Thursday, 28 January 2016
Sex Ed & Parental Respect
Dear Sunny Hostin, lawyer, journalist, columnist, social commentator,
Your child is a banana, and it's ripening fast! Before you know it, it's ripe. Puberty is here. The window to educate your child on the REAL words for his or her body parts is closed and sealed shut. The time for you to lay the groundwork and basic knowledge about sex in your own way, is over. You missed it. But it's ok, they learned from someone else.
I just watched you on the View argue the detriment of sex ed in schools because you feel it lacks "respect". Can we talk about that? Can we look at it from a different angle?
I'm assuming that you feel schools should respect a parent's right to educate their child themselves. I feel the direction you're going with this, and under different circumstances I'd make a sign and march for your right to raise your child as you wish. You taught your child where his nose is, so you want to teach him where his sexual organs are too. I get that. Thing is, are you going to also teach him about the many other sexual organs out there that differ from his?
Your stance shocks me to be honest. You're a lawyer. You're a journalist. Your entire career surrounds defending, trying, and reporting on individuals based on personal mistakes they've made. The world is full of humans who use poor judgement, think incorrectly, and are ignorant about the facts of life. I mean, there are still people out there who believe they won't get pregnant if they have sex standing up. Do you think that we should allow said people to be the ones explaining why those two guys are holding hands in the mall? Why that man is dressed like a woman? Where babies come from? What this tingling is between my legs?
I mean, several courts of law and society has ruled that all sexual orientations are legal and must be tolerated. Therefore teaching our youth about the many transgender orientations out there and teaching them what their reproductive organs are for is crucial. There must be a standard of knowledge that is taught across the board like any other subject in school. Sex Ed in schools is how we create tolerant societies. Sex Ed is how we protect kids from abuse.
Fact is, by the time you and other parents like you are ready to have this talk, your child has already learned a lot about sex. That's right. If mom and dad don't teach it, and the school doesn't teach it, then kids get together and learn about it from one another and their older peers. And yes, you may be one of the few parents who do inform their kids, but what about the other parents? Or more importantly, what about the other kids?
Tuesday, 19 January 2016
Gabor Maté & The Myth of Normalcy
Please watch this VIDEO
Normalcy is a myth.
Before the pills pills pills started getting pushed pushed pushed, those
of us with mental illness were more accepted. It was understood that
we were different and no one suggested drugging any of us to make
us more like our peers.
As Dr. Maté states, the best place in the world to be schizophrenic is a
small town in Africa where you are not medicated, but accepted instead.
Nowadays though, it seems that we can't have 'different' kids in class
with the 'normal' kids.
So we medicate them.
So we sedate them.
So we zombify them with pills.
Inclusion isn't real if you're altering one side to fit in with the other.
We change their body's chemistry to fit in with the others for 6 hours a day.
Do we do this for their good?
Do we do this for the good of their peers?
Do we do this for the good of the teachers and EA's?
What about the other 18 hours?
Do "school-to-community" programs in schools encourage the
over-drugging of kids?
Is it time to create alternative schools that don't require or (perhaps even)
allow chemical medications? Schools where the lunch menu is as important as
the curriculum. Schools where being INDIVIDUAL is almost a requirement.
I think yes.
Stop creating the box in which to fit the kids.
Let them create their own boxes to fit into! Even if they're in them alone.
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