Just reposting this for the new page, lol : )
Go out and look at the bogans who have also been never pushed academically by their parents and fail in life and keep impregnating women and put pressure on the health system due to their stupidity.
That is why I support more the Asian style because it's forceful.
I disagree entirely. I'm not sure if you realise it, but a lot of these individuals actually have worthwhile, common sense professions that are critical to society. Where would we be if everyone was an economist, or a mathematician, or writer? Nowhere.
And I thought it was usually us caucasians who stereotyped other groups...
I'm a strong proponent of libertarianism, that is, the right of the individual to free thought and action.
If children are appropriately educated and treated as equals, they are, as individuals, able to make the decisions that will lead them along their chosen path. It's enabling in that it makes you responsible for your own life, and you become used to thinking logically about any choices you may encounter.
For instance, at the end of year 10 I had the choice of whether to drop out and take up a trade or continue through til the HSC. I chose, entirely of my own volition, to continue and complete the HSC and then to attend university afterward; not because my parents forced me to, but rather because I'd identified the direction I'd like to take in life and knew I was entirely capable of achieving my goals.
The same logical thought process can be applied to any choice in life. For instance, a study published in The Lancet mapped two key attributes (dependence, physical harm) of a number of common legal and illegal drugs. Unsurprisingly, LEGAL DRUG alcohol had a higher potential for abuse and causing physical harm than a number of other ILLEGAL DRUGS such as khat, cannabis, LSD and ecstasy.
Somehow, the idea of drinking until you vomit and pass out is socially acceptable, but popping a pill of ecstasy is not. Tell me where the logic in this is.
I know it seems as though I'm going off on a tangent, but the same idea applies to both my examples. Rather than controlling someone and making it impossible for them to do certain things, why not teach them why these things aren't a good idea and leave the final decision up to them?
The fostering of strong values and a solid appraise of logic in children and teenagers will create responsible, capable, and intelligent adults.
• attend a sleepover I've never done this.
Doesn't it feel like you're missing a chunk of your childhood? I mean, some of my best memories are of sneaking out at 2am to trek half way across town to retrieve a stash of alcohol, meet up with some girls, and then to sit on the still warm tarmac under a streetlight, playing spin-the-bottle and sipping luke-warm UDLs.
Gosh, those were the days :' )