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Discipline for children

Is it OK to engage in sexual intercourse with a developmentally disabled adult that is in your care?

And what does this question have to do with the ethical consideration of rape versus consensual sex?

The fact that none of the anti-spanking advocates appear capable of making their point without resorting to innumerable logical fallacies and strained metaphors is quite telling.

The fact that the pro child hitting advocates appear un-capable of answering questions is quite telling.
Since I have already answered a number of questions in this thread, your little dig falls flat. But here's a free 'discussion 101' lesson for you:

Leading questions are undeserving of answers. The correct way to respond to leading questions, inflammatory language, and question-begging assumptions is to point out the fallacy of the argument, not to attempt to answer it. Treating a logical fallacy as if it were a legitimate point benefits no-one.

If you (or anyone else) can construct ONE SINGLE POST without resorting to basic logical fallacies, I will gladly answer any and all questions in that post, to the best of my ability.
 
The fact that the pro child hitting advocates appear un-capable of answering questions is quite telling.
Since I have already answered a number of questions in this thread, your little dig falls flat. But here's a free 'discussion 101' lesson for you:

Leading questions are undeserving of answers. The correct way to respond to leading questions, inflammatory language, and question-begging assumptions is to point out the fallacy of the argument, not to attempt to answer it. Treating a logical fallacy as if it were a legitimate point benefits no-one.

If you (or anyone else) can construct ONE SINGLE POST without resorting to basic logical fallacies, I will gladly answer any and all questions in that post, to the best of my ability.

So to be clear you are not willing to answer if it is ok to "Spank" a adult that is developmentally disabled to correct his behavior?
 
Since I have already answered a number of questions in this thread, your little dig falls flat. But here's a free 'discussion 101' lesson for you:

Leading questions are undeserving of answers. The correct way to respond to leading questions, inflammatory language, and question-begging assumptions is to point out the fallacy of the argument, not to attempt to answer it. Treating a logical fallacy as if it were a legitimate point benefits no-one.

If you (or anyone else) can construct ONE SINGLE POST without resorting to basic logical fallacies, I will gladly answer any and all questions in that post, to the best of my ability.

So to be clear you are not willing to answer if it is ok to "Spank" a adult that is developmentally disabled to correct his behavior?

I already did. In spite of the fact that this question is utterly irrelevant to the question of spanking children, I provided an answer - in question form.

Apples are not oranges. Children are not adults, developmentally disabled or otherwise. Black and white are not the only choices.
 
I'd like everyone reading this thread to take a look back and see what I've actually been saying. I have not been openly advocating spanking, or saying that it is the only, or best, or worst, or anything-else-at-all method of disciplining and teaching young children. Rather, my primary message has been one of proper communication, and how to best address difficult and complex issues with a high emotional content.

As a result, I have been repeatedly accused of advocating child-abuse.

Think about that for just a minute.
 
We deprive children of all sorts of rights that adults have. Children cannot buy alcohol, or tobacco. Children cannot vote, or drive a car. Children are not allowed to live on their own. Why is that? If we deprived an adult of these things, it would be illegal.
i fail to see how any of these things you listed naturally leads to "so it's OK to physically assault them."

You're either going to have to advocate that children be treated as adults in ALL areas, or admit that children and adults are fundamentally different, and that treating them differently is a rational expression and outcome of that difference. Your emotion-laden, closed-minded bigoted (and frankly silly) argument is fatally flawed.
or, argue that children having limitations on the choices they can make and the impact they can have on society has absolutely fuck-all to do with an argument about whether or not it's OK to physically assault a child.
 
Is it OK to engage in sexual intercourse with a developmentally disabled adult that is in your care?
no, it isn't - just like it isn't OK to engage in sexual intercourse with a child.
you pretty much are proving our point here.

The fact that none of the anti-spanking advocates appear capable of making their point without resorting to innumerable logical fallacies and strained metaphors is quite telling.
the fact that your entire "argument" is you being emotional and using loaded language to scream at other people for using emotional language (which simultaneously going out of your way to misrepresent what others are saying and also dodging questions and refusing to engage on the issue) is quite telling.
 
Hitting a child ...

It's like watching a roomful of adolescent males lose all capacity for reason when a pretty girl walks in. Are none of you capable of rational discussion on this issue, while avoiding basic logical fallacies?

How about this:

I'll give you that there are shades of grey involved when... making physical contact with a child. There is a difference between hugging and spanking, and definitely a difference between spanking and beating. You can spank a child and still be a good parent with good intentions. That said, there are still going to be a lot of people who still see 'spanking with good intentions' as unnecessary violence, and there has been plenty of evidence posted in this thread that it's usually more harmful than good.

How about we throw out the whole argument on whether spanking is assault, and actually try to recognize whether spanking has any real utility. So far evidence suggests that it doesn't.
 
