Less population in those states.
This is a problem, pumping up kids with perscription drugs as the solution to behavior problems. 40 years ago the kid would just get a good beating and told to behave with no medical term dropped on him and persription drugs.
Less population in those states.
It is easy to get guns in any state. gun laws are weak throughout the entire country.
It sure worked for generations. Pampered spoiled kids growing up to feel en led is what you get too often if you are afraid to discipline your kids early in life with a good old fashioned ass whipping .
Or maybe the fact that there are a lot of people in Texas with guns serves as a deterrant. I mean, you have to know that if you walk into a public area in Texas and start shooting there's a reasonable chance someone is going to start shooting back.
Or you could just not spoil your kids instead of beat them.
you know those are school shootings, right?
there's a huge difference between beating kids and spanking them. The fact that we've gotten so extreme in our coddling of children is definitely part of this epidemic.
You're right, my brain took that post off. I was thinking of shootings in malls and the like.
spanking children with mental illnesses is counter productive.
Gotta agree with this. I got a beating whenever I dared to talk back. Now kids don't seem to give a rats ass about anything other then themselves.
Yeah, there's not a long list of serial killers that were beaten mercilessly as children.
These days you have a lot of one-parent households with no father in the home. You have two-parent households in which both parents are working and too worn out to get after their kids. You have a lot of people having kids when they're older and don't have the physical vigor to get after their kids like younger parents would.
It isn't necessarily about physically hitting your kids, either; it's more about structure, rules and consequences in general. Kids need boundaries and they need to know exactly what those boundaries are. It's tougher to establish those boundaries these days for a lot of reasons.
I agree. If you can discipline your children properly and consistently without any kind of physical punishment, fine. But thinking it's okay to let your kids have hissy fits and meltdowns in public with no consequences, or trying "reason" with the child, or just saying "stop" 100 times while the little keeps melting down, is the type of overcoddling bull we see far too often. A kids needs to know to act right, and that if he doesn't he's going to face consequences. Spanking may be the easy way out, but it's far better than no discipline at all.
Let's look at your question again
Stupid. ing. Question.
These last few shootings have happened in states with some of the strictest gun control laws in the country, gun control obviously isn't the answer, your logic is flawed. As you can see no one else is trying to turn this into a gun control thread and people are actually trying to get at the root of the problem.
My daughter is very well behaved, I've never felt the need to lay a hand on her. I've been divorced for 7 years now too.
Sounds like your daughter respects you. Too many kids these days aren't like that.
80 years ago the majority of teenage boys had their own shotguns or .22 rifles, why weren't they shooting up their schools?
Yeah, still arrogant.
where did I say gun control was the answer to school shootings? I'm just predicting the sidebar our discussion would lead to.These last few shootings have happened in states with some of the strictest gun control laws in the country, gun control obviously isn't the answer, your logic is flawed. As you can see no one else is trying to turn this into a gun control thread and people are actually trying to get at the root of the problem.
majority? Where are you getting that from?
How many teenage boys even went to school in 1934?
Doesn't change the fact you asked a stupid ing question.
"where do these kids get guns"
That is like asking where to buy food.
LOL at Peckerhead Blake being taken to task over his idiocy.
First hand experience of course.
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