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Latest post Mon, Oct 1 2012 5:57 PM by masonkiller. 32 replies.
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  • Mon, Mar 12 2012 10:37 AM

    Father Publically Humiliates 'F' Student Son as Punishment

    Father forces seventh-grade son to stand on the street wearing a sign about his failing grades

    Michael Bell Sr. was upset by the fact that his son came home with three F's on his report card, so came up with an unusual way to teach the self-proclaimed 'class clown' a lesson.

    Throughout his spring break this past week, Michael Bell Jr. had to stand at the corner of a busy intersection in Miami while wearing a poster that told passers-by about his bad grades.

    The teen had to wear a poster that read 'Hey, I want to be a class clown. Is it wrong?' on his front side.

    On his back, there was a longer explanation for inquisitive drivers: 'Hey, I'm in the 7th grade and I have an 'F' for the semester. Is anything wrong with that. Blow your horn if you don't think so. Thank you!!!'

    CNN video

  • Tue, Mar 13 2012 7:45 PM In reply to

    • tjnyc
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    Re: Father Publically Humiliates 'F' Student Son as Punishment

    I hope nobody will take me the wrong way when I say that this is not exactly cruel, abusive, or evil of the father. The son looks like he understands what his father is trying to do, and has taken what he perceives as 'just punishment,' without much apparent torment or pain.

    That said, there obviously exist much more powerful and constructive ways to persuade the son to do better in school, which include trying to sensitively and openly understand his lack of motivation, patiently explaining the positive consequences of doing well / the negative consequences of doing poorly, and overall just trying to establish a strong and motivating bond with his son. This may, in turn, give him the resoluteness and willpower to do well in his coursework to "make something of himself" (the connection between the 'doing well in school' and 'making something of one's self' a separate issue), which he seems to be lacking, judging from the way he speaks in the video.

    In summary, my initial reaction is that this act—on its own—doesn't constitute immoral parenting, but rather just poor parenting.

    I'd really like to hear what you and the other regular posters think and feel about this.

    Thanks,

    Tony

    "It's way too dangerous to follow the advice of people who aren't empathetic, even if they are right."

  • Wed, Mar 14 2012 6:18 AM In reply to

    • Lowe D
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    Re: Father Publically Humiliates 'F' Student Son as Punishment

    Yeah, this father, he really made something of himself.

    You want to know how I did it, Anton? This is how I did it. I never saved anything for the swim back.

    Gattaca

  • Wed, Mar 14 2012 7:14 AM In reply to

    Re: Father Publically Humiliates 'F' Student Son as Punishment

    tjnyc:

    In summary, my initial reaction is that this act—on its own—doesn't constitute immoral parenting, but rather just poor parenting.

    I'd really like to hear what you and the other regular posters think and feel about this.

    The father has failed the boy for years.

     

  • Wed, Mar 14 2012 7:49 AM In reply to

    • Magnus
    • Top 100 Contributor
    • Joined on Mon, Jan 26 2009
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    Re: Father Publically Humiliates 'F' Student Son as Punishment

    tjnyc:

    I hope nobody will take me the wrong way when I say that this is not exactly cruel, abusive, or evil of the father. The son looks like he understands what his father is trying to do, and has taken what he perceives as 'just punishment,' without much apparent torment or pain.

    That said, there obviously exist much more powerful and constructive ways to persuade the son to do better in school, which include trying to sensitively and openly understand his lack of motivation, patiently explaining the positive consequences of doing well / the negative consequences of doing poorly, and overall just trying to establish a strong and motivating bond with his son. This may, in turn, give him the resoluteness and willpower to do well in his coursework to "make something of himself" (the connection between the 'doing well in school' and 'making something of one's self' a separate issue), which he seems to be lacking, judging from the way he speaks in the video.

    In summary, my initial reaction is that this act—on its own—doesn't constitute immoral parenting, but rather just poor parenting.

    I'd really like to hear what you and the other regular posters think and feel about this.

    Thanks,

    Tony

    Merely because the boy has internalized the shame does not make the infliction of shame remotely moral. 

    Reverse the players and ask yourself how you feel about it.  What if the son forced the father to wear a sign listing his failures and walk the street?  If I did that to you, under duress of some threat, would you consider that to be immoral?  If a husband did that to his wife? That's what UPB means -- universality of moral principles, even in the context of parent-child relationships.

    What is it about father-son relationships that makes people think that "parenting" includes forcing the son to do anything? 

    I have a son.  It is not difficult to get him to listen to me.  He's actually devoted to me in a way I sometimes find overwhelming.  My opinion of him means virtually everything to him.  It is easy to become frustrated and lash out, but I have to constantly remind myself how he will learn 99% of what I teach him by example.  The content of my yak-yak at him means nothing. What I do means everything.