How about we throw out the whole argument on whether spanking is assault, and actually try to recognize whether spanking has any real utility. So far evidence suggests that it doesn't.
i still want to know how pro-spanking advocates can possibly justify excusing a behavior which would be called assault if done to anyone else in any circumstance ever, other than what is evidently the popular cognitive dissonance of "oh, well they're children, so that makes it OK to assault them."
 
How about we throw out the whole argument on whether spanking is assault, and actually try to recognize whether spanking has any real utility. So far evidence suggests that it doesn't.
i still want to know how pro-spanking advocates can possibly justify excusing a behavior which would be called assault if done to anyone else in any circumstance ever, other than what is evidently the popular cognitive dissonance of "oh, well they're children, so that makes it OK to assault them."

It's definitely a relevant point.
 
i fail to see how any of these things you listed naturally leads to "so it's OK to physically assault them."

This is a Straw Man. You are attributing to me a statement which i did not make, and placing that statement in quotation marks so as to leave no doubt that you are attempting to attribute this statement to me. This is dishonest, and deserves no more than this simple act of written exposure.

You're either going to have to advocate that children be treated as adults in ALL areas, or admit that children and adults are fundamentally different, and that treating them differently is a rational expression and outcome of that difference. Your emotion-laden, closed-minded bigoted (and frankly silly) argument is fatally flawed.
or, argue that children having limitations on the choices they can make and the impact they can have on society has absolutely fuck-all to do with an argument about whether or not it's OK to physically assault a child.
Two despicable straw-man attacks in one post? Go for the record, while you're at it!
 
This is a Straw Man. You are attributing to me a statement which i did not make, and placing that statement in quotation marks so as to leave no doubt that you are attempting to attribute this statement to me. This is dishonest, and deserves no more than this simple act of written exposure.
then for once instead of spamming this thread with self-aggrandizing drivel pontificating about how outraged you are, why don't you actually post something remotely constructive to the conversation?

if you're that butt hurt over having your position reduced to "it's OK to assault kids because fuck children" then all you have to do is answer one of the two major questions that has been repeatedly asked of you (or any other pro-spanker):
1. if physically restraining an adult and pulling their pants down and spanking them would be classified as assault, how is it not assault to do that to a child?
2. what inherent quality of being a child makes it morally acceptable to perform an action which if done to any other person in any circumstance ever would be classified as assault?

saying that we don't let adults do heroin or 9 year olds buy whiskey doesn't answer the question, and getting the vapors over pretending that hitting a person is the same thing as physically stopping them from injuring themselves isn't answering the question either.
you claim to want to have a rational and intelligent discussion - so all you have to do is rationally and intelligently explain what aspect of the nature of being a child makes it OK to do something to them that would be classified as assault if you did it to anyone else under any other circumstance.

Two despicable straw-man attacks in one post? Go for the record, while you're at it!
seriously, why do you bother posting here when clearly buying and playing a tiny violin would be more to your liking?
 
i still want to know how pro-spanking advocates can possibly justify excusing a behavior which would be called assault if done to anyone else in any circumstance ever, other than what is evidently the popular cognitive dissonance of "oh, well they're children, so that makes it OK to assault them."

It's definitely a relevant point.

Not really. In fact, it's an infantile, shallow argument without merit.

Here's a scenario for you: You are at a local park. It's time to go, but your child refuses to leave. You have an urgent appointment you need to keep, and have no time for argument.

In this situation, is it acceptable to simply pick up your child and carry him/her, kicking and screaming, to the car?

If you did the same to an adult, it would be assault. But when you do it to your child, it's not considered assault. Children are not adults.
 
all you have to do is answer one of the two major questions that has been repeatedly asked of you (or any other pro-spanker):
1. if physically restraining an adult and pulling their pants down and spanking them would be classified as assault, how is it not assault to do that to a child?
2. what inherent quality of being a child makes it morally acceptable to perform an action which if done to any other person in any circumstance ever would be classified as assault.

That's one question, asked twice. And I answered it before reading this puerile drek. Now, when are you going to admit that you used numerous straw man arguments, and that doing so is a logical fallacy, rendering your argument moot?
 
In this situation, is it acceptable to simply pick up your child and carry him/her, kicking and screaming, to the car?
yes, it would. and the reason why is...

If you did the same to an adult, it would be assault. But when you do it to your child, it's not considered assault. Children are not adults.
no, it wouldn't be.
this is why your claims of wanting rational discussion are hilarious bullshit, ....

your pompousness regarding your own sense of your superiority on this subject to the contrary, you have yet to cite one study that shows a positive link between spanking and child development - numerous scientific studies have been linked showing a detrimental link between spanking and child development.
your sanctimoniousness about how above the emotional side of the argument you are aside, you have yet to answer the simplest of questions which would settle the entire matter once and for all.
 
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yes, it would. and the reason why is...

If you did the same to an adult, it would be assault. But when you do it to your child, it's not considered assault. Children are not adults.
no, it wouldn't be.
this is why your claims of wanting rational discussion are hilarious bullshit, ....

Excuse me?

You think you can walk up to your friend in the park, tell her it's time to go, and then when she refuses to leave, to drag her kicking and screaming to the car? You don't think that's assault?
 
