TheRiov wrote:
Wrong again. Excepting for 2 months in the summer, I AM raising my daughter full time.
How I could be wrong (not to mention "again" WTF?) about the fact that you stated:
Quote:
Daughter stays with me except during the summer and school breaks.
Typically there are ~180 instructional days in the school year. There are 365 days a year. That didn't sound like full time to me, you may feel differently.
TheRiov wrote:
Now an ad hominem attack would have been if I had said "your argument is invalid because of X" -- something I DIDN'T state, nor would you find me doing so. I simply asked if you had kids.
Yup, nobody is seeing through that one.
No, to make use of the
ad hominem logical fallacy you do not have to
state: "your argument is invalid because of X"
There was no point to your statement other than to diminish my post. Implying I don't know what I'm talking about because I don't have kids. Further reinforcing this fact is that you added that "non-parents" are more likely to have the "attitude" that children should be given the benefit of the doubt, and that mutual trust is more important than making sure every incidence of poor decision making by the child is discovered. Why would you think that? What part of being a "non-parent" could cause that attitude?
TheRiov wrote:
As for the other, parents whose children have been caught in some misdeed have to do additional checking. In my particular case, my 11 year old was posting videos to Youtube surreptitiously. (mercifully nothing inappropriate but it was outside the established rules and she did so by getting up at 3 AM, well after she should have been asleep)
So your statement about allowing kids to freedom lead me to one of the following conclusions:
a) you have no children
b) you have children and they have NEVER been caught in any wrongdoing that would cause you want to check on their veracity
c) you have children, they lie to you, but you continue to trust blindly in the name of their freedom
Since c) would imply you're far more trusting than your other statements on the board would imply, and b) implies a breed of alien child I've yet to experience I went with a).
Apparently you think in terms of false dilemmas. Obviously there are other possibilities. Perhaps I really do believe what I stated. Perhaps my children trust that I will find out about things because the truth always comes out. Maybe they would rather keep my trust and their privileges by being truthful. Perhaps they've even made mistakes and learned from them and instead of secretly monitoring them, thereby fostering distrust in a relationship that should be built on trust, I have allowed them to re-build the trust that was lost.
I guess its just easier to assume things.
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"Dress cops up as soldiers, give them military equipment, train them in military tactics, tell them they’re fighting a ‘war,’ and the consequences are predictable." —Radley Balko