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- cross-posted to:
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Corporal punishment remains legal, especially in the South. It still has its defenders. But the costs can be steep.
Corporal punishment remains legal, especially in the South. It still has its defenders. But the costs can be steep.
And it doesn’t work. Kids more wore it as a badge of honor when I was in elementary school in Louisiana.
Aren’t we glad that none of those kids sat their quietly taking it, waiting for years, found the adult’s address, every few years show up to their home.
When my family moved to another state in the 1990s, I ended up at a high school that desperately wanted to talk my parents into signing the permission slip for corporal punishment. The principal and assistant principal got involved and were very pushy.
Finally Dad told them, with a heavy sigh: “You’re trying to tell me you need to hit someone who is more mechanically inclined than anyone I’ve ever known, and yet is just as vindictive, rebellious, and angry as any other 14 year old boy. He will retaliate, and it will be very expensive and difficult to prove.”
And they never did get that form signed.
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I am glad that you, and by implication many others, think that.