was pretty standard if one of us forgot to do laundry. We
shared money, and snatched food from each other's plates with the
age-old "did you see that bird in the window!" line. Maybe that's "lack
of respect". What can I say. When I think of kids going through
closets when their parents aren't home, searching for Christmas toys
or dad's stack of Playboys, or parents' sex paraphenalia, I don't get
hysterical. Its just something kids do. And in return, when I hear
about parents going through their kids drawers looking for clues about
drawers, it doesn't get me hysterical either. In fact, to me its an act
of love. If the parents didn't care, they wouldn't do it.
The way the law is written, the parent is responsible for EVERY act a
child commits, and can be held accountable by law. If your child
steals, commits vandalism, etc., its YOUR butt that gets hauled into
court along with the child. YOU are going to have to pay the damages.
I don't see anyone asking for children to be more respectful of their
parent's stress-level, do I??? No one's coming up with a bill of rights
for parents:
1.) No child shall do anything which would cause un-due worry or
trigger concerns about child-kidnapping, rape or molestation: COME HOME
ON TIME!
2.) No child shall do anything that would lead to necessary court
appearances on the part of the parent: DON'T BREAK THE LAW.
3.) No child shall do purposely do anything which which tests the
body's tolerance of chemical substances, possibly leading to
hospitalization: DON'T DRINK AND NO DRUGS.
4.) No child shall conduct behavior which could lead to pregnancy, for
which they cannot be fiscally responsible: NO UNPROTECTED SEX.
Lists can cut both ways. For all the rotten parents we can think of,
kids can also do some EXTREMELY UNNECESSARY things which cause the
pre-mature greying of their parents. And I don't think giving children
a "bill of rights" is going to curb their rebellion, even when it
crosses the lines of the law.
Last of all.... this stuff about school being "slavery". D!, children
of other nations would kill for the educational system we have, perfect
though it ain't. History tells us that a ton of adults fought for that
system because they wished they had had it as kids. In the long run,
American citizens are better off with a high school diploma than
without one. And you CAN graduate early if you want to.
Looking at school as "slavery" seems like an extremely short-sighted
attitude. At best its indentured servitude, and even that ignores the
fact that the school gets NOTHING out of it. Its the student who gets
as much or little as s/he puts in. Maybe we need to take a poll of
Americans who didn't finish high school, at least 10 years later,
and ask how many wish they had. I have a feeling that most regret it.
But I'll admit I'm wrong if you've got the stats.
Sometimes we "force" people, not just children, to take or do something that
they don't like. In the case of education, this seems to be in the best
interests of the majority.
If
|
212.52 | well.... | WMOIS::B_REINKE | treasures....most of them dreams | Mon Jul 02 1990 17:14 | 34 |
| D!
Kids doing drugs would in 9 cases out of 10 lie about it to their
folks..
and if the folks wrongly accused a kid of doing drugs when they
weren't that would also damage the parent child trust..
my 12 year old daughter lit several books of matches a few nights
ago after the mother of a friend made up some lies about her and
ended up with our brining her home.
with the evidence of the fresh books of matches, still sooty,
a brand I'd just bought, she told us they'd been under her bed
and she did it a long time ago..
my answer was three fold
1. I understood that she was very very angry at the way she'd been
treated
2. what she did however statisfying was dangerous, and concerned me
(in fact I suggested that if she *had* to do that again to do it
in a metal bowl)
3. that I was concerned enough to strongly suggest we find someone
other than her father and I for her to talk to..
she still denys the matches and doesn't want to talk to anyone.
so I'm biding my time right now
(there have been other things than the matches, btw, but I'm not
going into that here)
Bonnie
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212.53 | Bill of Rights: Children & Parents | RIPPLE::MORRISSEY_TH | Canyon_Rat | Mon Jul 09 1990 21:41 | 31 |
| [copied without permission from "What Every Kid Should Know"
by Jonah Kalb and David Viscott, M.D.]
A Bill of Rights for Kids
But remember rights carry responsibilities...
you have a right to pick your own friends
you have a right to an explanation
you have a right to privacy
you have a right to property
you have a right to your own opinion
you have a right to be taken seriously
you have a right to your own thoughts
you have a right to feel the way you do
you have a right to spend time with you parents
you have a right to money of your own
you have a right to your own tastes
Parents Have Rights Too
Parents have the right to be treated as people
Parents have the right to set limits
Parents have the right to enforce their rules
Parents have the right to make suggestions
"Dealing with parents is not really that much different from dealing
with other people. Remember respectm courtesy, and mutual rights."
Parents have the right
|
212.54 | Yes | TLE::D_CARROLL | Assume nothing | Tue Jul 10 1990 10:07 | 3 |
| Beautiful. Thanks.
D!
|
212.55 | | ULTRA::THIGPEN | You can't dance and stay uptight | Tue Jul 10 1990 11:33 | 1 |
| .53: yes!
|
212.57 | Esteem your kids | CUPCSG::RUSSELL | | Tue Jul 10 1990 12:13 | 14 |
|
RE: .56
> you have a right to be considered the most important person in the
> world by someone
Not only important but valued and held in esteem.
It seems that most of the Bill of Rights for kids are simple outgrowths
of respect and liking. Not loving, although that too, but the feelings
of connectedness, approval, and admiration that makes us enjoy the
company of another.
Margaret
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