    Applying that idea here, what is the meta-message being sent from father to son? Ignore the content of the sign.  The message is, "I tell you what level of self-respect and social respect you will have."  Or, "I control you."  There are a lot of non-verbal interpretations one could draw.  But none of them is morally defensible.

    "The state calls its own violence law, but that of the individual crime."

    -- Max Stirner

  • Wed, Mar 14 2012 11:12 AM In reply to

    Re: Father Publically Humiliates 'F' Student Son as Punishment

    I'll explain what the story is really about and then the reason why I posted it will become clear.

    The father is attempting to compensate for his own failures, shortcomings, inadequacies, and lack of ambition by punishing his son, redirecting attention toward his son, eliciting approval and validation from passersby, thus vindicating himself.

  • Wed, Mar 14 2012 11:14 AM In reply to

    • hkw
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    Re: Father Publically Humiliates 'F' Student Son as Punishment

    tjnyc:

    I hope nobody will take me the wrong way when I say that this is not exactly cruel, abusive, or evil of the father. The son looks like he understands what his father is trying to do, and has taken what he perceives as 'just punishment,' without much apparent torment or pain.

    I'm not sure what "the wrong way" is but this is exactly cruel, abusive, and evil.

    "Borders Are Imaginary Lines" T-Shirt: http://kck.st/120hI7K

  • Wed, Mar 14 2012 11:44 AM In reply to

    Re: Father Publically Humiliates 'F' Student Son as Punishment

    Alan Chapman:
    The father is attempting to compensate for his own failures, shortcomings, inadequacies, and lack of ambition by punishing his son, redirecting attention toward his son, eliciting approval and validation from passersby, thus vindicating himself.
    Right. It's not like "Hey, this is great for the kid because it will help him." It's like "Yeah, that's what you deserve, you loser!"

    Because the goal isn't helping the kid to get what he wants out of life while still taking care of what's necessary. The goal is to threaten and hurt the kid until he starts obeying!

  • Thu, Mar 15 2012 10:10 AM In reply to

    • tjnyc
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    Re: Father Publically Humiliates 'F' Student Son as Punishment

    hkw:

    tjnyc:

    I hope nobody will take me the wrong way when I say that this is not exactly cruel, abusive, or evil of the father. The son looks like he understands what his father is trying to do, and has taken what he perceives as 'just punishment,' without much apparent torment or pain.

    I'm not sure what "the wrong way" is but this is exactly cruel, abusive, and evil.
    I mentioned not taking me the 'wrong way' just to say that I don't endorse this act as a proper or desirable way of improving his son's grades. I acknowledged that it's stupid and ineffective, but was questioning the interpretation of the action's (im)morality and the father's motives.
    Lowe:

    Yeah, this father, he really made something of himself.
    He doesn't have to be successful in order to want his son to succeed, does he?
    Magnus:

    Merely because the boy has internalized the shame does not make the infliction of shame remotely moral.

    Reverse the players and ask yourself how you feel about it.  What if the son forced the father to wear a sign listing his failures and walk the street?  If I did that to you, under duress of some threat, would you consider that to be immoral?  If a husband did that to his wife? That's what UPB means -- universality of moral principles, even in the context of parent-child relationships.

    What is it about father-son relationships that makes people think that "parenting" includes forcing the son to do anything?

    I have a son.  It is not difficult to get him to listen to me.  He's actually devoted to me in a way I sometimes find overwhelming.  My opinion of him means virtually everything to him.  It is easy to become frustrated and lash out, but I have to constantly remind myself how he will learn 99% of what I teach him by example.  The content of my yak-yak at him means nothing. What I do means everything.

    Applying that idea here, what is the meta-message being sent from father to son? Ignore the content of the sign.  The message is, "I tell you what level of self-respect and social respect you will have."  Or, "I control you."  There are a lot of non-verbal interpretations one could draw.  But none of them is morally defensible.
    Thanks for putting forth the standard of UPB. I tend to judge whether parenting is immoral by looking for signs of the child's pain and humiliation; if none is present, then the act of parenting is not cruel or evil, but merely unwise. UPB, however, seems to ignore any of these emotional markers, and considers an action from the perspective of, "will most (emotionally healthy and rational) people prefer this action, if done onto them?" It sounds like an act (in the realm of interpersonal relationships) can be judged as immoral by UPB standards, even when all parties affected do not experience emotional/physical hurt or sense "foul play." Let me know if this is accurate.

