The Big Picture: Arch-Villains

dante brevity

New member
Apr 15, 2009
199
0
0
Sutter Cane said:
dante brevity said:
Wait hold on, did you just say that fast food is as dangerous as cigarettes? Source?
Happily. Fast food increases risk of obesity and type-II diabetes.
http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(04)17663-0/fulltext
http://ajph.aphapublications.org/cgi/content/abstract/99/3/505
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1353829208000981
http://www.nature.com/ijo/journal/v31/n6/abs/0803616a.html

The last one has my favorite quote: "The food quality and portion size need to be improved before it is safe to eat frequently at most fast-food chains."

Fast food is chemically addictive.
http://www.medical-hypotheses.com/article/S0306-9877(08)00642-7/abstract
http://www.medical-hypotheses.com/article/S0306-9877(09)00484-8/abstract
http://www.nature.com/neuro/journal/v13/n5/full/nn.2519.html

Studies like these are showing that heating high-fat, high calorie food, like that available cheap and easy in fast food restaurants, triggers the same brain chemical mechanism as "cocaine or heroin."

Remember, I'm not making the argument that we need to protect adults from these foods, just kids that make bad choices and can't know better shouldn't be marketed food that's not "safe to eat."
 

Dastardly

Imaginary Friend
Apr 19, 2010
2,420
0
0
TheSchaef said:
Dastardly said:
Yeah, I run into that all the time as a teacher. Make a suggestion, and a parent slaps you with the, "Do you have kids?" argument. Please. Let's look at what I had to do just to prove I was fit to be in this classroom:
:list of self-congratulatory achievements:
Not this. A lot of parents went through a lot of those same processes (their brand of certification - if any - will of course differ) just so they could put a roof over their kid's head and put food on the table for him. And those who don't are probably putting in 60+-hour workweeks just to survive. And their investment in their child extends far beyond 172 half-days.

I can't think of a time when I left my boys in the care of anybody for more than ten minutes that was not themselves a parent. One thing I have consistently seen the parents understand - and the non-parents fail to understand - is that the child informs the parent as much as the inverse when it comes to raising children. "Do you have kids" may seem an insulting question to people with clinical or academic training in their field but parenting is neither clinical nor academic; it's experiential, and that's no one's fault.

Moreover, I trust my pediatrician to address my questions regarding my child's health when I first commission her expertise in that field. She doesn't exceed her mandate and she doesn't presume to inform on, for example, how I should discipline my child or how to help him get along with others at school. Maybe that perspective on how and why I trust the expertise of a stranger in a limited scope can help inform the potential difference in a reaction to someone serving the parent's need versus pitting yourself against them as an advocate for the child.
You can think what you like, of course. Obviously, as I mentioned originally, I'm not talking about all parents. I'm simply rejecting the notion that a parent "knows what's best" by virtue of simply being a parent. It would be like me claiming that because I attended school, I'm educated.

No. If I'm not demonstrating the skills I supposedly learned, my claim is empty and I'll be fired. That's why we're put through rigorous proving processes before we're even allowed into a classroom (and continuously put through those processes while we're in there).

There is no such certifying process for parents. The most they ever have to prove to anyone is that they're not beating or starving the child, and that the child has some clothes and a roof. And because their position in the child's life is infinitely more influential, I don't think they should get a free pass just for having figured out how babies get made.

Most parents do a pretty good job. Many do a wonderful job. Those parents are the ones who realize that their job isn't just to keep the kid alive--it's to teach the child. By the time a kid is 18, he's spent just over 10% of his life in school. That's it. We can't be responsible for 100% of his education.

But you want us to just roll over and believe that simply because a person is a biological parent, they automatically know what's best? I'm sorry, but my experience has taught me that is not automatically the case.

- When a kid shows up to my class in the same outfit three days a week--a Christmas shirt in the middle of August, to boot--but mama comes into a parent conference with her hair and nails all pretty, dressed up like the Queen Mother? And no, she's not interviewing for jobs. She's collecting Welfare and child support. She just likes looking nice while her kid gets nothing. I'm supposed to believe she knows--or even cares--about what's best for her child?