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In years of having this discussion, not one pro-spanking person has ever been able to give me a single example of something positive that spanking accomplishes that a non-spanking approach would not also solve.
Well, I wouldn't consider myself to be "pro-spanking", because I don't think anyone with an ounce of reason or compassion is actually pro spanking. I am, however, not anti-spanking categorically. It has utility in limited scenarios. An example of something positive that the provision of physical pain can accomplish that failure to give pain cannot solve is in the development of empathy and sympathy in toddlers. Toddlers go through a stage (often between 1 and 3) where they bite and hit and kick and otherwise act out when they are unhappy. You could try to reason with a toddler, I suppose, but I doubt that's going to accomplish much. Quick and moderate retributory pain, however, acts as a means of teaching that their actions cause pain to others, and is by far the fastest method of creating awareness of the repercussions of their own actions. If a toddler bites you, bite them back - not too hard mind you, but enough to hurt. If they hit you, hit back. Follow each action up with a firm "No!" and a parental scowl, and if feasible, time in an isolated "time-out" situation. In this way, they learn that their actions cause pain to other people, as well as learning that they are socially unacceptable.


Corporal punishment may deter unwanted behavior, but not by teaching right from wrong. It teaches fear of retribution.
You can mold a dog's or a lab rat's behavior with painful stimuli just as easily, but don't think you're teaching them right from wrong.

You can impose good behavior, but not morality. Morality is an internalized ethic, not an external, enforced inhibition.
Of course you're not teaching morality; you're teaching social mores. The two are related, but not necessarily the same thing. You're teaching "this behavior is not acceptable". This is the same thing that you're teaching a dog or a cat. Consequently, it's the exact same thing that an adult dog teaches their pup when they snap at them and pin them down. It's the same thing an adult cat is teaching when they smack a kitten, or bite an ear.

You cannot begin to teach why the action is unacceptable (the basis for both morality and ethics) until the child has the capacity to understand the explanation you're giving them (for morality) and the ability to independently reason and apply those reasons (for ethics).


same escalation of violence in my childhood, it just taught me to lie first always and to be constantly manipulating my parents to not get caught.
Interesting. I was mostly only spanked for lying. I might be grounded for misbehavior, or given manual labor, or all sorts of tedious and distasteful tasks. But my rare spankings as a child were almost all for lying. Lying was by far the worst thing I could do as a child, and carried a punishment that far surpassed any other meted out by my parents.

And by the way if you can´t outwit a child and have to resort to violence, you should keep it in your pants until you learn how to use your words.
I'm quite certain that we can all outwit a toddler; I'm also quite certain that being able to outwit a toddler is irrelevant when it comes to discipline. Being smarter than them doesn't in any fashion guarantee that you're able to reason with them.

How exactly do you communicate to a toddler that their behavior is unacceptable? What do you do if you've got a toddler with a good imagination and a very strong will, who is undeterred by time-outs? How exactly do you recommend conveying to them convincingly that they need to stop pouring juice all over their infant brother while he's sleeping every time they're unsupervised for 10 seconds?

So you're saying that time-outs aren't effective because they weren't effective on you, specifically?
It stands to reason that if time-outs weren't effective on some people (including me as well) then there is a subset of people on whom they aren't effective. This they aren't effective on ALL people. So what is your alternative to time-outs?


cite one single example in all of Western culture where what you're advocating doing to children wouldn't be called assault if you did it to an adult, and we can change the entire conversation.
Adults are capable of reason where children are not. This is not a comparable situation.

However, I do notice that you limited it to "Western" culture. You've conveniently, and quite cleverly, excluded all those areas of the world that allow for corporal punishment in their criminal justice systems. In fact, it's only in relatively modern times that corporal punishment has been removed from our justice system - for a significant amount of human history corporal punishment in the form of whipping, flogging, and similar has been exactly parallel to the same actions taken with recalcitrant children. Now, of course, you're welcome to be disgusted by the actions of our ancestors, and to deride that as barbaric... but various forms of corporal punishment was used in criminal justice in the Western world into the 20th century.
 Judicial Corporal Punishment

I by no means advocate spanking children. It should be a punishment of last resort. By the same argument, I by no means advocate engaging in war; it too should be an engagement of last resort and only turned to when all other negotiations have failed. But I would be naive and negligent to suggest pacifism in the face of an overt aggressor... and I maintain that there may be times when a spanking may be the functionally appropriate action to take.
 
Excuse me?

You think you can walk up to your friend in the park, tell her it's time to go, and then when she refuses to leave, to drag her kicking and screaming to the car? You don't think that's assault?
and you think you can just walk up to a random kid in a park, tell them it's time to go, and then when they refuse to leave drag them kicking and screaming to the car?

"your child" is not synonymous with "your friend" - if you want to equate it to an adult relationship it's closer to "a person under your legal guardianship", in which case it is in fact legal to physically coerce a person to obey reasonable instructions given in the conduct of your duties as a guardian.
 
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