Is punishing a kid consider abuse?

Recommended Videos

gazumped

New member
Dec 1, 2010
718
0
0
See, I didn't at all find the case of the guy shooting his daughter's laptop shocking because of his action, I found it shocking because of what he was punishing her FOR.

She had the AUDACITY to complain about her parents. How dare she speak out! She does some normal teenagery moaning about having to do chores and she gets her possessions destroyed.

THAT'S what's scary about this father's actions. That he responded to such a little thing with such a threatening gesture, as if to shut her up for good.
 

Saltychipmunk

Member
Jan 17, 2012
28
2
3
Country
USA
there are acceptable forms of punishment and then there are excessive froms of punishment.

selling the lap top is ok. bringing a gun out and shooting it? excessive

spanking kids ... fine.. belting kids excessive.
 

Vault101

I'm in your mind fuzz
Sep 26, 2010
18,855
15
43
uuhhhh no its considered good parenting

the severity however, is what makes or doesnt make it abuse
lisadagz said:
See, I didn't at all find the case of the guy shooting his daughter's laptop shocking because of his action, I found it shocking because of what he was punishing her FOR.

She had the AUDACITY to complain about her parents. How dare she speak out! She does some normal teenagery moaning about having to do chores and she gets her possessions destroyed.

THAT'S what's scary about this father's actions. That he responded to such a little thing with such a threatening gesture, as if to shut her up for good.
I didnt watch the Video...but yeah put that way it is a little concerning

I cant comment eather way, I dont know the situation personally
 

CrazyBlaze

New member
Jul 12, 2011
945
0
0
Physical punishment should be a last resort but it is not abuse unless the parents are constantly beating the kid for no reason is abuse. I do believe in physical punishment is effective. So you take something away from your kid or put them in the corner after many times and they still don't listen then you use physical punishment appropriate to the crime. I know the times I stepped out of line and was spanked I learnt my lesson and my Dad was physically punished when he was a kid and he said that it helped him. Sometimes kids just need to be punished.
 

MrTub

New member
Mar 12, 2009
1,742
0
0
Volf99 said:
Tubez said:
Volf99 said:
Tubez said:
What do you mean with punishing a kid?

Is that included/exclude hitting a child? cause I would see that as abuse.
spanking is abuse? Really?
Yeah... You're hitting somebody...
...strongly disagree. It isn't abuse, nobody is beating anybody else
"It isn't abuse, nobody is beating anybody else" Can you clarify that?

But may I ask how is it not abuse since you are hitting a person.
 

Helmholtz Watson

New member
Nov 7, 2011
2,497
0
0
Tubez said:
Volf99 said:
Tubez said:
Volf99 said:
Tubez said:
What do you mean with punishing a kid?

Is that included/exclude hitting a child? cause I would see that as abuse.
spanking is abuse? Really?
Yeah... You're hitting somebody...
...strongly disagree. It isn't abuse, nobody is beating anybody else
"It isn't abuse, nobody is beating anybody else" Can you clarify that?

But may I ask how is it not abuse since you are hitting a person.
Hitting a person =/= automatically abusing someone. When spanking is done as punishment, it is different from a parent hitting a child in the face with a closed fist.
 

MrTub

New member
Mar 12, 2009
1,742
0
0
Volf99 said:
Tubez said:
Volf99 said:
Tubez said:
Volf99 said:
Tubez said:
What do you mean with punishing a kid?

Is that included/exclude hitting a child? cause I would see that as abuse.
spanking is abuse? Really?
Yeah... You're hitting somebody...
...strongly disagree. It isn't abuse, nobody is beating anybody else
"It isn't abuse, nobody is beating anybody else" Can you clarify that?

But may I ask how is it not abuse since you are hitting a person.
Hitting a person =/= automatically abusing someone. When spanking is done as punishment, it is different from a parent hitting a child in the face with a closed fist.
It's still hitting somebody and I personally think its pathetic since you're venting your anger at somebody that is defenseless.
Do you also think people should be able to "spank" a grown up person as punishment for misbehaving?
 

Vegosiux

New member
May 18, 2011
4,378
0
0
Tubez said:
It's still hitting somebody and I personally think its pathetic since you're venting your anger at somebody that is defenseless.
Well, you can vent your anger at somebody who's defenseless by saying "Firstname Lastname, YOU'RRRRE GRRRROUNDED! Now go to your room!" Is that abuse to, because of the "venting at a defenseless one" clause?

What I'm saying here is that if it's about venting one's anger, it's not punishment at all, since it has no educational value.

Now, let me propose a scenario.

There was a kid who was caught smoking by the parents once. They made him sit down and told him to smoke the entire pack right there, in front of them, and he can't leave until then. He at first went "Pfsh, no problem!" but after 4-5 in a row, he changed his mind and decided that smoking can fuck him up pretty badly and ruining his health in order to be rebellious and stick it to the man wasn't worth it. Oh, and he didn't actually have to smoke the whole pack after he got to that point.