- When a child can't read or do basic math, but is too old for the school to legally hold him back anymore, and the parent doesn't take any steps toward using the free help we offer in our after-school, non-paid time to try to get that kid caught up, because they get an extra check each month as long as the child is classified as "learning disabled?" And we're supposed to believe they've got the child's best interests at heart?

- When a child can't even keep their head up and concentrate in class for ten minutes, falling asleep because he was out all night standing on the street corner playing lookout for his drug-dealing older brother while the parent was hooking out of her house?

- When a child can't focus on learning anything because his parents don't provide food with their Welfare check, because they just had to get some new rims for the car? And the school is forced to provide two of the "three meals a day" to the child, for free, year-round, just to ensure the kid isn't starving to the point he can't learn?

- When a woman who already has had two kids taken away by the State for neglect and criminal issues, and her next kid is going the same way, and she comes in for a conference only after a court order. And she's pregnant again?

- In a less extreme and far more common example, when two parents can't even act like civil, mature adults during a parent conference, and instead bicker with each other in the exact same way a child would, and do so while their child is watching, and then want to claim their child's failure and misbehavior in school is our fault?

With things like this considered, which we encounter every year with multiple kids, I refuse to accept that someone automatically knows how to parent simply because they have a child? Sorry, I just can't buy that. I draw my conclusions based on evidence, not titles.

(And yeah, the same goes for teachers. My "self-congratulatory list of achievements" wasn't a list of achievements at all. It's a list of the things I had to do just to be allowed to enter a classroom, and a list of the standards I must meet in order to stay there, nothing more. If at any point I stop demonstrating mastery of those standards, the degree and license mean nothing. The list was provided only for sake of contrast, not because those things hold any weight on their own.

It doesn't guarantee a good teacher, but at least it's something. A teacher education curriculum is about 50% "content area" stuff--science teachers learning science, etc. The other half is about how children learn and are motivated, evidence-based practices for teaching and managing behavior in and out of the classroom, stuff like that. If even all of that doesn't guarantee a good teacher, how much less of a guarantee do we have on parents simply because they're parents?)
 

lordofskulls

New member
Mar 30, 2011
4
0
0
I found the comment about blaming Master Chief for the lack of civility in online play hilarious because Master Chief is mute.
 

NKnight

New member
Jul 31, 2010
90
0
0
"Frankly I think modern society places far too much emphasys on protecting stupid people from the consequences of their own stupidity" / "Nature is very good at this natural selection thing, and one of the main mechanisms by wich it operates is that self destructive idiots remove their negative influence from the gene pool by self destructing as a result of that idiocy"

That one deserved a quote. Amazingly put Bob. True in every single word.
 

dante brevity

New member
Apr 15, 2009
199
0
0
Nurb said:
dante brevity said:
Nurb said:
I'm of the same opinion; tobacco is different than fast food, because fast food isn't chemically addictive like tobacco is.
I'll find them for you if you want, but a Google search will help you find a dozen studies that say fast food is chemically addictive. Not just in an emotional/comfort capacity either; people who've eaten diets with high sugar get the shakes when the sugar is taken out of their food. I'm not saying that this should make fast food illegal; I'll be ticked if someone tries to take away my very addictive caffeine. Marketing these things to kids, though? No.
You missed the posts above explaining how fast food is NOT CHEMICALLY ADDICTIVE. Same way weed is in no way addictive, but people CAN form a dependancy on it, gambling, video games... etc

The morbidly obese are addicted to food period, but there's nothing chemical about it that makes the brain addicted like crack, tobacco, or alcohol.

There's a difference between chemical and emotional/mental created addiction.
I didn't miss the posts; they're just wrong. Fat, sugar, salt and caffeine, all of which are excessively present in a fast food meal, all share addictive properties with other "drugs" like "crack, tobacco or alcohol." I understand the argument that some things are not inherently addictive, and I agree with you that marijuana is probably one of these. Fast food isn't, though.

