Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh yeah, we tell them everything.
We're like "well there's this agency called ICE and they snatch people off the street and put them in vans and then no one knows where they are until they end up in another country, and there's nothing anyone can really do about it because it turns out that our system of checks and balances doesn't actually work but we didnt realize it until now and now no one knows what to do because Congress is completely feckless and our judicial branch is a bunch of dithering academics, so now we just wait and hope it eventually ends somehow."
No, we don't talk about. What's the point? It seems completely age inappropriate and will just create needless and exaggerated worries.
Are you concerned that they're having the conversations with other students? My kids have come to us with some very wrong opinions about current events that they picked up from other kids.
Anonymous wrote:Oh yeah, we tell them everything.
We're like "well there's this agency called ICE and they snatch people off the street and put them in vans and then no one knows where they are until they end up in another country, and there's nothing anyone can really do about it because it turns out that our system of checks and balances doesn't actually work but we didnt realize it until now and now no one knows what to do because Congress is completely feckless and our judicial branch is a bunch of dithering academics, so now we just wait and hope it eventually ends somehow."
No, we don't talk about. What's the point? It seems completely age inappropriate and will just create needless and exaggerated worries.
Anonymous wrote:My oldest was 6 when sandy hook happened. It was really hard figuring out what to say and how but we did talk about it.
I think for stuff like the Brown shooting, I probably wouldn’t raise it with kids under 8, as that won’t even seem relevant to them. But kid over 8 probably worth a “maybe you heard about this …, do you want to talk about it?” Convo. It really depend on how close it hits home for them. For most 6 year olds, News about 6 year olds massacred in school will provoke anxiety, but news about a shooting at an office jbuildkng across the country won’t register for them. So if you are Jewish, the synagogue shooting might be more traumatic for your child and you might want to preemptively address it.
Anonymous wrote:I think this is different than it used to be, at least for those of us who pay attention to what's happening right now (sociology and political science degree here, plus I protest every Saturday).
My children are in 1st and 3rd grade, I talk with them about basically everything. Their father is black, I assume white kids are way more sheltered about what's happening to certain communities in America right now. We talk about ICE, Trump, school shootings, really whatever is on the news I don't shelter them, though I wouldn't want them watching certain footage like people being attacked etc or footage from the shootings.
I see people here are not as radical as me. My kids are happy, and I don't talk about it all the time.