National Protest and 'disband the cops' discussion (please review page 1)

More info of the rioters that were shot/killed in Kenosha:

The 3 shot (2 killed) in #Kenosha, Wisc. at the BLM riot have been identified. Joseph Rosenbaum, 36, was the first one killed. Video allegedly shows him chasing teen shooter & throwing something at him. Rosenbaum was a registered sex offender for a sex crime involving a minor. https://t.co/up1VgDyrgZ
 
^Shithead #1 was at the gas station minutes before, calling the milita geared up people that were protecting infrastructure "ni@#a", and yelling "point your gun at me"... He won the grand prize that night.

Not sure if everyone caught that video.

When my oldest son was younger, probably about 14, he got a little big for his pants. In front of the rest of his siblings he called me out and wanted to get a little sporty. So I followed through and smacked him down pretty hard. After that he knew where I stood. Credibility is everything.
 
^Notice at the end of the last video on the page, the kid walks straight up to the police car to turn himself in and they ignore him. Then he backs up like the officer is pointing a gun at him or something.
 
^Shithead #1 was at the gas station minutes before, calling the milita geared up people that were protecting infrastructure "ni@#a", and yelling "point your gun at me"... He won the grand prize that night.

Not sure if everyone caught that video.
Yeah, agree. Although I'm not 100% certain, but I think the video and confrontation you're referring to tool place the night before?

Nonetheless, careful what you wish for, you just might get it.
 
How quickly you can go from woke to un-woke when someone fights back.

I think that this is a foundational, fundamental part of it: people have become so comfortable with running their mouths off on social media with no repercussions, they are actually surprised when there ARE repercussions in the real world. It's easy to be a woke cyber-bully from the confines of your computer screen.
 
When my oldest son was younger, probably about 14, he got a little big for his pants. In front of the rest of his siblings he called me out and wanted to get a little sporty. So I followed through and smacked him down pretty hard. After that he knew where I stood. Credibility is everything.


Unrelated to the thread but we were just talking about this at work, fewer and fewer parents any more are willing to discipline their kids. Anecdotally there is a 45 year old mom that lets her 12 year old hit, curse at her, and say derogatory comments in public about her.

My mom is now 50, I have 12 inches of height on her and out weigh her by about 50 pounds, I still fear my mothers backhand or worse a shoe being thrown.
 
Unrelated to the thread but we were just talking about this at work, fewer and fewer parents any more are willing to discipline their kids. Anecdotally there is a 45 year old mom that lets her 12 year old hit, curse at her, and say derogatory comments in public about her.
The changing social climate in the West around corporal discipline, along with the increased awareness of the very real legal risks to delivering any form of it in public, are probably the two biggest contributors to this change you're seeing in parenting behavior.
 
10-11ish years ago my 6ft 2 step-brother was being a dick to my special needs sister and my mother slapped the shit out of him. He called the cops, they came up and saw the difference in height and weight and left. Told his punk ass to behave.

I went through OBC with a Mississippi State trooper, he tells a story about how he caught a 16 yr old drinking under a bridge with some old guys, knew the kid's dad and called him up. His dad rolls up to take custody and asks: you gonna arrest me if I hit my kid? He goes naw, can I watch? And the kid gets a beating.

Telling you, that the lack of corporal punishment is having a severe effect on society today. The lack of fearing your parents etc.
 
Telling you, that the lack of corporal punishment is having a severe effect on society today. The lack of fearing your parents etc.
Disagree because:

I was raised with daily beatings and was a shit kid.

My wife (now ex) and I made the decision early on to not hit our kids. (Twin boys).

At a young age they learned to say “yes dad, no dad” and to respect their mom like they did their own lives.

They are now 17 and still treat their mom with crazy respect and rarely, if ever, talk back to us. Daily, even in public they tell us that they love us.

I don’t want my kids to fear physical violence from me, I want them to fear disappointing me.

To add -

Too many parents wait until kids are near teenage before implementing rules and expectations. That’s way too late. It needs to begin when they are toddlers. Something my ex used to fight me about, but now she thanks me.
 
There's a balance that is very blurred between discipline and beating the hell out of a kid that I think gets lost on some people either through actually believing that they need to beat the fuck out of their child. Or on the flipside clutching pearls when a child is spanked.

I should clarify that I'm not fearful of my mom or even of my dad from physical violence. But that the consequences of my actions instilled a respect in me and taught me not to be a little shit.


Too many parents wait until kids are near teenage before implementing rules and expectations. That’s way too late. It needs to begin when they are toddlers. Something my ex used to fight me about, but now she thanks me.

I think this is really the crux of it, I've had friends that were allowed to do whatever they wanted until their teens and it was too late at that point while others who had strong and firm parents from the age of being a toddler stay in the lines.

But then again I don't have a kid so what do I know, if people are interested in discussing further I can make a thread otherwise I've derailed this one enough already.
 
Disagree because:

I was raised with daily beatings and was a shit kid.

My wife (now ex) and I made the decision early on to not hit our kids. (Twin boys).

At a young age they learned to say “yes dad, no dad” and to respect their mom like they did their own lives.

They are now 17 and still treat their mom with crazy respect and rarely, if ever, talk back to us. Daily, even in public they tell us that they love us.

I don’t want my kids to fear physical violence from me, I want them to fear disappointing me.

To add -

Too many parents wait until kids are near teenage before implementing rules and expectations. That’s way too late. It needs to begin when they are toddlers. Something my ex used to fight me about, but now she thanks me.

Ok, so this takes a bit more nuance to explain my position and time. My better half works in family law for the state. She puts the scumbags (moms, dads, rapists, everything) on the registry. We often talk about where the line is between abuse and discipline.

I honestly don't think physical beatings of a 16 year old do anything. Beating the snot out of a four year old with a switch (Adrian Peterson, hello) is abuse, not discipline. A short spanking is discipline. But corporal punishment when utilized needs to be a part of a holistic system with children. Can't just hit your child because you feel like it etc. So yes, most of this revolves around setting down rules and expectations when children are toddlers.

My Step-brother was raised by his mother until he was 12 and my step-sister was 9. They had zero rules and expectations. And their mom also ran a meth lab in their house. Their mom was a PoS. We had rules in our house, and he rebelled for the 8 years he lived with us. My step-sister rebelled some, mostly taking the cue from her brother but not nearly as much. My Step-brother hasn't held down a job for longer than 3 months at a time and is somewhere in Oregon where he can't seem to pay his phone bill.
 
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