However, even if McDonald's was addictive like gambling more than crack, the fact remains that we don't market gambling to children. If Casinos trotted out a cartoon character mascot and bought airtime during kids' shows, you better believe parents and the government would cry foul.
 

Dastardly

Imaginary Friend
Apr 19, 2010
2,420
0
0
Cocamaster said:
Dastardly said:
...stuff...
First, let me preface by saying that I highly admire your position as an educator and the sacrifices you and your peers make for our children.

My mother is a teacher herself; pushed through 12 years of professional training to end up in a job where it's only tangible reward is knowing you are helping someone else build their future. She has told me of many horror stories of parents, which I'm sure you have many of your own.

But I once brought up this issue to her, and this is what she told me, after 35 years of dealing with this, which is something that resonated with me and changed my opinion on the issue:

"It would be extremely arrogant of me to pretend that just because I am a professional in this field, that I am a better parent for this particular child than its own parents."

Basically, her argument is that she deals with these children in a specific environment, school, with much defined rules and expectations from those involved. She doesn't provide for these kids, feeding them, playing with them, dealing with their issues, other than within the context of this clearly defined relationship of teacher-student. Children themselves behave differently in school than they do at home.

It is not the place of the teacher to parent, just to teach. That said, teachers can teach parents, too, and parents SHOULD listen. It's all about establishing a relationship.
I'm sorry I missed your reply! It didn't send me a message saying that I had one, but I found it a moment ago.

I agree with your mother. I would certainly be extremely arrogant of me to pretend I am a better parent, and that's why I would never do so. However, what I'm saying is that I don't automatically have to believe that they are a "good parent" simply by virtue of the fact that they have a child. That's all I'm saying.

If I want to claim I'm a good teacher, I have to provide constant evidence. I had to provide quite a bit of evidence just to become one. If I stop providing clear evidence, I lose my claim to being a "good teacher." The burden of proof is constantly upon me to live up to that claim.

I reject the notion that some (not all) parents put forth that what we say as educators holds absolutely no weight because some of us "don't have kids." Or even those of us that do, "don't know what's best for my child." If you look at my earlier (quite long) reply to another poster, you'll see some of my personal horror stories that demonstrate some of these people clearly do not know what's best.

I'm not claiming to be a better parent, but some of my suggestions as a teacher might have merit. Please understand, I very nearly never make these kinds of suggestions. And when I do, it's in the context of a discussion about the child's behavior at school. I would never presume to tell a parent how to do their job. But when a child is misbehaving in class, and I recommend something to the parent that we could do in school, and that parent responds by telling me I don't know what I'm talking about because I don't have kids?

The parents I'm talking about are the ones that shield themselves from any criticism or suggestion from anyone, by hiding behind the, "Well, I'm his parent and I know what's best" mantra. If anyone in any leadership or teaching position pulled that crap, they'd be out on their ass in no time. And parenting is the single most important leadership and teaching position, yet it simultaneously requires the least training or experience to get into.
 

Sebass

New member
Jul 13, 2009
189
0
0
manic_depressive13 said:
I despise the "natural selection" argument, not just because it's somewhat offensive, but because it's extremely stupid. There have been many brilliant people in history with self-destructive tendencies. You did sort of acknowledge this, but the rest of your tirade overshadowed it. You seem to suggest that just because someone keeps themselves healthy/safe, it automatically means they are smarter than your average self-destructive individual. Here, I'll give you five seconds to think of a successful idiot... yeah, exactly. "Evolution" (there aren't any inverted commas sarcastic enough) doesn't seem to be doing such a good job after all.

