Real Objectives Revealed
Press Release for Immediate Distribution
Real Objectives Revealed
At last MP Sue Bradford has been forced to
admit her real objectives > of her bill to repeal of Section
59 of the Crimes Act.
The Justice and >
Electoral Select Committee's report shows it was not to
reduce > violence but to hamstring parents. > > The
committee has re-written Section 59 so that it lists the
occasions > when reasonable force can be used by parents
with their children.
This > categorising of
legitimate uses of force was something Bradford >
consistently railed against as totally unacceptable. But she
has > helped delineate and describe four situations. Three
of those have to > do with preventing behaviour that might
lead to harm, crime or is > offensive or disruptive. The
fourth simply allows parents to use > reasonable force for
"performing the normal daily tasks that are > incidental to
good care and parenting."
> > But the
re-write specifically and pointedly prohibits reasonable
force > to be used if the motivation is to correct. > >
Parents are to be legally prohibited from correcting their
own > children! How revealing of Bradford's purposes!
The original Section > 59 only allows the
use of reasonable force for one reason: correction. >
Bradford's new version of Section 59 only specifically
prohibits the > use of force for one reason: correction. >
> Correcting children with force of any kind, however light,
is > specifically prohibited.
Yet part of
parenting is teaching right and > proper behaviour and
speech, teacing manners and etiquette, teaching > grooming
and modesty, teaching right from wrong, good from bad, wise
> from unwise. Reasonable force can be used to stop some but
not all bad > behaviour the parents may want to stop. But
nothing in this law > appears to allow parents to use force
to get the child to behave in a > way the parent may require
or that culture, tradition or societal > norms expects. This
new Section 59 allows the use of reasonable force > to stop
some types of bad behaviour, but does not allow the use of >
force to enforce the performance or practise of any kind of
good > behaviour. >
The standard of public
behaviour will obviously sink to the lowest > level
generally acceptable, since parents will not be legally
allowed > to force children to maintain higher
standards.
Disobedience and > disrespect
will blossom. Those who feed on such dysfunction can see a >
bonanza on the horizon: it was as if this legislation had
the future > welfare of counsellors, psychologists, lawyers
and the exploding > numbers of child and family advocacy and
interventionist groups in > mind. >
This
Bill has become totally unworkable. It shows that the
purpose has > nothing at all to do with violence or
excessive force against > children, which things are already
illegal.
The purpose of this bill > all
along has been to repeal parental authority over their own >
children, to minimise and compromise a parent's ability to
correct, > train or discipline his or her child to act,
dress or speak to any > standard imposed by the parent. >
Correction of children is to be illegal. This is absurd. It
is insane. >
Ends