Posted on 09/23/2014 6:28:54 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
The image of Adrian Petersons sons legs has ignited a welcome cultural conversation. This is unusual. Most of these contrived conversations are efforts to take one headline and shoehorn it into a narrative that liberals want to advance, usually about race and racism. Those conversations are never truthful.
But the discussion of a four-year-old boys wounds has elicited some brutally honest commentary.
Writing on CNN.com, Steven Holmes blasted what he regards as excessive tolerance for spanking and child abuse in the black community. He dispatches the I was whipped and I turned out all right excuse. Holmes cites the abundant research showing that spanking inhibits the learning process . . . It leads to anger, depression, violence and alcohol and drug abuse. It breeds hostility toward authority . . . and spawns other antisocial behaviors. Physical punishment, he continues is associated with legions of sullen, angry, violence-prone boys . . .
Peterson advanced the mean streets argument. I could have been one of those kids that was lost in the streets without the discipline instilled in me by my parents . . . Holmes replies: This may have been true for Peterson. But what also could be true is that the streets may not have been so mean if they were not populated by so many kids who are angry at the world because, among other things, they were spanked.
Physical punishment is almost as common among whites. Some conservatives defend spanking because they see critics as liberals who seek to undermine authority across the board. Doubtless, some are and some liberal parenting approaches are enough to make you want to take a switch to the adult! (Dylan, how would you feel if someone cut your fingers with scissors?)
But to quote Mother Teresa on the subject of abortion, Dont resort to violence. Of course theres a difference between a swat on the bottom and a beating with a tree branch or electrical wire. But, frankly, why would anyone defend using violence to teach children right from wrong? We dont do it with puppies and kittens anymore, for heavens sake.
Some research suggests that 66 percent of parents admit to striking their children, and 30 percent of those say theyve spanked children as young as one year old. Picture a 1-year-old; just struggling to get to his feet; wobbling between the coffee table and the sofa. Is there no way, other than violence, to teach him not to pull the cats tail?
This is not to deny that kids can be extremely provoking, and that they are in dire need of limit setting. There is no harder job. When one of our sons was having behavior problems, we enrolled in a course for parents of children with autistic-spectrum disorders. We thought we had tried everything (except hitting of course). We hadnt. Kids with this condition, we were told, dont distinguish between good attention and bad attention. Acting out gets the notice they crave, even if its in the form of a reprimand or a time out.
One way to cope was to catch them being good and then praise them lavishly. Their need for attention would be filled up with approval. Working toward rewards (tokens for clearing their place, making their beds, putting their shoes in the mud room) that could later be cashed in for prizes helped them plan for the future, delay gratification, and receive positive feedback. Did it work 100 percent of the time? Of course not. Did we sometimes resent having to establish these elaborate rituals for tasks that ought to be simple? Yes. But if we had hit the boy, his already fragile ego might never have recovered.
Studies have also shown that verbal abuse can be as damaging as physical violence. Children who are ridiculed or belittled by their parents, dismissed as stupid or idiotic just for doing childish things, are as prone to negative outcomes as those who are physically assaulted.
Some parents are abusive because theyre bad people. But many well-meaning parents may be harming their children in the misguided belief that hitting or insulting them instills important virtues, or at least does no harm. They might want to think again.
Mona Charen is a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center
Yes. There is. No, it wasn’t abuse.
Abuse is ongoing, systemic, and meant as derrogatory or “mean”.
You can redifne terms, like a good little Leftist, but don’t pretend it wins you the moral high ground.
My answer is yes. I spanked my boys.
I didn’t bum-rush them through the door into the garage and across the hood of the car, though. I considered that just slightly out of bounds.
I don't know why abuse must be “ongoing” to be categorized as abuse, but if you insist, here's a readjustment: assuming that your father just once beat you with a belt hard enough to leave black and blue marks for a week, then your father once assaulted and battered you. (By the way, legally, assault and battery does not have to be “ongoing” to qualify as assault and battery.”)
IMHO, a direct parallel to the Judicial revolving-door....do the crime, do the time, get out and start the process over again. If there is NO punishment (I don’t consider ‘time’ in a stocked gym with A/C, 3 squares, etc. ‘detrimental’), why worry?
Which is a general enough definition to make any form of corporal punishment assault and battery.
If that is where you want to pin your definition, then that’s on you.
Just realize what kind of company taking that stance puts you with.
Here is an argument in exactly the same form as the argument you made:
It is better to cut off your child’s hand than to have him grow up to a homicidal maniac and serial rapist.
Most of the time spanking is AN OUTLET FOR THE ANGER OF THE PARENT.
Spanking for this reason is ALWAYS wrong, NEVER justified, ALWAYS sinful.
Spanking as a ritual—going behind the woodshed—is a less serious wrong, but is always wrong. Parents who do this are simply too slothful or narcissistic to learn how to parent.
A swat on the tush to get a child’s attention is okay. Striking a child in anger or ritualistically is always wrong.
Next silly question?
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