An obsession with your health does not demonstrate intelligence or lack thereof. You should know, you're fat. There is a significant difference between choosing to do something despite it being detrimental to your health, and choosing to ignore the fact that what you are doing is harmful, despite overwhelming evidence. Most people who smoke these days are aware of the consequences, and although it may be true to an extent, I can't help but feel that "they're idiots and they deserve to die as a result of their own stupidity and humanity will be better off without these idiots carrying the idiot gene" is needlessly inflammatory, and more than a little ridiculous. Having said that, it is definitely not the government's place to be putting these relatively non-issues ahead of real political concerns.
I like this guy.
 

Quizza

New member
Sep 13, 2010
5
0
0
Enosh_ said:
"blaming master chief for lack of civility" this line is killing me, given that he himself made the agument that halo is to blame a billion times
Lol moviebob, with always great and solid arguments.
 

Dangerious P. Cats

New member
Dec 21, 2008
204
0
0
Isn't the issue here advertising to children as a whole rather than that McDonalds is advertising to them? A society that bans high fat food is a crappy society and I think most rational people can understand that, but with these kinds of calls I can't help but think that the undercurrent of all this is that advertising to children as should be banned. I have to confess I'm somewhat open to the idea if it's implemented well, there are plenty of things I did as a child that I disagree with as an adult primarily because of advertising and me not being old enough to rationally consider it.
 

TheSchaef

New member
Feb 1, 2008
430
0
0
Dastardly said:
Obviously, as I mentioned originally, I'm not talking about all parents. I'm simply rejecting the notion that a parent "knows what's best" by virtue of simply being a parent. It would be like me claiming that because I attended school, I'm educated.
No, because education is clinical knowledge, parenting is primarily experiential knowledge. The fact that they are a parent in the first place is what gives them the advantage. I'm sure you would agree that a person can be learned without attending a traditional school, but who's going to be taken more seriously, the person with the degree or without? Likewise, I'm going to trust the word of the parent over the non-parent because they're the ones who put in the time.

If I'm not demonstrating the skills I supposedly learned, my claim is empty and I'll be fired. That's why we're put through rigorous proving processes before we're even allowed into a classroom (and continuously put through those processes while we're in there).
That's the same process that a lot of other people have to go through also. It's part of having a job. But your training is in teaching, so you teach. It doesn't make you qualified to raise a child from birth to adulthood any more than if you took a job as a spot welder. Citing your credentials against the experiential knowledge of actually being a parent is like comparing apples and ducks.

But you want us to just roll over and believe that simply because a person is a biological parent, they automatically know what's best?
Roll over as opposed to what? You can't raise the child in their stead, and once they move on from your grade, you'll never see them again anyway. In the end, a parent is going to do what a parent is going to do, and short of calling Child Services on them for neglect, what is it you're proposing to do?

Various examples defining the middle by the extremes
You'll find few people more critical of welfare queens than I. I once knew someone who worked in the state system in Pennsylvania, and he related a pretty broad range of horror stories about the cases he had to work. But the problem here is not strictly in the parenting but in the socioeconomic situation at work (and I can only assume this puts you in a relatively low-income district). Never mind parenting, a lot of those people should not even be functioning members of society, which is my point about the low bar for parents being sufficient to the task that I'll take their word on its face.

But here's the problem: the system exists in a way that perpetuates the problem. Even use the words "welfare reform" in a sentence and here come the accusations of racism and leaving black people to die in the streets. Point out that all the free education in the world won't solve the underlying problems that prevent these kids from being upwardly mobile, and you get a lot of "LOL go back to Faux Neewwzzzz" (if you really want to be an impactful educator, teach people that "Faux" is roughly pronounced "Foh" and is not a valid homophone for "Fox"). I'm not much into schadenfreude, but I do think your examples demonstrate the chickens coming home to roost when it comes to propping up the dregs of society and shielding them with the people who are actually trying to claw their way out of their hole. And as long as people are crucified for wanting to remodel or replace a broken system, expect nothing more than the status quo where people who shouldn't even be a part of this conversation are encouraged to continue negatively impacting all areas of society, and not only the aspect that directly relates to the kids stuck with them as parents.

