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j.r. leonard's avatar

Conservatives often argue that the loss of traditional values, like faith, family and patriotism, deprives people's lives of meaning. They're half right. Those things can provide meaning, but living life, surviving and learning to thrive in the world can provide just as much meaning. The problem with our contemporary society is that we've removed a good deal of those pressures and replaced them with a bunch of mostly stupid, zero sum status games that are increasingly bereft of any meaning other than the preservation of power for the bureaucratic class.

Nowhere is this more pronounced than in the construction of modern childhood. Kids were once an integral part of household production; they worked on the farm, helped out in the store, or got outside jobs and brought their wages home. Eliminating the need for that sort of child labor is a net positive, but in some ways what we've replaced it with is worse. We've removed kids from real life, because real life is too risky, and tried to replicate real world learning and development through some bizarro facsimile of the real world. We've turned childhood into a two decade experience of unreality. Why would we expect them to come out of that mentally healthy?

The other ironic thing is that parents often go to great lengths to give their kids advantages in these stupid games, making themselves miserable in the process. But they also go to great lengths to try to hide this from their out of of some perverted notion of selflessness. Of course, kids pick up on their parents disposition, and while they don't exactly know what's wrong, they know enough to understand that their parents being miserable is in some way related to them.

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BRetty's avatar

Zvi,

I think "fighting at school" and the draconion penalties for physical violence now, are a bigger issue than almost anybody thinks.

I commented about this at ACX, a few months ago, in a nutshell:

- boys, esp 11-15, are going to fight

- My childhood experience was that those fights lasted about 30 seconds

- after a scuffle you were friends again. (Sitting in the hall outside the principal's office for an hr becomes a bonding experience, good school principals knew this....)

-- !!!! you learn that fighting is EXPENSIVE, punching somebody also hurts *your* hand, you take some damage no matter what. !!!!

- you also learn that if you insult or provoke people all the time, you will likely get punched in the mouth.

- boys learn this before they become men physically able to kill people.

I think these are all valuable lessons. The reaction from some at ACX surprised me. One commenter replied that I seem to have had a "violent and traumatic childhood" ? A few 45-second scuffles in 7th-9th grade is "violent and traumatic"? I would say, "completely normal, and healthy." The fact that very rational people now consider any physical violence to be anathema explains a lot. Never having been in a fight produces adults who don't understand violence at all, who think words or silence are violence, and who are helpless in the face of actual violence, criminal or political.

There is an analogy to the fact that children who grow up with guns, who learn how to shoot and handle firearms with responsible adults, are the least likely to go for "mass casualty" attacks. I would also opine that one reason military veterans are so conservative is because they have seen how effed-up the govt is, and also govt's incredible power to destroy things, and know govt action is a terrible answer to most things.

BR

Also, w/r/t a fight clearing the air and being friends again, the modern alternative, call it "girl rules", is holding anger and grudges and crying and gossip and slander and insults and cliques and social exclusion and status and it never ends and just gets worse and look I am now describing the current political and cultural landscape.

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