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Violence from normal people?

#1 User is offline   JoAnneM 

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Posted 2009-April-11, 13:45

I have been thinking about all these acts of violence from seemingly normal people. Fathers killing their families, employees killing co-workers, etc. Usually these people have lost jobs, homes, money, their "base".

I think we (society, not me) are reaping the rewards of not teaching children and young people to fail. You can't hurt their "self esteem" so everyone is given a trophy whether they come in first or last. There are schools where no grades are given because they don't want kids to be "judged". I read that in the Great Depression acts of violence actually decreased while in this recession violence is on the increase.

Maybe we should rethink how we are raising our little darlings who can't be punished, scolded, spanked, or told they weren't as good as someone else.
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#2 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2009-April-11, 14:48

I am not sure I buy into the causal relationship that you are suggesting. I would say thought hat childhood has changed greatly in the sixty years since I was a child.

An example:

My granddaughter, now 16, will be visiting England for a week this summer. Last summer she went to Spain for four weeks. A fine adventure I am sure but also very organized. She will have few opportunities to exercise major independent judgment.

When I was 13, a friend and I planned a bike trip. We managed to get our parents permission, we loaded a tent and cooking supplies on our bikes and headed out for a few days or maybe a week, I forget. Our parents knew in general terms where we were going and when we would be back but we were, basically, on our own. We camped on the St. Croix river. Not England, not Spain, but it was great.

Which is better? I dunno. I liked it my way. it's possible we learned a little more about coping with the unforeseen, but mostly I just enjoyed my childhood. Kids today have great opportunities, all very safe and structured. Possibly I had more fun.

Either way, I didn't shoot anyone and I don't think that my granddaughter will either. I don't have much to say about how someone gets to the state where he would do so.


About spanking: My younger daughter had a very contentious streak in her. On some issue I got frustrated and yelled at her "Do you want a spanking". She put her hands on her hips, glared back and said "Yeahh!". I'm very proud of her for that. She hasn't shot anyone either.
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#3 User is offline   y66 

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Posted 2009-April-11, 14:52

In The Lay of The Land by Richard Ford, the 50+ something year old protagonist speculates with pride of parental accomplishment and some irony that this is what his extremely savvy daughter learned at Harvard -- how to fail - and that this had prepared her for just about anything she would encounter in life.

Yeah, good idea to start teaching this earlier.

re: violence from normal people -- I'm not saying I'm normal, but a few months ago I was driving on a 2-lane road through a swanky suburb and some guy in a Jaguar approaching from a side road looked like he was having second thoughts about whether or not the stop sign he was seeing in front of him applied to him (it did). I didn't slow down. Didn't speed up either. I just thought, dude, I hope you have side airbags. Not my finest moment behind the wheel. Maybe he was a smug, entitled motherf------, or maybe he was just a guy who liked nice cars having a rough day and a moment of not thinking clearly. Next time I'll slow down.
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#4 User is offline   helene_t 

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Posted 2009-April-11, 15:16

What stroke me when I moved to England was how polite children and even teeners are here. I cannot help linking it to the more traditional (authoritarian) child raising over here. Then again it could just be rural Lancaster versus urban Randstad and not so much an issue of countries.

Read "the nurture assumption". The impact of child raising has been grossly over-estimated.
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#5 User is offline   luke warm 

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Posted 2009-April-11, 15:44

i think we have gone too far with the self-esteem thing... in some sporting events nowadays, they don't have winners and losers for fear of damaging someone's young psyche... to me, this is rubbish... i don't know when it started, but it's gotten worse and will never be like it was
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#6 User is offline   helene_t 

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Posted 2009-April-11, 16:54

Oh btw, w.r.t. self esteem I agree with Jimmy and JoAnne.

Spanking seems immoral to me but whether it is good, bad or neutral for the kids' development I have no clue.
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#7 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2009-April-11, 17:27

Quote

Spanking seems immoral to me


Naw....it'll just make you go blind. :)
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."
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#8 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2009-April-12, 07:48

luke warm, on Apr 11 2009, 04:44 PM, said:

i think we have gone too far with the self-esteem thing... in some sporting events nowadays, they don't have winners and losers for fear of damaging someone's young psyche... to me, this is rubbish... i don't know when it started, but it's gotten worse and will never be like it was

There are extremes here. My granddaughter's first soccer team, when she was quite young, was organized around tis "no one wins" theme. She quickly moved on. Later, she got a concussion while playing. Her coach took her out of that game but saw no reason she could not play the next game. Her father disagreed and so she lost her position.

Again I contrast this with my own childhood. I would take a ball and bat down to the playground, or in my younger days just out front in the street, and see if anyone wanted to play. We understood that someone wins and someone loses, and we understood that if we got bashed in the head we should take a break. It takes adult input to put these obvious truths aside.

