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justdrew wrote:
what she needs is a steady stream of friendly adults to talk to and help structuring her creative output, keep her busy drawing and making stories and building. It seems like the environment is not right and I think she'd be far better off in a different environment, with more people around who will engage with her rather than 'deal' and 'cope' with her. but I've no idea how she and her family can get to that place, wherever it is.
Today, approximately 780,000 children in the US are caught up in the court and child welfare maze because they are unable to live safely at home. Imagine what it would be like to lose your parents, not because of something you did, but because they can’t—or won’t—take care of you. Now, into these children’s lives come dozens of strangers: police, foster parents, therapists, social workers, judges, lawyers, and more. Hopefully, one of these strangers is a CASA volunteer.
CASA volunteers are appointed by judges to watch over and advocate for abused and neglected children, to make sure they don’t get lost in the overburdened legal and social service system or languish in an inappropriate group or foster home. They stay with each case until it is closed, and the child is placed in a safe, permanent home. For many abused children, their CASA volunteer will be the one constant adult presence—the one adult who cares only for them.
Last year, more than 68,000 CASA volunteers served more than 240,000 abused and neglected children through 1,018 program offices. CASA volunteers have helped more than two million abused children since the first program was established in 1977.
See the results of independent research documenting the value of CASA advocacy.
Learn about current employment opportunities with National CASA and throughout the CASA/GAL network.
http://www.nationalcasa.org/about_us/index.html
8bitagent wrote:But what happens if a child is born a bad seed? Im just saying...what if no horrific drugs or "therapy" can help a child destined to be bad and destructive?
justdrew wrote:8bitagent wrote:But what happens if a child is born a bad seed? Im just saying...what if no horrific drugs or "therapy" can help a child destined to be bad and destructive?
the party political machines have always been the traditional dumping ground for these rare cases.
ok, that was mean. sorry.
as far as I know such very rare cases get locked up for life, and tranquilized for manageability. not a nice outcome. but some are able to "pass" and that is likely where some serial killers come from.
So, seen any good movies lately? That A Beautiful Mind is like totally inspiring. It moved me to tears. Psychotics are kinda scary, but what ya gonna do?!? And that Russell Crowe is sooooo cute!! He made me wanna hug him!!! But still, kinda creepy, the whole thing. I'm more of a romcom kind of a gal, to be honest...
Are you married? I'm a progressive. I think Jon Stewart is like totally kewl. And that Michael Schofield is like just incredibly brave and inspiring!!! I just saw him on Oprah!!!! He gave his life for his little girl, that's what he said at her funeral. It made me cry.
Do you have children?
mentalgongfu2 wrote:So, seen any good movies lately? That A Beautiful Mind is like totally inspiring. It moved me to tears. Psychotics are kinda scary, but what ya gonna do?!? And that Russell Crowe is sooooo cute!! He made me wanna hug him!!! But still, kinda creepy, the whole thing. I'm more of a romcom kind of a gal, to be honest...
Are you married? I'm a progressive. I think Jon Stewart is like totally kewl. And that Michael Schofield is like just incredibly brave and inspiring!!! I just saw him on Oprah!!!! He gave his life for his little girl, that's what he said at her funeral. It made me cry.
Do you have children?
Yes, it is that condescending tripe such as the above to which I was referring with my earlier name-calling. It is designed for the sole purpose of being an asshole; not to advance any point or line of inquiry.
The last few pages of this thread have been just absolutely fucking incredible, and incredibly instructive.
Back to the topic : I've been trying to figure out how to describe what it is that bugs me about the original article
agitprop wrote:Dude, if this kid was born to just about anyone else she'd be institutionalized permanently or pitched off a cliff.
http://rigorousintuition.ca/board/viewt ... 104#272104
MacCruiskeen wrote:One thing to note about Michael and Susan Schofield is that they are of course living in a (specifically Anglo-American) social and cultural context in which various kinds of child abuse are regarded as absolutely normal and necessary. "Smacking" them, "spanking" them, giving them "time-outs", sending them to the "naughty seat", rewarding them for "good behaviour", punishing them for "bad behaviour", depriving them of meals, forcing them to eat, threatening them, shouting at them, ignoring them, controlling them, etc., etc., etc. In short: "disciplining" them, and "teaching them right from wrong", i.e. making their children's lives a misery for much if not all of the time.
I have been wondering why Michael Schofield has been getting so much almost-adulatory support from so many other parents, and it strikes me as very likely that most if not all of those parents are routinely abusing their children in the socially-accepted ways listed above.
agitprop wrote:What's wrong with a time-out?
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