Now, is this abuse? As punishment, it was pretty damn effective.

I know said kid (well, he's not kid anymore). Was one of the most shocking things that happened to him, but he also admits that he'd likely not have seen the point if the parents tried to just reason with him, or if they just dealt some arbitrary punishment such as grounding.
 

MrTub

New member
Mar 12, 2009
1,742
0
0
Vegosiux said:
Tubez said:
It's still hitting somebody and I personally think its pathetic since you're venting your anger at somebody that is defenseless.
Well, you can vent your anger at somebody who's defenseless by saying "Firstname Lastname, YOU'RRRRE GRRRROUNDED! Now go to your room!" Is that abuse to, because of the "venting at a defenseless one" clause?

What I'm saying here is that if it's about venting one's anger, it's not punishment at all, since it has no educational value.

Now, let me propose a scenario.

There was a kid who was caught smoking by the parents once. They made him sit down and told him to smoke the entire pack right there, in front of them, and he can't leave until then. He at first went "Pfsh, no problem!" but after 4-5 in a row, he changed his mind and decided that smoking can fuck him up pretty badly and ruining his health in order to be rebellious and stick it to the man wasn't worth it. Oh, and he didn't actually have to smoke the whole pack after he got to that point.

Now, is this abuse? As punishment, it was pretty damn effective.

I know said kid (well, he's not kid anymore). Was one of the most shocking things that happened to him, but he also admits that he'd likely not have seen the point if the parents tried to just reason with him, or if they just dealt some arbitrary punishment such as grounding.
I do not know if that is abuse, but I would have to guess so since it inflicts physical harm. And if my parents did that to me they would most likely be charged with something since I would have a very very hard time to breath.


But if you are for spanking of children, for to teach them their place, are you also for spanking/smacking a grown person so they know their place/learn how to behave?
 

BrassButtons

New member
Nov 17, 2009
564
0
0
Volf99 said:
When spanking is done as punishment, it is different from a parent hitting a child in the face with a closed fist.
Whipping isn't the same as punching either, but it's still abuse. Spanking being different from punching does not mean it isn't also a form of abuse.
 

redisforever

New member
Oct 5, 2009
2,157
0
0
I never intend to have kids, or at least, I don't now, but I think they should be raised properly. They have to be taught right from wrong. If they do something wrong, they should be punished, so they know not to do it again, and that doing something wrong leads to punishment. If a child goes unpunished for something wrong, they will start thinking that they can get away with anything, and this leads to a horrible thing. Entitlement. I hate that. All these kids who are spoiled by their parents into thinking they can get anything for no work. Thinking they can do anything with no consequences. I just realized I sound like a parent at only age 17, but the point is, I was raised this way, and I think it works. The child may dislike, or hell, hate the parent while they're being punished, but later in life, they will realize what it meant, and how it helped them later. And they will thank their parents. Now, I'm not advocating abuse, God no. What I'm saying is that everything that a child does, that is wrong, must be dealt with accordingly, and everything a child does right should be rewarded. Yes, I do think parents should be allowed to hit their kids. I don't think they should have to, and should try to avoid it, but yes, in certain cases, they should. Now, when I say hit, I do not mean beat. That is abuse, and very, very wrong. That got very long, very fast.
 

Bara_no_Hime

New member
Sep 15, 2010
3,644
0
0
MasochisticAvenger said:
So, Escapist, do you think punishing a child is, or should be, considered abuse?
It really depends.

A spanking? Not abuse.

A whipping or spanking with a belt or physical paddle? Probably abuse.

An open-hand slap on a fleshy body part (such as the butt) deals a sharp, brief pain with no lingering damage. Not abuse.

A close-hand hit, or hitting with an object, can deal actual damage to the skin and cause lasting pain. Abuse, or bordering on abuse.

As with so many things, it's an issue of moderation. You have to consider WHY you are hitting the child. A brief pain no damage hit is Pavlovian - it causes the child to associate bad results with bad behavior. A lasting, damaging hit causes fear and trauma and can damage a child's psychological development. The only reason parents go for the lasting, damaging hit is because it makes THEM (the abusive parent) feel better - which is both sick and pathetic.

It's like how, when my cat misbehaves, I sometimes throw a small pillow at her. It doesn't do any damage, but it's startling, and now she knows that if I hold up the pillow threateningly that she's being naughty and should stop.

Of course, Pavlovian techniques work best when you reward good behavior - something many parents forget.
 

SwagLordYoloson

New member
Jul 21, 2010
782
0
0
Legally it can be considered abuse. But I disagree with many laws, abuse for disciplinary action should be taken into consideration and those who fail at tasks in the workforce should be slapped twice with a salmon. Thus I would expect the same action be taken out among children, but seeing as they are still developing as humans one slap with a carp would be sufficient punishment.
 

