But the evidence is that's not the case with this particular issue. We know that abuse is driven by beliefs which justify the abuse (in all kinds of abuse, such as domestic violence, as well). When those attitudes are successfully challenged, behaviours change.
Then you would have to explain why people who do believe corporal punishment is ok and don't abuse.
They're not the issue. If, in reducing abuse, we also reduce some non-abusive behaviour, what's the issue?
The issue would be your forcing your belief or the States belief onto other people and denying their right to apply that belief when it doesn't do any harm.
Well, but the point of changing social attitudes is that in doing so we will, of necessity, change the attitudes of some abusers.
I think this is ok generally as far as abuse is concerned. We could try and help people understand what is abuse and violence and how it effects people and society. But I think we have been doing that for years. In fact we have become so sensitive to what abuse represents that we are discovering new ways to define abuse.
But the issue is peoples interpretation of what exactly abuse is. What counts as abuse. That is a different story as people can have different views about what constitutes physical abuse. So how do we determine who is right or wrong.
You did not give evidence that single mothers under stress are more aggressive and therefore abuse more. You've thrown a whole heap of stuff together and come up with some unfounded conclusions. And - crucially - you have given no evidence that abuse occurs when parents are "out of control" due to stress.
I am not just saying they abuse more because stress. It could be a number of reasons like psychological disorders or trauma, severe anxiety or regarding stress it would be more like PTSD.
Research shows that some who have been abused as children will abuse as parents so are at a greater risk of abusing. Obviously they are traumatised with unresolved psychological problems and are more volnurable to abuse compared to someone who has not been abused as a child.
Do you think people under duress, stress, have emotional problems, psychological disorders can act irrationally.
But it's not causative. You can say it until you're blue in the face, that basic reality doesn't change.
Ok so do you think its an influence, a factor they may indirectly lead to higher risks of abuse or better outcomes.
Very flawed evidence, as I have repeatedly pointed out.
Ok lets unpack this. Do you mean flawed as in the claim that the TF setup or not is not the cause of abuse itself or that the actual research itself is flawed.
In the research it says for example that a fathers absence is directly linked to higher risk of abuse. What is your understanding of a direct connection.
Without doing anything else to address the abuse that was already occurring? No, I very much doubt it would.
Considering all solutions to preventing child abuse requires positive parenting and education then it would stand to reason that encouraging parents and fathers to be more actively involved would also mean promoting positive parenting and education. Just like it would for all family setups.
Obviously if your encouraging dads to be good dads you don't just encourage them to be there in person but to be good dads as fathers should be and fullfilling the role of a father to their kids. They go hand in hand. Part of being a good dad is not abusing your kids and ensuring their wellbeing and development.
As kids need both a mum and dad for optimum development it makes sense to encourage mums and dads to be mums and dads as part of any programe or policy that is aimed at reducing child abuse.
What support are you talking about here? If we're talking about abuse prevention, parents with a history of being abusive in any way should probably be the highest priority.
Yes I agree, why because parents with a history of being abused themselves are more prone to abuse their kids. So parents who have ben abused are within the Risk factor category as opposed to a protective factor.
But if thats the logic then why can't we target say single parents because for the same reason. Why can't we target support for this group more considering the research.
No. I'm just pointing out that the fact that some of them did skews the statistics in both groups.
Apart from that big assumption I cannot see any other skewing. Can you point out the other stats that may be skewed so I can better understand. But from what I understand now it seems there is no way there could be many TF that had abusive fathers because the majoirty came from either unmarried couples or single women who had a child without the father being in the house from near after birth or not at all according to the stats.
It's a very common reason for breakdown of a household.
I don't think its a common reason. It seems Infidelity, lack of communication, financial troubles, and lack of sex and intimacy are some of the most common reasons. It seems 85% of people get divorced because of a lack of commitment in the US. Though it doesn't specify if they have children it doesn't really matter because that 85% will cover all marriages kids or not.
What about them? If they're abusing, they're part of the problem. If they're not abusing, they're not relevant to this discussion.
Didn't you say the root problem for abuse is the persons belief or attitude that abuse is ok. If corporal punishment is regarded as abuse then those who use measured corporal punishment will be wrongly labelled as abusers and then become part of the problem.
People abuse because they believe they have a right to. They believe, as I said, that abuse is acceptable, is justified, is normal, is harmless, and so on. That's the attitude we have to change, no matter who it is who holds it, and no matter what household structure they inhabit.
But as this thread says corporal punishment is abuse. Yet there are people whose beliefs that corporal punishment is acceptable don't abuse. How do we sort that out. See it also comes down to what is regarded as abuse or not.
No. What I said was, "Beat a kid hard enough, often enough, and trauma results." That's not saying "all corporal punishment results in beating kids until they suffer trauma." The two statements are not equivalent.
No you were claiming that we can establish a direct causal link between corporal punishment and abuse. You used beating a kid hard enough that they will suffer trauma as evidence of that casual link. I said thats a false comparison for that casual link because people use corporal punishment and theres no trauma or problems and in fact some evidence that it benefits. So just because some suffer trauma from corporal punishment doesn't mean corporal punishment causes trauma.
If that were true, we probably wouldn't see decreasing abuse rates, but that's what every source I can find is reporting.
I'm not saying its the only cause but a general overlay of more stress for everyone that has occured in modern society. It may not be seen in child abuse rates though they are increasing, but in DV, assualt and violence in general not necesaarily physical abuse but antagonisim and resentment between people and groups.
So people who already will suffer mental illness (which has increased massively), psychological disorders and trauma which is also increasing will be more easily pushed over the threshold into violence and abuse when in more volnurable situations including family situations.
The fact is we have seen an increase in child abuse in modern times like I said even after better reporting. This seems to coincide with the breakdown in families which is also said to be a major facter in instability in society. As they say strong societies demand strong families.
But you've missed my point, which was that while some people fixate on things like household structure, the underlying causes of abuse go unacknowledged and unaddressed.
I am disputing your view of what is the underlying cause of abuse. You say its peoples beliefs and attitudes and that is part of it. But I disagree that its the only cause or even the major cause.
Like I said people have different views on what constitutes abuse when it comes to corporal punishment so that needs to be sorted. People also have different views on what is the root cause or causes and the solutions to prevent it.
Perhaps I am taking a more overall view, society wide view as we know that families have destablised so stablizing them is going to solve many problems including child abuse. Naturaly when preventing child abuse we also consider what is good parenting so that needs to be considered.
I agree there is also the micro view where we target support for families as they are as we need to intereven quickly when it comes to child abuse. But I think both strategies or all strategies need to be considered. One without the other will be misguided.