In a less extreme and far more common example, when two parents can't even act like civil, mature adults during a parent conference, and instead bicker with each other in the exact same way a child would, and do so while their child is watching, and then want to claim their child's failure and misbehavior in school is our fault?
Maybe they do, maybe they don't, but their lack of social skills, even passed on to the child, do not make you more qualified to raise the child. Besides, if that's your criteria, then based on the condition of most forums, I submit most people on the Internet should not be "allowed" to have a child.

It doesn't guarantee a good teacher, but at least it's something. A teacher education curriculum is about 50% "content area" stuff--science teachers learning science, etc. The other half is about how children learn and are motivated, evidence-based practices for teaching and managing behavior in and out of the classroom, stuff like that. If even all of that doesn't guarantee a good teacher, how much less of a guarantee do we have on parents simply because they're parents?)
Yes, and as I said, those skills give you a specialization in the education of a child. The guarantee you're going to get on parents will never come from a textbook or a certification because again, they are not clinical skills. The reason being a parent makes someone a de facto expert on raising their child is precisely because it is NOT automatic as you suggest. A parent becomes the expert by the very process of being a parent. It's 24-hour, 7-day, 365-a-year on-the-job training, and for the most part, you don't get to quit or ask for a raise or vacation or federal holidays. Putting in the time is what qualifies them, and for the most part, your examples of people who are less qualified than you to be a parent have nothing to do with your expertise, and everything to do with the fact that they are less qualified than you to be a member of society at all. Bad parenting is the least of their troubles; they suffer from bad everything-ing, and therein lies the real problem.
 

Sofus

New member
Apr 15, 2011
223
0
0
Marketing to children is a logical long term investment. If some parents are too busy to guide their children, then that is their own problem.

There are usually laws, which prevents children from purchasing both cigarets and alcohol. I don't know if similar laws should be applied to fast food, or if we should simply impliment a parenting license.

Aslong as a company doesn't lie or withhold vital information about their products, they can do whatever they want for all I care.

Keep in mind, that humanity once though the world was flat. We all act on the knowledge that we possess.
 

Hungry Donner

Henchman
Mar 19, 2009
1,369
0
0
I don't have any problem with mascots like Ronald McDonald. I do have a big problem with happy meal toys, I think those are a much bigger enticement for kids, but I still don't think they should be banned.
 

MB202

New member
Sep 14, 2008
1,157
0
0
After re-watching the video, I couldn't help but notice the picture for when MovieBob said he was "totally behind" kids eating healthier; it's a picture of Elmo with some Muppet veggies.

What does MovieBob think about Cookie Monster not specifically eating cookies? Or that some people have given him the nickname "Veggie Monster"?
 

Anti Nudist Cupcake

New member
Mar 23, 2010
1,054
0
0
I love how he talks about stupidity and then makes the title of the video "arch-villains", we all know how clever villains can be...
 

Dastardly

Imaginary Friend
Apr 19, 2010
2,420
0
0
TheSchaef said:
No, because education is clinical knowledge, parenting is primarily experiential knowledge. The fact that they are a parent in the first place is what gives them the advantage. I'm sure you would agree that a person can be learned without attending a traditional school, but who's going to be taken more seriously, the person with the degree or without? Likewise, I'm going to trust the word of the parent over the non-parent because they're the ones who put in the time.
Firstly, I appreciate your thoughtful reply. In many instances, these sorts of discussions can turn ugly very quickly. Civility greatly appreciated.

To the topic: Taking what I've marked in italics, it's getting my point backwards. It's more important to note that a person can go through traditional school and not be very learned at all. Being in and going through the experience does not guarantee learning. Learning isn't measured by time-on-task, it's measured by assessment.

Assessment can be formal (like taking the driving test, or having a review done by your supervisor). It can also be informal--if I'm cutting people off, failing to use my turn signal, and generally just being a jackass on the road, people can informally assess me as a bad driver. The key to assessment isn't that the test itself is magical. The usefulness is in the data it generates.

