AmericanThinker: Children born in 1800, 1850 or 1900 almost universally faced conditions and dealt with problems today’s child-care mental health “experts” consider debilitating and yet persevered. Indeed may not have given these conditions much thought because nobody was throwing them in their face week after week year after year asking them how they felt or offering drugs.
Offering them only “treatment,” not a cure for bad memories or physical and emotional problems. Let’s be clear about that because as a psychologist once told me in a rare moment of honesty “we [his profession] no longer talk about cure – only treatment.”
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All good, except for picking pampered socialist “Teddy” as the mascot.
Pfffft. And now we have a trend in school districts to push out the start time for high schoolers because they can’t get they asses out of bed and sleep deprivation is a health issue. It’s true! Per the long heads the National Academy of Pediatrics. It’s haaard. And likely a debilitating stressor. Pretty soon, it’ll be a national security issue, like the weather.
Just wait, snowflakes. Life is about to smack you upside the head with a 2 x 4. I’m building a bigger bunker.
Back OT, treatment is a financial enhancement. Lifers are easy to treat.
One of the 45 goals of communism as entered into the US congressional record in 1963.
“To take over psychiatry and invent “conditions” that only psychiatrists can understand”.
Yes these kids will go fetal & whimper when the Ca-Ca hits the ole fan…
Being forced to deal with problems helps a child develop critical thinking skills that help them deal with problems as adults. Today’s child is taught that someone else has all the answers they need in life, and it just isn’t so. No wonder our country is run by a few idiots that think they’re all the “smartest person in the room”.
You’re right about the wimps curling up when the fan fecalization takes place. “Mommy! Twitter hasn’t worked for 15 minutes!” Like I’ve said before, their carcasses will feed my dogs.
My mother taught us “what doesn’t kill you makes you strong.” So far, so good.
Could you just imagine a modern family traveling cross country on a mule drawn wagon?