MrTub

New member
Mar 12, 2009
1,742
0
0
Bara_no_Hime said:
MasochisticAvenger said:
So, Escapist, do you think punishing a child is, or should be, considered abuse?
It really depends.

A spanking? Not abuse.

A whipping or spanking with a belt or physical paddle? Probably abuse.

An open-hand slap on a fleshy body part (such as the butt) deals a sharp, brief pain with no lingering damage. Not abuse.

A close-hand hit, or hitting with an object, can deal actual damage to the skin and cause lasting pain. Abuse, or bordering on abuse.

As with so many things, it's an issue of moderation. You have to consider WHY you are hitting the child. A brief pain no damage hit is Pavlovian - it causes the child to associate bad results with bad behavior. A lasting, damaging hit causes fear and trauma and can damage a child's psychological development. The only reason parents go for the lasting, damaging hit is because it makes THEM (the abusive parent) feel better - which is both sick and pathetic.

It's like how, when my cat misbehaves, I sometimes throw a small pillow at her. It doesn't do any damage, but it's startling, and now she knows that if I hold up the pillow threateningly that she's being naughty and should stop.

Of course, Pavlovian techniques work best when you reward good behavior - something many parents forget.
Just want to point out, if you ever for some odd reason comes to Sweden. Then I would suggest that you do not spank your kid since that is considered abuse by our legal system.

http://voices.yahoo.com/the-effects-no-spanking-law-child-abuse-328316.html
 

NoOne852

The Friendly Neighborhood Nobody
Sep 12, 2011
843
0
0
I have seen that video. I think the father was overreacting to his daughter venting on facebook (and really, it was stupid of him to shoot up a several thousand dollar laptop [someone I know did some research to find out the whole situation in the video] along with the 130 dollars he just spent on software to put on it). I find it very unlikely she meant everything that was said, it isn't like no other kid in the world was never mad at their parents at some point and would vent about what they view is unfair. The difference in that situation was that the father found out about what the daughter said.

OT:
No, punishing a child is not abuse, but that also depends on what the punishment is. In the instance I was speaking of earlier, the girl was grounded until she goes to college and her father destoried her laptop. For that situation, it would have been more reasonable to talk to her about it first, take away her laptop instead of destroying it, and instead of grounding the girl for about 4 years, coming to more reasonable time slot.
But assuming you meant physical punishment, as long as it isn't going overboard and it only occurs when necessary, it isn't an issue.
 

Woodsey

New member
Aug 9, 2009
14,548
0
0
I think you'll find people had a problem with the slightly psychopathic way in which he went about it. Plenty of people suggested, you know, giving the fucking laptop away. The whole "and your mum asked me to put a bullet in it for her too," is ridiculous. Not to mention he did the EXACT same thing his daughter did, only he added bullets, and 15 million more people to the mix.

Plus, all she really did was moan about her parents on Facebook. Big fucking deal, people need to vent - its not exactly healthy (for the girl or the parents) for them to look into every part of her life.

"Some even going as far as suggesting punishing a child for doing something wrong should be considered on the same level as beating a wife."

... what kind of child 'punishment' are you advocating exactly, if you're getting that sort of response?
 

spectrenihlus

New member
Feb 4, 2010
1,918
0
0
Tubez said:
Vegosiux said:
Tubez said:
It's still hitting somebody and I personally think its pathetic since you're venting your anger at somebody that is defenseless.
Well, you can vent your anger at somebody who's defenseless by saying "Firstname Lastname, YOU'RRRRE GRRRROUNDED! Now go to your room!" Is that abuse to, because of the "venting at a defenseless one" clause?

What I'm saying here is that if it's about venting one's anger, it's not punishment at all, since it has no educational value.

Now, let me propose a scenario.

There was a kid who was caught smoking by the parents once. They made him sit down and told him to smoke the entire pack right there, in front of them, and he can't leave until then. He at first went "Pfsh, no problem!" but after 4-5 in a row, he changed his mind and decided that smoking can fuck him up pretty badly and ruining his health in order to be rebellious and stick it to the man wasn't worth it. Oh, and he didn't actually have to smoke the whole pack after he got to that point.

Now, is this abuse? As punishment, it was pretty damn effective.

I know said kid (well, he's not kid anymore). Was one of the most shocking things that happened to him, but he also admits that he'd likely not have seen the point if the parents tried to just reason with him, or if they just dealt some arbitrary punishment such as grounding.
I do not know if that is abuse, but I would have to guess so since it inflicts physical harm. And if my parents did that to me they would most likely be charged with something since I would have a very very hard time to breath.


But if you are for spanking of children, for to teach them their place, are you also for spanking/smacking a grown person so they know their place/learn how to behave?
There is a reason we treat children and adults separately. An adult can listen to reason (most of the time) I child usually won't.