Back in the day, kids played around
in the neighborhood. Cops and robbers. Cowboys and Indians. Games of football,
basketball, baseball, hide and go seek, kick the can, capture the flag, all in their various forms and locations. If kids got out
of line, little Johnny knew Billy’s mom was good friends with his mom. And the
unwritten code of the neighborhood allowed Billy’s mom to inform Johnny’s
mother of the bad behavior. Sometimes, Billy’s mom would even discipline
Johnny. And Johnny's mom would THANK her.
Unfortunately, neighbors hardly
know each other anymore. Their kids rarely hang out together. And if they do,
“You had better not lay a finger on my child, or I’ll sue!”
This ability to connect with people
without building relationships is the key. We have “friends” on Facebook we
didn’t really know before we accepted their request. We have other one we have never seen on years. We send out
little tidbits of our lives (or other family member’s lives), pithy sayings, funny
pictures, alarming videos, etc., and call it “friendship.” We “Like” it, “Share” it,
make “Comments,” yet after a week of this ocean side, one-inch deep socialization, we still
don’t really know anyone any better than we did before, unless we’re making snap judgments about their politics, decisions about clothing styles, or choice in
companions.
Yeah. We really know that person because they said something about the
president’s policies or another person’s religious beliefs.
Or that they watched “Dancing with
the Stars” last night…and now they're angry because little miss So-and-So got kicked off the show.
Or they posted a video taken in a Wal-Mart...
Yep. That tells me everything about
them, doesn’t it?
This phenomenon also empowers
people. Stuff you’d never say, standing in a Town Hall meeting, or on the
street corner, or in a classroom, will all of a sudden come gushing out as you now feel strong enough to type it and hit “Send.”
It’s all so liberating. Isn't free speech wonderful?
But the times….they are a-changin’.
There’s a prevailing wind blowing
from major capital cities in the western world. It’s a growing sentiment among politicians: Parents will never be parents. Parents are too busy, too uninformed, too
lackadaisical, maybe even too stupid to know what’s best for their children, so
government will step in and do what parents should have abrogated but failed to
do so.
Take
the stance Australia is taking, for exhibit #1. They have created a new
position, called “E-Safety Commissioner." This new commissioner “will be empowered to issue notices to cyber-bullies to
take down harmful online posts, or face court injunctions or police referrals.”
Of course, this law targets Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram, primarily. I’m sure other
sites will be monitored as well, but let me ask this question: Because these
sites experience such a high volume of traffic (millions of posts a minute
combined), how will one commissioner monitor all the posts, decipher them, and
ferret out the “Harmful posts”? (And what determines “Harmful”?) Will they have
to use computer programs that scour these sites and examine every word—TSA-style—and
when a certain number of “red flag” words are packaged together in one post,
then will it bring that person's account to the attention of E-Safety
Commissioner? And if the perpetrator turns out to be living in Guam or
Atlanta, Georgia, then what? Do they extradite? The point is, monitoring of your child's sites is not just something they are thinking about doing. They are already doing it.
Exhibit
#2 comes from the Land of Lincoln. The state of Illinois now has a law on
the books wherein if it can be shown, by way of a post on a social media site,
that it occurred during school hours, then the school administration has the
right to request the password of the student in question for the purpose of
looking for cyber bullying activity. In other states, this goes a little too
far, and having the student type in the password for an administrator is the
preferred method of accessing such evidence. The point here is, your child's activity should not be happening at school, and if your child does post something at school, he or she may run the risk of having every post on their page subject to review.
Now, the
United States doesn’t have an overarching law yet to handle cyber bullying, but
it is covered under already
existing federal law and is mandated to be investigated whenever cyber bullying looks, smells and tastes like harassment.
Here’s my point in bringing all this up: With freedom comes great responsibility. And if parents
don’t start taking responsibility for their children’s actions via technology,
then their (we are talking about the parents here) freedoms will be confiscated “for the sake of saving lives.” And it’s
not just concerning the issue of cyber bullying we are talking about when it comes to the freedom/responsibility issue. It also pertains to anything illegal
your student could do while using technology, whether it be a smart phone, tablet,
or regular computer...and what could be done to them as victims, whether they be at the hands of a cyber bully, a child pornographer, a pedophile, or human traffickers. It's not safe out there. I always wonder why parents who would never allow their kids to walk the mean streets of a major city at two in the morning think nothing of allowing them to "walk" the even viler streets of cyber space.
Good
parents not only want to know where their children are at all times (e.g., Are they
at a friend’s house? At home doing their homework? At soccer practice?), but they should also want to
know where their children are in cyber space and what they are doing while there.
Who
knows? Your child’s actions may land you in jail. And if something really horrendous took
place—like your child being responsible for another child taking his or her life—and
you, the parent, purchased the phone and the phone is in your name, then you might
someday become an accessory to murder. Sound bizarre? Ludicrous? Far-fetched? Check out the articles below and let me know if you think it is.
As
I see it, it’s only a matter of time, so be proactive. Get ahead of the issue. Keep
tabs on your child’s cyberspace activity…it may save you both. (Here’s a tip
sheet to help.)
http://abcnews.go.com/US/mom-accused-teen-cyber-bully-arrested-child-abuse/story?id=20617247
http://www.cnn.com/2013/10/18/opinion/omara-parents-cyberbullying/
http://cyberbullying.us/holding-parents-responsible-for-their-childs-bullying/
*Generic photos courtesy of
freedigitalphotos.net
_____________________________________
Short Bio
C. KEVIN THOMPSON is an
ordained minister with a B.A. In Bible (Houghton College, Houghton, NY), an
M.A. in Christian Studies (Wesley Biblical Seminary, Jackson, MS), and an M.Ed.
in Educational Leadership (National-Louis University, Wheeling, IL). He presently
works as an assistant principal in a middle school. He also has several years
experience as an administrator at the high school level.
A former Language Arts teacher,
Kevin decided to put his money where his mouth was and write, fiction mostly.
Now, years later, he is a member of the Christian Authors Network (CAN), American
Christian Fictions Writers (ACFW), and Word Weavers International. He is the
Chapter President of Word Weavers-Lake County (FL), and his published works
include two award-winning novels, The
Serpent’s Grasp (Winner of the 2013 Blue Ridge Mountain Christian Writers
Conference Selah Award for First Fiction) and 30 Days Hath Revenge - A Blake Meyer Thriller: Book 1, as well as articles in The Wesleyan Advocate, The Preacher, Vista, The Des Moines
Register and The Ocala Star-Banner.
Kevin is a huge fan of the TV
series 24 , The Blacklist, Blue Bloods,
and Criminal Minds, loves anything to
do with Star Trek, and is a Sherlock
Holmes fanatic, too.
Facebook: C. Kevin Thompson – Author Page
Twitter: @CKevinThompson
Goodreads: C. Kevin Thompson
Another sad example of suicide by social media.
ReplyDeleteThis time? It was on Kik.
http://www.al.com/news/birmingham/index.ssf/2015/06/i_didnt_know_my_child_teens_sh.html
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