by EnergySpin » Sun 04 Jun 2006, 07:39:19
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('killJOY', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') think married people who have children should have to either pay a fine or accept lashes ala Singapore criminal justice system, before being allowed to get divorced.
I am a child of divorce, and if neither spouse is criminal and/or abusive, a married couple should be strongly discouraged from getting divorced.
I knew a couple with children who said, "We are getting divorced" and I bashed them so hard that the woman will never speak to me again. the divorced husband/tossed out father still talks to me. But I tried real hard to prevent that breakup. I called them shitbag losers and told them they are going to hell for what they are doing to their children.
If you have kids and you plan to deprive them of a home with both mom and dad, you are a piece of garbage and I'd like to inflict corporal punishment on you, for the sake of your children, you bastard pieces of shit.
foodnotlawns, you don't have a grip on reality. Whatever your problems are, they are not caused by your parents' divorce. Whatever your problems are, you can't lay the blame at anyone else's feet. Whatever your problems are, you have to take responsibility for them.
You're in the grip of the "nurture assumption," a massive popular delusion that stems from the quackery of Freud.
Read
The Nurture Assumption by Judith Rich Harris. It just might change your outlook on your life and on parenting.
Every parent should read the book, too, for it will release them from a lot of the guilt foisted on them by the therapist witch doctors who currently control much of the mental health field. Here's a juicy quote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he idea of zero parental influence
Is it dangerous to claim that parents have no power at all (other than genetic) to shape their child's personality, intelligence, or the way he or she behaves outside the family home? More to the point, is this claim false? Was I wrong when I proposed that parents' power to do these things by environmental means is zero, nada, zilch?
A confession: When I first made this proposal ten years ago, I didn't fully believe it myself. I took an extreme position, the null hypothesis of zero parental influence, for the sake of scientific clarity. Making myself an easy target, I invited the establishment — research psychologists in the academic world — to shoot me down. I didn't think it would be all that difficult for them to do so. It was clear by then that there weren't any big effects of parenting, but I thought there must be modest effects that I would ultimately have to acknowledge.
The establishment's failure to shoot me down has been nothing short of astonishing. One developmental psychologist even admitted, one year ago on this very website, that researchers hadn't yet found proof that "parents do shape their children," but she was still convinced that they will eventually find it, if they just keep searching long enough.