pbromaghin
Subscriber
Are we off at a wild enough tangent yet?
Not yet. Keep going.
Are we off at a wild enough tangent yet?
I like Continental Europe a great deal and have travelled through it quite extensively, but like many British people I don't feel European although I know geographically Britain is in Europe and we are in the European Common Market, and I feel we should stay in it, but we are an island race and I have never really felt EuropeanInteresting, but I'm afraid more than just the final suggestion fails to resonate with me. But then again, most of my non-US experience is in the UK and they aren't really European... are they?
So many folks seem to feel that any attention from an unrelated adult male toward a child is automatically evidence of evil intent. As someone in an earlier post noted, many if not most child sexual abuse originates in the family or extended family, but receives little publicity. But we guys with cameras are suspect. And no, I have no answers. I wish I did.
Our son Morgan is a male kindergarten and first grade teacher. He's about 6' 2", really buff and an excellent, "hair on fire" teacher, voted teacher of the year by his colleagues last year. He has the same sort of concerns. Working in Title I schools he has many students who need attention, ideally from a male role model, since so many of them have absentee fathers. He has to walk a narrow line, and has to avoid more than the most casual contact.
So many folks seem to feel that any attention from an unrelated adult male toward a child is automatically evidence of evil intent. As someone in an earlier post noted, many if not most child sexual abuse originates in the family or extended family, but receives little publicity. But we guys with cameras are suspect. And no, I have no answers. I wish I did.
Yep. We've become a nation of passive-aggressive betas.Tell me if I'm off base here, but here in the America, some if not most won't confront people of suspicious behavior. We're too quick to call the cops, a lawyer or surreptitious attack someone on line. I think there's too much of a culture of complaining instead of direct action to find out what's going on. We have a culture of "Someone else is going to handle it". We just pick up the phone.
I like Continental Europe a great deal and have travelled through it quite extensively, but like many British people I don't feel European although I know geographically Britain is in Europe and we are in the European Common Market, and I feel we should stay in it, but we are an island race and I have never really felt European
UK is in a joke considered to be USA's 51st state. .
Back to the American confusion of nudity vs sexuality, I was invited to play hockey a few months ago against a team from Austria, that was on vacation touring around the US and wanted to play at the Snoopy Rink in Sonoma County.
We had no idea how good they were so we put a team together, and played them. They weren't very good but they had a girl on the team of about 25, who was the daughter of one of the guys playing. Afterwards they all came into the dressing room and I talked a couple of minutes to the girl who was sitting across from me. Her English wasn't great but I asked about their trip.
Then she proceeded to strip down naked, walk without a towel down to the shower area where there are about 4 shower heads and then shower with her team and ours.
We did a double take and tried not to be obvious and sort of left them to their shower, and got back to the locker area. She nor the rest of their team had the slightest problem with their nudity or commingling.
I thought to myself, we are so fucked up in this country. So silly and sexually repressed.
And it's not just teachers/students. My son will be starting kindergarten this fall and is going to a kids' thing at the Y a few days each week. The teacher for it is also a teacher in the school system (though in the high school). She mentioned that in school here, the kids are not allowed to give each other hugs. Period. At all. I know there are reasons for it, good ones even. But I think it comes down to people giving up on trying to put events into context. Rules have lost wiggle room based on circumstance and all must be absolute. Hugs are bad if one person doesn't want a hug, so therefore all hugs are banned. Etc .
As for accepting surveillance cameras, I think it's the potential end-use that distinguishes them from photos taken by unknown individuals with unknown intents.
I know how precious children are and they are our future, but are they over protected? Do they need wild play? Maybe kids should be coddled less. Maybe little boys and girls should know how to defend themselves?
http://www.npr.org/sections/ed/2015...of-wild-risky-play-fire-mud-hammers-and-nails
Looks like a typical backyard where I grew up.
GRHazelton. You look wistfully back at your childhood and so do I. I grew up in the 70's. But all this coddling and is not good for kids. Yes parents should protect their kids. I feel this is a result of helicopter parenting.
http://www.businessinsider.com/millennials-are-the-most-stressed-out-2015-2
Some kids today have every minute of their day scheduled with activities. They have to keep their minds occupied. What I don't get why soccer moms put AV systems in the back of minivans.
What I wonder about kids growing up today is how they will/can handle silence.
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