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Believe It or Not
In Washington, Tea Party types and their Republican acolytes kept threatening to shut down the government, their mantra, a paraphrase of the old Reagan canard, "Government is not the solution to our problem, government is the problem."
In Florida, their spiritual doppelgangers, Pastor Terry Jones and his Islamophobic Christian zealots, tried, convicted and destroyed by fire a copy of the Quran, mindlessly heaping insult on Afghan injury and igniting a riotous defense of their faith against Western invaders that cost many lives.
Elsewhere in our country, Birthers, Tenthers and others, angry but not sure why, decry socialistic, fascistic, communistic, Hitlerian Obamaesque schemes and warn lawmakers to "keep your government hands off my Medicare."
What's happening here?
Consider the possibility that, primed by a barely-C-average-and-proud-of-it ex-President, a simmering anti-intellectualism has taken flight; facts no longer matter. Though rivals abound, its most perfect expression may have come from Congressman Joe Wilson, the loudmouth who, defying tradition, decorum and taste, bellowed "You lie" as our new President spoke. The implicit "boy!", universally understood, was a fillip that emboldened the fantasies of white supremacists, militias, nativists and other Neanderthals who, weapons loaded, crosses alight, "man-up," lurch into action and hatch plots to lay waste pointy-heads and science in the name of God, guns, the flag and being "number one."
And, as the troglodytes grunt, moan, holler and spit, their presence magnified by a heat-seeking media, the national IQ dips further and an already confused public panics -- never a good omen for rationality.
When pondering the current state of the American mind, an article in the New York Times last week offers a clue. It seems the assistant principal of a high school in Wichita Falls, Texas, disciplined a student with a "paddle" so successfully that the boy ended up in the hospital. While the article minimized the abuse by referring to it as "paddling," the repeated striking of the buttocks of a juvenile with a board (likely drilled through with holes to ensure hot contact) by a male adult is a custom still followed in 20 states of this Union, most of them in the South.
Despite the protestations and expert testimony of child safety advocates, this terror continues to be the subject of debate in legislatures and school boards in the states in question. One wonders if the "pro" argument features grunts and a Bible.
The superintendent of the school district involved found no wrongdoing, per the report, pointing out, craftily, that corporal punishment is "one of the tools in the toolbox we use for discipline." However, the mother of the hospitalized child charged that the schools in Texas have arrogated to themselves the right to determine the level of discipline required "as long as (they) don't kill him." She added, "If I did that to my son, I'd go to jail."
In New Mexico, the legislature recently banned such punishment, but the newly elected Republican Governor has not indicated if she'll sign it. A former teacher and school administrator, now a Republican state senator there, is in favor of continuing its use. "The threat of it keeps many of our kids in line so they can learn," he said, apparently with a straight face.
A Democratic state senator, shocked that there is even a debate, said, "We should be educating kids that they can't solve problems with violence."
Yet in Mississippi, a high school boy was hit so hard he passed out, fell and broke his jaw. That'll teach him.
A New Orleans Catholic school did away with the practice due to pressure from their archbishop who believes hitting kids promotes violence, but the institution is now under pressure from staff, alumni and students to reinstate it because they believe it builds character and results in high graduation rates. A student leader who supports reinstatement defends it as "tradition" and says he and other seniors "can tell the difference between our class and some of the newer students who didn't receive the same discipline."
Meanwhile, Rebecca D. Costa, in her book The Watchman's Rattle, examines the way even advanced societies have become extinct throughout history. She points out that "behavioral psychologists have been collecting irrefutable evidence that criticism, negative reinforcement and institutionalized rigidity all inhibit creativity, productivity and growth. Take any child who has been subjected to a critical environment and observe the results: withdrawal, low self-esteem, fearfulness and a long list of aberrant behaviors." In addition, Ms. Costa says, while it is an important characteristic of human development that people acquire beliefs, because the brain is resistant to change we tend to cling to them, and sometimes, when things get tense, "beliefs trump facts."
