Taamar wrote:
I hadn't said anything about you or your life or your family, and you brought mine into it in a disparaging manner. Yes, personal attack. Up until then it had been about opinions. You made it about ME, specifically, and my parenting.
Where was this disparaging manner? Rynar didn't make it about you at all; he pointed out that you may hold this opinion because you lack parenting experience. That's not disparaging; holding an opinion becuase you lack experience is neutral. The simple fact that you have a child does not mean you have a great deal of parenting experience. "Lacking" experience does not mean you have none.
Furthermore, "you are not permitted to hit the cat because you are mad" may or may not be the situation observed in the video. Like most videos that appear around here, this one lacks a lot of information. Why is the kid mad? Did the cat do something to him already? Is he allergic to the cat or afraid of it? Maybe an older sibling knew that, and thought it would be funny to put the cat there to frighten or annoy him and film it, not realizing what would happen. Older siblings do tease, and do not always think through their actions completely. We simply don't know and we cannot simply assume the kid simply hauled off and smacked the cat out of anger. We also cannot go off "only what we see in the video" because obviously the child is upset
for some reason.
You see, I
do have a great deal of parenting experience, since I have not just one but three children, and have raised one to adulthood. I can tell you, if your first reaction on seeing that video is to smack the kid because they hit the cat, there is something wrong. It's an animal. It is less important than the kid. If the kid smacked it completely unprovoked, then I'd punish the kid, but animals that live in the house must understand they may
never reltaliate against a human being
under any circumstances whatsoever. Human life and safety is simply more important, so while I would punish a kid for hitting an animal for no reason, I would, at the very least, tell the animal "NO!" firmly as well.
The fact that you can teach a kid not to hit the cat at 4 years old does not make it some unpardonable sin if he does so. 4 years old is still extremely lacking in impulse control, especially when upset, and if the kid has been provoked in some way it's far from entirely his fault.