A smack for correction should not be a crime
A smack or time out for correction should not be a crime.
The Kiwi Party
Press Release
28 July,
2009
The Referendum about the so called
“anti-smacking” law (the name which Sue Bradford herself
originally gave to her Bill) is really about how children
should be corrected according to former MP & now President
of the Kiwi Party Gordon Copeland.
“Smacking and
taking a child to time out are now criminal acts in New
Zealand’ said Mr Copeland. “But only when they are used
for the purpose of correction that is to rebuke or punish,
in order to improve a child’s behaviour”.
“At
the heart of this debate therefore there are really two
questions.
Firstly do children need to be
corrected?
Most of us would answer this question
with an emphatic “yes”. However some would just as
emphatically answer “no” because they believe that
children are born virtuous and will automatically, as if
by instinct, grow up to become unselfish & loving adults!
I believe, with the wisdom of the ages, that both
children & and adults need to be
corrected.
Secondly should parents be permitted by
law to smack or take their children to time out as part of
good & loving parenting?
I believe that the answer
to this question is also yes. Note that, consistent with the
Referendum question, the qualification is that we are here
talking about these correction techniques used by good
parents. I am not saying that hitting with a jug core or
locking a child in a dark room are acceptable correction
techniques, because they are not! Those are the actions of
bad parents who need to be corrected (there’s that word
again) by the law of the land”.
“Are we capable
of making that distinction clear in law? Of course we are
and we should. The training, education and correction of
children, accompanied by large lashings of love & good fun,
are the central tasks of parenting. Simply stated that is
what good parents do!”
“When it comes to
correction parents should have the freedom, under the law,
to use a variety of ways to achieve the outcome which they
seek, namely an improvement in behaviour, in ways which are
appropriate to the circumstances & age of the child. This
includes appropriate verbal correction, smacking, timeout
and as the child grows older, grounding & the loss of
privileges. Parenting on a day by day basis is never one
dimensional.”
“I believe that these decisions
must be made by parents and by parents alone! The State has
no role to play and it is wrong for politicians to outlaw
smacking and the use of time out in these circumstances.
They have no mandate to do so. This matter was not widely
raised in the 2005 Elections. The issue made its way onto
the floor of Parliament through a private Members
Bill.”
“The claim that smacking and time out
should be criminalised to bring the correction of children
into line with the correction of adults is a
fallacy.”
“We correct adults through fines,
community service and prison sentences but none of these
apply to children for the simple reason that they are
children! The law always has & always will make that
distinction.”
“I’m delighted that there is to
be a Referendum on this issue and the question “Should a
smack as part of good parental correction be a criminal
offence in New Zealand” is crystal clear. Let’s use the
opportunity to deliver a message to the Beehive which
politicians will ignore at their peril because this issue
really is for the sake of our children, our grandchildren &
all generations to come.”
Gordon Copeland is a
former MP who left United Future to become an Independent
because of his strong opposition to the criminalisation of
smacking and time out for the purposes of correcting
children.
ends