Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: Iceman on June 17, 2008, 07:24:26 AM Just because "they" do it, doesnt mean "you" need to, or make it right. This acceptance of others is crap. Set the example. Don't just give in to your neighbors poor decision making.That's exactly my point... let others raise their children in a manner they see fit. Larry spends quality time with his children, he makes no excuses for them and holds them accountable for their actions (and I'm sure their words)... he is not concerned with the 'acceptance of others', he's concerned with raising children who can be their own people. This is not 'poor decision making'... rather, it's a rational decision to disregard some of the conventional wisdom (oxymoron) which you seem to favor. Again... constant foul language around children probably isn't the best idea... that I'll conceed. However, the good far offsets the bad in this situation. Bad language falls far down on the list of things I don't want my children exposed to... things like accountability, free thinking, decision making, and consiquences are a much bigger concern to me. I'm not saying it should be perfectly acceptable to have a class full of 9 year olds dropping F-Bombs... but that's where the learning of consiquences and accountability come in. We've learned where those words are acceptable, and where they're not... children will learn the same thing very quickly too, unless their parents and other authority figures don't hold them accountable (which is the true crime here). Poor parenting isn't defined by language, it's defined by results... untill we've all raised perfect kids, I think we should keep the rocks inside our glass houses. ~Josh
Just because "they" do it, doesnt mean "you" need to, or make it right. This acceptance of others is crap. Set the example. Don't just give in to your neighbors poor decision making.
You keep saying that the good outweighs the bad, but why does it have to be both? Can't he take his children hunting, place upon them responsibility, etc., while at the same time demonstrating self-control and good behavior/language?You're saying that because A is more important than B, B doesn't matter at all. I'm saying that you can do A and B at the same time...which is the better decision.And buddy, last time I checked, teaching your kids good social skills was a CONSERVATIVE aspect of good parenting. If it was a CA mindset, they wouldn't care about it at all...RW
I am saying the good out weighs the bad... and why does there have to be bad? Even if he never used a bad word... we'd probably find something else to fault him for... no life jacket in the boat, or no hunter orange, or not wearing a helmet on a 4-wheeler... whatever. Because, it's always easier to tear stuff down than to edify it, and if you look for the bad... you'll find it... always (just ask Michael Moore).
If my kid tells your kid to F-off... then it is what it is... teach your kid that words are just that... words. I'd rather my son tell some other kid to F-off... than to haul off a slug the kid in the nose. I'd also be sure that whatever consiquences were handed down, for either, would be upheld and/or magnified. If you want to talk that way as a child, fine... but, also understand that your words and actions have consiquences... the sooner they learn that, the better off they'll be.