What would you like to use? LOL
Wooden spoon okay for you?
The law does not protect child abusers. It protects parents who use corporal punishment to discipline their child from criminal charges.. If a doctor or some other expert judges the parent's corporal punishment crosses the line, the parent can still be charged and hopefully authorities will exercise judgement and act in the best interest of the child.
I agree with you TS... provided that "spanking" isn't child abuse... Its a judgement call. I'd say if the spanking leaves a bruise or some other injury then it crosses the line. But I also believe in shades of grey rather than black and white. Its entirely possible for a well intentioned parent to injure/abuse their child with corporal punishment... In which case social workers should remove the child from the home until the parent is deemed a fit parent after taking some sort of training/counseling.
I agree with you TS... provided that "spanking" isn't child abuse... Its a judgement call. I'd say if the spanking leaves a bruise or some other injury then it crosses the line. But I also believe in shades of grey rather than black and white. Its entirely possible for a well intentioned parent to injure/abuse their child with corporal punishment... In which case social workers should remove the child from the home until the parent is deemed a fit parent after taking some sort of training/counseling.
I don't think I can ever recall getting a spanking as punishment when I was a child. But then again, being a big sister with two little brothers to blame stuff on has it's perks.
I've given my kids slaps on the hand or a swat or two across the buttocks, mostly to make a point. Don't touch that, keep clear, that's dangerous. In no way, shape or form was it abusive; when kids are under 5 in particular it can be often be very necessary to impress upon them quickly why something should not be touched, tasted, thrown, or otherwise sampled. The sting of a slap gets the point across more often than not.
I'm right warped and my mother broke so many wooden spoons over my backside she couldn't count and I think my dad ended up with all his belts stretched. Didn't phase me a bit. But then all my warpage did was cause a satisfaction of curiosity, a few hair-raising events, and finally resulted in a twisted sense of humor. Haven't mangled anyone, haven't killed anyone, I don't steal stuff, etc.
Wifey got all uppity one time when I swatted the backside of our youngest till I explained that it was to get her attention and it was a flat-handed swat on her diaper-padded behind which made more noise than having any other physical effect. It worked. After that I just clapped once or twice loudly. Worked like a charm.
No laws will prevent abuse.
How many of you were spanked as a child?
Chances are a great number of children born before the 80s experienced at least one well-timed thwap on the behind after doing something particularly naughty. And it's likely that few tots of the 50s and 60s managed to escape without some form of corporal punishment, whether it came from an angry teacher or a frustrated caregiver.
Though spanking has become a topic of charged debate in the decades since, it is still classified as "allowable corrective punishment" in Section 43 of the Canadian Criminal Code. This means parents can threaten a good spanking without facing legal repercussions.
But that could change if the Canadian Medical Association Journal gets its way.
As the Globe and Mail reports, the prestigious publication is urging Canada to ban the practice outright and even change the legislation to make it illegal for parents to lay a swift hand on their children.
"I'm not sure the message has got out that regular physical punishment isn't a good way to get kids to behave properly and can lead to later problems," CMAJ editor-in-chief John Fletcher explains. "It is time for Canada to remove this anachronistic excuse for poor parenting from the statute book."
Fletcher's assertions are supported by an increasing pile of scientific research.
A 2010 study in Pediatrics magazine asserts that frequently spanked children are more likely to act out aggressively in the future.