The Washington Post magazine has its annual education issue today and of course there is an article about getting into college. Good God. Here is how it went for me: I decided I was interested in going so I talked to my parents who said if I wanted to go I could live at home rent free. I figured I might join the Navy but really wanted to go on so I filled out an application to the University of Minnesota, but no other places. Late in my senior year I was told I had been given a scholarship that I hadn't applied for and hadn't heard of. So I went to the U.

There was some Dianne Keaton movie years ago that had some woomen with their toddlers at the sandbox, all fretting about whether their kids would get into the proper preschool. It hardly seems an exaggeration.
Ken
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#9 User is offline   PassedOut 

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Posted 2009-April-12, 08:32

kenberg, on Apr 11 2009, 03:48 PM, said:

About spanking: My younger daughter had a very contentious streak in her. On some issue I got frustrated and yelled at her "Do you want a spanking". She put her hands on her hips, glared back and said "Yeahh!". I'm very proud of her for that. She hasn't shot anyone either.

LOL.

Read that to Constance and she got a big kick out of it too. It's wonderfully remarkable how kids all come with their own personalities.
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#10 User is offline   hrothgar 

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Posted 2009-April-12, 08:55

JoAnneM, on Apr 11 2009, 10:45 PM, said:

I have been thinking about all these acts of violence from seemingly normal people. Fathers killing their families, employees killing co-workers, etc. Usually these people have lost jobs, homes, money, their "base".

I think we (society, not me) are reaping the rewards of not teaching children and young people to fail. You can't hurt their "self esteem" so everyone is given a trophy whether they come in first or last. There are schools where no grades are given because they don't want kids to be "judged". I read that in the Great Depression acts of violence actually decreased while in this recession violence is on the increase.

Maybe we should rethink how we are raising our little darlings who can't be punished, scolded, spanked, or told they weren't as good as someone else.

I don't think the problem is primarily with the way people are "raising their little darlings", but rather, with the way with all y'all lived your lives...

Your generation set a pretty piss poor example. In particular, the obsession with short term gratification at the expensive of long term investment is horrific -

Crippling education spending so you could all enjoy your tax cuts...
Passing massive deficits on the the next generations...
Destroying the environment...

I think this type of example has much more of an impact that whether your beating your kids enough
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#11 User is offline   PassedOut 

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Posted 2009-April-12, 09:58

hrothgar, on Apr 12 2009, 09:55 AM, said:

I don't think the problem is primarily with the way people are "raising their little darlings", but rather, with the way with all y'all lived your lives...

Your generation set a pretty piss poor example. In particular, the obsession with short term gratification at the expensive of long term investment is horrific -

Crippling education spending so you could all enjoy your tax cuts...
Passing massive deficits on the the next generations...
Destroying the environment...

I think this type of example has much more of an impact that whether your beating your kids enough

As despicable as the things you mention have been (and I agree with you there) I don't see the direct connection with random acts of violence.
The growth of wisdom may be gauged exactly by the diminution of ill temper. — Friedrich Nietzsche
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
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#12 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2009-April-12, 10:23

"You want to know why I did what I did, there's just a meanness sir, in this world"

The Springsteen reference goes back to the fifties. It would be good to get people help when they need it, even better to fix conditions that create hopelessness, but whatever my failings, and I have many, I am not taking the responsibility for some nut who grabs a gun and goes ona killing spree.
Ken
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#13 User is offline   TimG 

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Posted 2009-April-12, 10:38

I was recently reading a thread (on another forum) about butchering home grown chickens and how to deal with telling young kids the truth about where meat comes from.

One suggestion was "say how it's [the chicken's] 'purpose in life' and of course play up the 'better place in heaven' thing." Seems to me that the lesson there is that killing something (or someone) is good because the something (or someone) that is dead will end up happier.

Someone else told their kids "we will keep the 'nice' ones (the hens) and eat the 'mean and nasty ones' (the roos)." Another good lesson: mean things deserve to die.

On another front, I think my kids are exposed to more violence on TV and in movies than I was as a kid and expect that I was exposed to much, much more than my parents were when they were kids. I also think that the exposure cannot fail to desensitize to a degree.

How many people were killed in Psycho? I think two. How many in one of the Halloween movies?

I don't mean to blame things on the entertainment industry, but I can't help but think that the TV and movies we are exposed to is part of the problem.
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#14 User is offline   luke warm 

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Posted 2009-April-12, 11:43

hrothgar, on Apr 12 2009, 09:55 AM, said:

JoAnneM, on Apr 11 2009, 10:45 PM, said:

I have been thinking about all these acts of violence from seemingly normal people.  Fathers killing their families, employees killing co-workers, etc.  Usually these people have lost jobs, homes, money, their "base".

