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maj. tom wrote:Do you realize that the the increase in crime today was actually seeded about 15-20 years ago when corporal punishment was removed from schools by a woman in charge in the government at the time?
Since then the discipline structure that the British had put in place has slowed eroded away with no proper social programmes and family education to replace it. Well there have always been a lot of people who made children and didn't know how to mind them, but most these kids got straight when they were sent to school under a strict principal and dean of discipline. There has been nothing in place since. Just gangs which provides everything a young boy wants today.
I don't think beating a child beyond discipline is good (discipline and abuse are two different things, and let's be serious, nobody is scared of a woman principal or dean of discipline), but the fear of it keeps them straight. Religion can't hold water these days to encourage them on a proper path. And the people who argue against corporal punishment usually don't understand how hooligans behave compared to their good natured children that they raised so well.
So here we are in Trinidad today: an 11 year old boy still in Standard 2, imagine that frustration, saying he feeling to stab somebody today, and stopped just short of doing it. Constantly disrupting classes and bullying the other children. Talking about a cry for help! Everything failed this boy in his education and discipline, at home and at school. How do you expect a child to act if there are no boundaries set?
rspann wrote:As far as I concerned we have it nice here , we don't even know what hardship is. I don't think hardship reach as yet. Just go see the lifestyle of the same ones that claim hardship. Big boxes of BBQ, for the whole family, KFC selling normal, food franchises do studies and that is why more opening up , people shopping , malls going up because money flowing, no old cars on the road. Nobody really seeing trouble here. Yeah, we know it not as nice as before, but tell me what hardship there is in Trinidad? No bombs flying , the killings are isolated and related to particular situations. Stay out of those situations and you relatively safe. Here just like anywhere else, where you could go that life is drastically better than here? Trinidad still nice., Trinidad is a paradise.
maj. tom wrote:Do you realize that the the increase in crime today was actually seeded about 15-20 years ago when corporal punishment was removed from schools by a woman in charge in the government at the time?
Since then the discipline structure that the British had put in place has slowed eroded away with no proper social programmes and family education to replace it. Well there have always been a lot of people who made children and didn't know how to mind them, but most these kids got straight when they were sent to school under a strict principal and dean of discipline. There has been nothing in place since. Just gangs which provides everything a young boy wants today.
I don't think beating a child beyond discipline is good (discipline and abuse are two different things, and let's be serious, nobody is scared of a woman principal or dean of discipline), but the fear of it keeps them straight. Religion can't hold water these days to encourage them on a proper path. And the people who argue against corporal punishment usually don't understand how hooligans behave compared to their good natured children that they raised so well.
So here we are in Trinidad today: an 11 year old boy still in Standard 2, imagine that frustration, saying he feeling to stab somebody today, and stopped just short of doing it. Constantly disrupting classes and bullying the other children. Talking about a cry for help! Everything failed this boy in his education and discipline, at home and at school. How do you expect a child to act if there are no boundaries set?
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