tubamom wrote:...We already infantilize our youth enough as it is - at some point we have to let them grow up and make their own mistakes...
I liked your post except for this portion. We "let" kids grow up? Would they ever grow up if we took so passive a role? Judging from a quick review of
my generation (let alone the generations that are younger), it would appear that too many of our parents "allowed" us to grow up, with the result that not very many actually made it to adulthood. I know a lot of mid-40s teenagers, sad to say.
It seems to me that we
push our kids into growing up, by steadily increasing their responsibilities and restricting their freedoms if they don't live up to those responsibilities. They have to show the responsibility before they get the freedom.
My parents raised me well and provided a good example, but when it came to the car, they should have taken driving privileges away from me on the first ticket. They didn't, and I'm lucky to have survived that portion of my growing up. I see the kids around here driving Daddy's pickup at 70 mph down a country road designed for horse and carriage and posted with a speed limit of 45. They get seen, and word gets back. Daddy says, "Don't do that, boy" but does not take away the privilege and not-so-secretly beams with pride that his kid has a fast truck.
Rental-car companies won't, repeat
won't rent a car to anyone under 25. Considering who they do rent to, I'm amazed that parents are freer with their property.
Perhaps the way to push a kid into growing up would be to let him drive when it is his car he is driving--his car that he bought and that he insures with his money; money that he earned doing actual work. (Or "her"--the teenage girls are often worse than the boys.)
You can't write the law that way, hence my previous post. But if it were MY kids, that's the direction I'd want to go.
Rick "who, as should be obvious by now, doesn't have kids" Denney