Redneck Voodoo
Hall of Famer
- Joined
- Jul 12, 2014
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Want to know why Adrian Peterson is playing Sunday?
2-1 teams have 55% percent of making playoffs.
1-2 teams have less than 25% chance.
uh huh.
Want to know why Adrian Peterson is playing Sunday?
2-1 teams have 55% percent of making playoffs.
1-2 teams have less than 25% chance.
Sorry, but parental discipline can be a very subjective topic and you or anyone else on this board has zero right to say what is or is not excessive. In Texas a parent is allowed to discipline their child and the judicial system will determine if it's excessive.
You can have your opinion on what is or is not excessive, but that doesn't make it wrong or illegal for someone else to believe different.
As for my lynch mob "mentality" (not action) comment. Let's use this board as an example. There were/are potentially thousands of kids right here in AZ being abused and CPS F'd it up big time. Yet, that thread garnered a measly 3 pages of which several posts diverted to taxes. AP's thread is 12 pages and growing.
Point is he's rich and famous so there's going to be more attention to him, but none of use have any right to judge him on how he disciplines his kids. Let the law do that.
There should be more outrage when a parent fails their children than when an overworked system fails them. If we didn't have so many Adrian Petersons in this world, we wouldn't need CPS in the first place.
Chris Kluwe had a valid point about Vikings management.
You could not be more wrong. Just because a back-assward area thinks it is ok, doesn't make it ok. This is the same mentality that believed owning slaves was ok, and whipping them to give discipline was ok.
Parents have the right to discipline, but not abuse. Beating a child with a switch is abuse, plain and simple. Nothing subjective about it.
Sorry, but parental discipline can be a very subjective topic and you or anyone else on this board has zero right to say what is or is not excessive. In Texas a parent is allowed to discipline their child and the judicial system will determine if it's excessive.
As for my lynch mob "mentality" (not action) comment. Let's use this board as an example. There were/are potentially thousands of kids right here in AZ being abused and CPS F'd it up big time. Yet, that thread garnered a measly 3 pages of which several posts diverted to taxes. AP's thread is 12 pages and growing.
none of use have any right to judge him on how he disciplines his kids. Let the law do that.
So whipping as a form of punishment is part of southern black culture??? That seems so incredibly messed up.
Just because something can be called subjective doesn't mean it's so. Leaving bleed marks on your child is not subjective. It might be to the person committing the act but that doesn't mean it is to normal human beings. I am sure most thieves on some level say they are doing it for good reasons (i.e. pay bills) etc. That doesn't mean the act of doing so is subjective one bit.
It most definitely is. Growing up in early childhood with my father that was from New Orleans, it happens nearly every day with nearly every kid in the neighborhood. This type of discipline is usually the first type that is tried in this culture. I can attest.
I often wonder how being hit with switches, belts, and paddles in my early childhood has affected me in the long term. I'd personally say that they helped me, a lot. I know I turned out ok. Every kid reacts differently to different types of discipline though. Food for thought.
Sure it is. Just because you think it is abhorrent, doesn't mean the guy next to you does. Pretty much the definition of subjective. Don't you think?
You could not be more wrong. Just because a back-assward area thinks it is ok, doesn't make it ok. This is the same mentality that believed owning slaves was ok, and whipping them to give discipline was ok.
Parents have the right to discipline, but not abuse. Beating a child with a switch is abuse, plain and simple. Nothing subjective about it.
Sure it is. Just because you think it is abhorrent, doesn't mean the guy next to you does. Pretty much the definition of subjective. Don't you think?
Making a 4 year old kid's scrotum bleed is abhorrent. Not subjective. Not a judgment call.
So what if the guy next to you thinks that rape is justified because she dressed in a certain way or that dragging someone behind you in a car is okay because it's part of the culture? Not everyone has to agree on something for it to be clearly wrong.
Making a 4 year old kid's scrotum bleed is abhorrent. Not subjective. Not a judgment call.
It is abhorrent, but it absolutely is subjective. Peterson in this case went over the line. My point is that the hitting the kid with a switch alone isn't over the line IMO.
It is abhorrent, but it absolutely is subjective. Peterson in this case went over the line. My point is that the hitting the kid with a switch alone isn't over the line IMO.
The Arizona Self Righteous Sports Fans Network.
It is abhorrent, but it absolutely is subjective. Peterson in this case went over the line. My point is that the hitting the kid with a switch alone isn't over the line IMO.
A four year old? There is no situation where hitting a 4 year old with what is basically a whip is anything but flat out abuse.