Drawing the distinction between "clinical" and "practical" isn't quite as useful as we want to make it. We tend to overstate the difference between the two just as often as we understate it. Yes, the experience of actually teaching/doctoring/parenting/etc. is always very different from the learning. The difficulty of the experience, however, does not negate the efficacy of the techniques taught in the clinical environment.

The way kids learn behavior is the way they learn behavior. That mechanism functions both in and out of school, and it functions the same way. The difference is in the techniques used to take advantage of that mechanism. Teachers and parents utilize different techniques, depending on the environment, but they're both taking advantage of the same mechanisms in the child's mind.

As a for instance, a parent could be told, "It's not going to do you much good to tell the child how not to behave if you're not also going to tell the child the correct way. It's must faster to focus on what you want, rather than what you don't want." It's a basic, but very important principle to guiding behavior and learning. Don't tell someone the 1,000 ways not to do it, when just showing them how will suffice.

Too often, though, a parent will say something like, "Yeah, well when you have kids, we'll see how easy you think that is." But no one ever said it's "easy." Just that it's effective. The fact that there is an easier (but less effective) shortcut doesn't disprove the more effective practice being recommended.


A student is writing a book report, and you tell them, "Read the book carefully. Summarize the plot, including character names. Use complete, grammatically-correct sentences." The student turns in a piece of paper with the title, a bullet list of the characters, and an incorrect plot summary of the book, likely guessed from the title. The report is also entirely constructed of sentence fragments.

As the teacher, you tell them, "This report isn't accurate, and it's unintelligible because the sentences are incomplete. You didn't follow the instructions." To which the student replies, "Yeah, well your way is harder, and it takes longer. So I'm not going to do it, because it's my paper."

Just because a task is more difficult to do correctly doesn't excuse us for not doing it correctly. Just because implementing sound parenting advice is harder in practice than it is in theory doesn't mean no one should ever have to do it.

That's the same process that a lot of other people have to go through also. It's part of having a job. But your training is in teaching, so you teach. It doesn't make you qualified to raise a child from birth to adulthood any more than if you took a job as a spot welder. Citing your credentials against the experiential knowledge of actually being a parent is like comparing apples and ducks.
I'm not citing my credentials against the parent. I'm not saying "my training makes me a better parent than their experience." I'm saying that I am required to demonstrate mastery before I can claim mastery in my job. A plumber has to prove he can plumb before he gets a license to plumb things. A fisherman has to have a license to catch a fish.

The point is that the parent doesn't have to have any experience in order to become a parent. They don't have to take a class, look through a book, read a pamphlet. Nothing. They never have to prove they are effective at the job--only that they're not criminally ineffective at it, and only when being watched.

So, when the school makes some kind of recommendation about how best to teach the child something (which is certainly our area of expertise), for a parent to just wave us off saying, "You don't have kids, so you don't know," is a cop-out.

Roll over as opposed to what? You can't raise the child in their stead, and once they move on from your grade, you'll never see them again anyway. In the end, a parent is going to do what a parent is going to do, and short of calling Child Services on them for neglect, what is it you're proposing to do?
I'm not. I'm most definitely lamenting a problem to which there is no acceptable solution. My personal solution? I don't want to raise that person's kid. More and more, we as schools are being told to do just that. Character education, rigorous behavior management programs, time and money and after-school care, schools providing half of a kid's meals, year-'round... If I wanted to raise the kid, my name would be on his birth certificate. I'm all about teaching him stuff, of course! But raising him? No.

I don't want the school to tell the parents how to do their job. I just want the school to be able to put the parents in a position where they have to do the job. If the kid's misbehaving, we should be allowed to send him home to be dealt with until he's ready to learn. We need to stop picking up the slack for the absentee parents. If that means some people starve, fine. Consequence is the only dependable teacher.

Various examples defining the middle by the extremes
Nah, I was pretty clear that my examples were extreme. It's just that they're out there. I'm certainly not making any claim that the "majority" of parents are bad. But there are plenty.

