our spirit of individualismf ce once and for all. our government spends too muchut money. we learned more about that this week. week. but perhaps more importantly, r they work tirelessly each datay to promote more freedoms awayan and tell us what we can do. w how we can do it, and probablyye most concerning why we should do it. d in other words, they want to our moral compass, our consciencel and our conviction. for most of usf us , this is rey troubling because we already have a fundamental belief system. ental beour sense of right and r was set years of learning and parenting and our experiences and faith. what wperiencee call in the sou, our raisen. we were well raised to have ethics and beliefs we hold, but maybe that s not exactlye fo the case for an increasingly growing segment of our population. easingly gmaybe more and more ar aren t getting necessarily examples traditionally setr motr by their mothers and fathers, making it easier for the state to step in and fill th
from it. , yo they have to know that,s you know, life is full of hardok knocks and people are going to say things you don t likeyo and you llu don be okay if youe study, you re going to gett a bad grade and maybe you lld e studyou lly harder next time.d schohe parents shouldn t march into the school and demand the grad deme be changed. bu but this is what we re dealing with . you know, i think in on the left, primarily in large cities and sort of elite parent clusters, this helicopter parenting that protects the child from any any adverse events. ot it s not possible. and you just will inevitably raise children that think every sideways glance is a grave social injustice. sidewaysand it s just, you knowe we re raising children to bethat adults that can t handle adversity. and so i just like to givem to my kids the freedom to learn on their own, obviouslywith with boundaries at boundaries. some authoritarian parenting some authoritarian parenting, du as you you described in tup.your