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That's another cultural difference. Many cultures do not care about respect (in the "we're both humans, let's talk it out and then walk it out" sense of the word) between parent and child. For example, in Black American culture and other African diaspora cultures, the tendency (WARNING: GENERALIZATION THAT DOESN'T APPLY 100%) is to be stern and invoke fear. It doesn't matter that the child is afraid and only behaving for the time being and to avoid further punishment. The phrase "you better/you're going to respect me" is used in the same manner as not looking adults in the eye unless told to do so. It isn't a parent-child-equal-footing-respect to which mainstream cultures tend to adhere.
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Because Dr. Spock published his book and you agree with him doesn't make your culture and background more relevant or correct than others. I try to have an open mind when working child abuse cases. I'm not sure any of us want to live in a country where the government comes into everyone's home and threatens potential criminal action for anyone who doesn't follow the government's plan for child rearing. We shouldn't be in the business of punishing parents unless it is readily apparent that the parent's intent in hitting the child was to be cruel, to torture, etc. |
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Not making a judgement, just thinking out loud. This might be off-topic but a couple of years ago I had a coworker who was upset with me because he felt I didn't "respect [him] enough." It seems that, even though he wasn't of the African diaspora, that he had the same thinking that younger people just automatically have to respect their elders whether or not they actually earned it. |
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Not just the spankings, but the discipline in general we received growing up. Growing up the mantra from my parents and grandparents was 'If I don't teach you, the law will.' And we all know that 'the law' is much more severe with AfAm than whites. |
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For some Black people: Being quiet, reserved, and almost subservient from fear of punishment or any reminders of her/his upbringing. For some Black people: Becoming opposed to any type of disagreements, anger, tension, raised voices, loud talk, etc. because it reminds the person of her/his upbringing. |
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Again I ask, why is it against the law for me to hit you or an animal, yet okay to hit a defenseless child 1/4 or even half my size as long as my intent wasn't to be "cruel". How is hitting a 3-year old not cruel? |
It is not against the law to hit an animal. Animal cruelty does not include people who use a rolled up magazine to discipline or train a puppy. There are all types of animal training, breeding, and raising (for food, etc.) techniques that would not be considered animal cruelty.
Sarah McLachlan isn't singing about a puppy who took a dump on the couch and was smacked on the rear in punishment. |
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Peterson's case involves no broken bones, concussions, death, etc. |
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I was spanked 3 or 4 times in my lifetime but my brother was spanked a lot more than I was. Why? When I saw him get spanked, the sibling rivalry thing kicked in and I was determined that the parental units would love me more so I behaved myself. Every child is different and I agree the lines are subjective but to me, if a permanent mark is left, it was most definitely abuse. Then again, some of the worst abuse is mental and there is no physical evidence at all. I'm kind of curious- for those who did experience more corporal punishment- Do you think that was the only way for your parents to get you to act right? Do you think lesser punishments would have worked? For me, growing up and in my own parenting, spanking was the absolute last resort after everything else had been tried and did not work OR when what the child was about to do would harm them far worse than a swat on a diapered butt. |
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It's okay to have some community standards and it's okay for the state to protect children from actual abuse, but from corporal punishment? Even corporal punishment which you might subjectively consider cruel? To a degree, yes, because in many cultures, that's how children are raised. Child Welfare workers are trained a lot in cultural competencies, so they may choose to leave a child from a certain culture with marks from a switch in the home and conclude there's nothing wrong, because it is probable that the child is loved and cared for and has a parent or parents who want to raise them to understand that actions have consequences and to respect authority. I've read up on the study trying to correlate grey matter/brain structure with corporal punishment, but it fails to explain the causation aspect of the relationship, so it's speculation. And even then, different =/= better. Quote:
I really don't get some animal cruelty laws and especially don't like how they're sometimes applied. And all the stuff Dr. Phil said too. |
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The lab wins though 'cuz it can be potty trained. My parents used a leash on me.. probably smart. They also used corporal punishment early and often. |
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