I'm not much into schadenfreude, but I do think your examples demonstrate the chickens coming home to roost when it comes to propping up the dregs of society and shielding them with the people who are actually trying to claw their way out of their hole. And as long as people are crucified for wanting to remodel or replace a broken system, expect nothing more than the status quo where people who shouldn't even be a part of this conversation are encouraged to continue negatively impacting all areas of society, and not only the aspect that directly relates to the kids stuck with them as parents.
And this is where I've been going with this. These problem parents no longer need to get carte blanche just because they're parents. Having the job doesn't mean you can do the job, especially when you didn't have to go through any kind of screening process to get the job. The fact that a kid has survived long enough to go to school doesn't mean "good" parenting is taking place.

We are desperately trying to fix education, and fix society at large. We're placing more accountability on all of our leaders and teachers. We're putting more responsibility on them even as we take away pay and benefits. Every problem that comes up, we tell them to deal with it, whether it's their fault or not. We tell them to be the kickstand for those "dregs" you mentioned.

But no one is going after the parents. The first unit of civilization was the family. The parent, it's first leader and teacher. Parents are the front lines, the ground floor, the keystone, the most important link in the chain, and whatever other metaphor you need to indicate that they are of utmost importance.

Yes, and as I said, those skills give you a specialization in the education of a child. The guarantee you're going to get on parents will never come from a textbook or a certification because again, they are not clinical skills. The reason being a parent makes someone a de facto expert on raising their child is precisely because it is NOT automatic as you suggest. A parent becomes the expert by the very process of being a parent. It's 24-hour, 7-day, 365-a-year on-the-job training, and for the most part, you don't get to quit or ask for a raise or vacation or federal holidays. Putting in the time is what qualifies them, and for the most part, your examples of people who are less qualified than you to be a parent have nothing to do with your expertise, and everything to do with the fact that they are less qualified than you to be a member of society at all. Bad parenting is the least of their troubles; they suffer from bad everything-ing, and therein lies the real problem.
From this last round of quotes/replies, I'm seeing that we're not really disagreeing. We're talking around each other. I'm trying to avoid going to the "They shouldn't even be here" extreme, though. I'm just saying that we need to stop giving them a pass simply because they are parents.

Being on the job does not mean you're learning a damned thing about the job. You could just be marking hours and collecting a paycheck. And in workplaces with little to no accountability, people do that all the time. Parenting has virtually no accountability. As long as the kid's not beaten, naked, or starving, the parent is held as untouchable.

And to the point I've italicized in your quote: I'm not making the claim that I'm more qualified than them to be a parent. I'm saying that their status as "a parent" does not make them more qualified than anyone else. If they've demonstrated expertise as a parent, that expertise may well qualify them. But the status itself? No. Because it costs nothing to attain, virtually nothing to keep, and no one checks up on whether it's being earned.

I'm not saying, "I should be able to tell parents how to do it." I'm saying that too many parents completely ignore any recommendations from the school about a child's learning, simply because, "You're not his parent, so you don't know a thing." Fact is, we've undergone extensive training and demonstrated mastery in this department (child learning), and as far as we can tell they did what?

To put it in another way, it'd be like someone telling a Klan member that his Klan-member son is a racist, and that Klan member saying, "Well, I'm white, so that means I'm the only one qualified to judge whether a white child is racist."
 

angel85

New member
Dec 31, 2008
129
0
0
I've been eating mcdonalds since I had teeth, I'm now 25 and am a perfectly healthy weight with relatively low body fat because me and my family exercise basic common sense, i.e. "don't order a large, and remember they have salads too." The menu even tells you how many calories each item has so they're basically doing everything they can to keep you from killing yourself outside of telling the fat people who show up to go home.
 

protogenxl

New member
Mar 5, 2008
72
0
0
They can get rid of Ronald
But Nothing Can Kill The Grimace!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zeyU7uVOTic