I think we (society, not me) are reaping the rewards of not teaching children and young people to fail.  You can't hurt their "self esteem" so everyone is given a trophy whether they come in first or last.  There are schools where no grades are given because they don't want kids to be "judged".    I read that in the Great Depression acts of violence actually decreased while in this recession violence is on the increase.

Maybe we should rethink how we are raising our little darlings who can't be punished, scolded, spanked, or told they weren't as good as someone else.

I don't think the problem is primarily with the way people are "raising their little darlings", but rather, with the way with all y'all lived your lives...

Your generation set a pretty piss poor example. In particular, the obsession with short term gratification at the expensive of long term investment is horrific -

Crippling education spending so you could all enjoy your tax cuts...
Passing massive deficits on the the next generations...
Destroying the environment...

I think this type of example has much more of an impact that whether your beating your kids enough

well luckily we have your generation to set everything straight... now there'll be peace on earth, clean air and water, and a thermostat in the white house (for global temperatures, doncha know)
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#15 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2009-April-12, 11:58

TimG, on Apr 12 2009, 11:38 AM, said:

I was recently reading a thread (on another forum) about butchering home grown chickens and how to deal with telling young kids the truth about where meat comes from.

One suggestion was "say how it's [the chicken's] 'purpose in life' and of course play up the 'better place in heaven' thing." Seems to me that the lesson there is that killing something (or someone) is good because the something (or someone) that is dead will end up happier.

Someone else told their kids "we will keep the 'nice' ones (the hens) and eat the 'mean and nasty ones' (the roos)." Another good lesson: mean things deserve to die.

On another front, I think my kids are exposed to more violence on TV and in movies than I was as a kid and expect that I was exposed to much, much more than my parents were when they were kids. I also think that the exposure cannot fail to desensitize to a degree.

How many people were killed in Psycho? I think two. How many in one of the Halloween movies?

I don't mean to blame things on the entertainment industry, but I can't help but think that the TV and movies we are exposed to is part of the problem.

I go along with much of what you say here. One of the differences in entertainment now is that kids just see so much. Every Saturday I went to the movies. Sometimes I went in between. I don't think the main difference is that I watched Hopalong Cassidy and the Cisco Kid, I also saw Key Largo and various war movies. Someone getting sizzled by a flame thrower made an impression but mostly I was doing things that were not passive intake of stuff, however violent or non-violent.

Of course not all kids are sitting on their butts watching tv but many are. It may not make them into violent nuts but it can't be doing them much good.
Ken
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#16 User is offline   jdonn 

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Posted 2009-April-12, 12:17

PassedOut, on Apr 12 2009, 10:58 AM, said:

hrothgar, on Apr 12 2009, 09:55 AM, said:

I don't think the problem is primarily with the way people are "raising their little darlings", but rather, with the way with all y'all lived your lives...

Your generation set a pretty piss poor example.  In particular, the obsession with short term gratification at the expensive of long term investment is horrific -

Crippling education spending so you could all enjoy your tax cuts...
Passing massive deficits on the the next generations...
Destroying the environment...

I think this type of example has much more of an impact that whether your beating your kids enough

As despicable as the things you mention have been (and I agree with you there) I don't see the direct connection with random acts of violence.

I think there is a direct connection to poverty, which certainly has a direct connection to violence.
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#17 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2009-April-12, 16:31

I haven't noticed too many "random" acts - mostly the violence is directed at a particular groups of people.

Drones hunting al-Qaeda by dropping bombs on Afghan wedding parties - now there is some random violence for you.
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#18 User is offline   jdonn 

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Posted 2009-April-12, 17:03

That was also a random point to stick in this thread.
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#19 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2009-April-12, 17:56

jdonn, on Apr 12 2009, 06:03 PM, said:

That was also a random point to stick in this thread.

When I think of random acts of violence I think of Charles Whitman back in the 1960s who climbed into the tower in Austin, Texas, and shot people on the street - truly indiscriminate killing, or the guy who drove his truck into the Luby's restaurant and then shot total strangers.

I am not seeing that type of violence nowadays - the killings seem to me less random - classmates, coworkers, ex-coworkers, families, etc.

To me, the militaries drone bombings have more in common with the indiscriminate Texas tower shooter than recent domestic killings - so I somewhat disagree with the concept of random violence by normal people.

I would concur with increased violence by normal people.
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Posted 2009-April-13, 03:17

I agree the root of the problem is education. Not only formal education but the one received/given at home.

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Also, he rates to not have a heart void when he leads the 3.


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Besides playing for fun, most people also like to play bridge to win


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