So perhaps, to paraphrase Reagan, beliefs are not the solution to our problem; beliefs are the problem.
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16 Comments so far
Show All"Beliefs trump facts" could be the rallying cry of the entire Christian conservative sector of the population and for a lot of other groups too.
With eternal foreign occupations and wars on the horizon, the US needs a steady supply of cannon fodder to keep the US military fully manned.
The schools described in this article are preparing future "volunteers" that will follow orders and inflict torture as needed.
I remember when the Nashville public schools banned paddling in the 60's... after being sued by a student who had a grand mal seizure as a result.
While banned in the Nashville public schools, school child beating has never been banned by the state and is still allowed in other school districts and private schools. You'd think that adults charged with children's learning, would have learned something themselves from past experience.
.....Post-Constitutional America
Hitting a child to get what you want is the ultimate expression of failure as a parent or teacher... by the time you've failed that much, violence isn't going to help anything except perhaps to assuage the adult's damaged ego.
I suggest that they beat themselves instead...
Well, this is a fitting companion piece to the one by Phil Rockstroh, as it provides yet more background on where shame comes form; and how it operates... reverberating as the inverted gift that keeps on giving in the way of adding more and more violence to already corrupt societal levels.
Well it didn't do me any harm.....
(Sarcasm!)
Sadly this response if often regurgitated for all sorts of abuse
.
http://alice-miller.com/books_en.php?page=2
My dad and his brothers, all long-deceased, used to reminisce affectionately about the heavy-handed physical abuse administered by the nuns in their parochial school during the 1920s. It was the usual stuff-- the nuns freaking out and banging the bad boys on the hands with metal rulers, sometimes with knuckle-bruising and splitting force.
When I was a teenager listening to their anecdotes at family gatherings, this drove me up a wall. I didn't speak up, but once vented to my more conventional (and devoutly religious) older brother about it.
My perplexity was compounded by the fact that the nuns almost always punished the wrong kid-- consistent with my own less lurid parochial school experiences decades later-- and that the elders found the injustice amusing. Yet, in other situations, my father and his siblings were quick to take offense and umbrage, especially when insult was added to injury.
My brother scornfully set me straight by pointing out that of COURSE the elders were understanding and forgiving of the "discipline" they received; from their perspective, they were indeed wild, unruly kids who needed to be controlled with an iron hand, and when they matured they were grateful that the nuns kept them from becoming thugs and criminals! As far as THEY'RE concerned, my brother scolded, the nuns kept them all out of jail!
So in my brother's opinion, they were correct to feel that what seemed to me to be unredeemed abuse really DID "do them a world of good".
I argued some with my brother, but like so many others, this discussion more or less began and ended with the suggestion that I "grow up"; we never talked about it again as far as I remember.
I never DID grow up, of course. It sounded like the "Stockholm Syndrome" to me then, and it still does.
I appreciate his giving me some insight into how people rationalize abuse, and thus perpetuate it, too. It certainly helped me to understand the attitude that had puzzled and frustrated me so much. But there's no way the end justifies the means.
I'm beginning to believe in secession. Why allow uneducated doofuses the power of the filibuster? If they don't like civilization, let them form their own country.
I would ban the prescription of psychoactive medications for unruly children that risk long-term brain damage, often exacerbate learning difficulties, and generally harm children's health before I would even begin to worry about the paddle. But I guess the paddle manufacturers can't compete with Big Pharma, so they are up the creek.
"...the repeated striking of the buttocks of a juvenile with a board (likely drilled through with holes to ensure hot contact)..."
_____________________
I'm not familiar with this terminology, and thankfully I don't have any experience in whacking or being whacked with boards-- perforated or otherwise.
So, what does "hot contact" mean?
I am guessing it is a codeword for teachers into pedophile s&m?
Haven't there been any instances of teachers or administrators being assaulted by irate parents?
If someone beat my kid I'd get medieval on him.
Tough Love International is an organization which, among other things, advocates for legislation mandating use of the paddle as the primary disciplinary tool in every public school in the nation.