    ...And also for sharing about your relationship with your son. Like many others on these boards, I was treated somewhat the opposite way to how you treat your son, insofar as lecturing (or "yak yak," as you call it): I faced, on average, a two-hour long lecture a month, about something or other that I did or thought 'wrong.' I have mixed feelings about these and the other questionable parts of my childhood, and I'm still trying to parse out the moral/immoral and the aeshetically preferable/unpreferable parts of my upbringing (which is probably what motivated me to post in this thread). Despite mixed feelings about my own childhood, I think that your child is very lucky to have a father who cares enough to effortfully apply UPB and the "lead by example" principle to your relationship with him (and also to discuss them in an internet forum). :]

    However, despite a sound UPB argument and the insightful psychological interpretations, I'm still inclined to believe that the father genuinely valued and desired a good future for his son, though his methods of correction were grossly misguided (to say the least). It's hard for me to jump from the argument that bringing his son out in public with a sign like that was objectively immoral--which I'm now willing to accept--to the conclusion that the father was motivated by a desire for cruelty or sadism (i.e., that he is evil himself). Let me know if I put up a straw man here, or if anybody thinks this is true; it just seems too extreme and unreasonable to say that the father is blind, cold-hearted, and only motivated by his own insecurities--which he's now projecting onto his son, and looking for external vindication--without acknowledging that the father may actually be trying to show his son the potentially negative consequences of not being accountable for his actions, which he probably had to learn the hard way throughout his life.

    "It's way too dangerous to follow the advice of people who aren't empathetic, even if they are right."

  • Thu, Mar 15 2012 10:49 AM In reply to

    Re: Father Publically Humiliates 'F' Student Son as Punishment

    Humiliation and mockery aren't exactly great motivators for people to succeed at something worthwhile.  Sure they use it in the military, but that's so you'll be a better killer and order-follower.  No amount of tar and feathers will make this kid do wonderfully in academics.  Besides, it's likely the crap they were trying to teach him was more of a joke than any he was telling in class.

    "The government always sneaks in when I'm half seized-over and purloins the very thread from my hanky!" - Joad Cressbeckler

  • Thu, Mar 15 2012 3:22 PM In reply to

    • Chisleu
    • Top 500 Contributor
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    • Myrtle Beach, SC
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    Re: Father Publically Humiliates 'F' Student Son as Punishment

    His dad looks really, really high.

    Maybe his dad's education was limited and this is all he can think to do to motivate the kid. If we take the stance of nurture > nature, on average, then how can we expect anything but an F student if his father was an F student? I don't know this, but I know smart parents seem to have smart kids.

    It would be interesting to know what his father does for work.

  • Wed, Apr 25 2012 1:51 PM In reply to

    • azile
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    Re: Father Publically Humiliates 'F' Student Son as Punishment

    This is very, immature, pathetic behaviour from an adult who should know better.

    There's no way that public humiliation will benefit this young lad, the only consequences of this will obviously only be harmful.

    What makes it all worse is the popular approval of behaviour like this from the public - it makes you despair!

    "The system has failed you don't fail yourself."

  • Thu, Apr 26 2012 3:26 PM In reply to

    • Lowe D
    • Top 75 Contributor
    • Joined on Thu, Jul 29 2010
    • Atlanta, GA
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    Re: Father Publically Humiliates 'F' Student Son as Punishment

    tjnyc:
    Lowe:

    Yeah, this father, he really made something of himself.
    He doesn't have to be successful in order to want his son to succeed, does he?
    He doesn't want his son to succeed.

    You want to know how I did it, Anton? This is how I did it. I never saved anything for the swim back.

    Gattaca

  • Thu, Apr 26 2012 3:30 PM In reply to

    • Lowe D
    • Top 75 Contributor
    • Joined on Thu, Jul 29 2010
    • Atlanta, GA
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    Re: Father Publically Humiliates 'F' Student Son as Punishment

    nathanm:
    No amount of tar and feathers will make this kid do wonderfully in academics.
    That's not true.  I'm sure you remember the Tiger Mother story.  This form of parenting is mostly tar and feathers, but often produces magnificent puzzle solvers.

    If only life were a rubiks cube... god knows a lot more libertarians would be happy.

    You want to know how I did it, Anton? This is how I did it. I never saved anything for the swim back.

    Gattaca

  • Tue, May 1 2012 9:51 AM In reply to

    • A man
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    Re: Father Publically Humiliates 'F' Student Son as Punishment

    Alan Chapman:

    I'll explain what the story is really about and then the reason why I posted it will become clear.

    The father is attempting to compensate for his own failures, shortcomings, inadequacies, and lack of ambition by punishing his son, redirecting attention toward his son, eliciting approval and validation from passersby, thus vindicating himself.

     

    How can you come to a conclusion that would require hours of examination by a therapist based on a few lines of text in a tabloid media?

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