Jazz Shaw, I would call this breaking news, but the only real headline here is that Time Magazine felt the need to point this out as if it were some sort of surprise. Ask anyone of any race, gender,...
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Jerry Newcombe, Ted Cruz is beginning to surge significantly in the polls in Iowa. Surely the evangelicals in Iowa are the key factor. Already, some of the political pundits are writing him off,...
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Scott McKay, Because…THAT’S what the Good Guys do. Here’s a horrible, horrible story which as it turns out has a bit of a silver lining. By the way, don’t do drugs, all right?...
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Sela T, Donald Trump has proven to be a man of many talents…but his GREATEST near Superhuman power, would be the ability to become a household name…GLOBALLY, whether for good or...
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Larry Elder, The following story is true. The names have been changed to protect the innocent. I drove past the outdoor parking-lot-turned-Christmas-tree-store several times before I decided to...
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More Americans favor than oppose a pathway to citizenship for immigrants who are living in the United States illegally, a new Associated Press-GfK poll shows. While most Republicans oppose such a...
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Steve Watson, Claims that First Amendment rights “go back only to the 1960s.” The so called “progressive” website Slate, offered up an article Tuesday that argues free speech...
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Gateway Pundit | Jim Hoft Isn’t there a conservative out there somewhere who can challenge Paul Ryan in a primary? Different Republican Speaker – Same Liberal CrapNow we know why...
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Vladimir Putin has described US Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump as an “unquestionably talented” man. “He is a very outstanding man, unquestionably talented,”...
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Harvard administrators are crimson-faced over a misguided effort to get students ready for the holidays by handing out pointers to help them debate tuition-paying grownups who don’t know a...
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Tickets for Adele’s 2016 U.S. tour are selling out fast. Find out how to get tickets. Getting tickets to one of Adele’s 2016 concerts may seem like an impossible task. Luckily for fans of...
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Republican U.S. presidential candidate Ben Carson canceled a trip planned for later this month to Africa that would have taken him to Nigeria, Kenya and Zambia due to what his campaign on Thursday...
Good morning from the nation's capital, where riled conservatives tell our Philip Wegmann they didn't know a giant spending bill changes immigration law to add "guest workers." Lawmakers also scrutinize how the government vets immigrants' use of Facebook and other social media for links to terrorism. Josh Siegel examines repercussions. In an on-camera interview with Genevieve Wood, a Cuban dissident reflects on that communist regime one year after President Obama proposed normalized relations. And historian Lee Edwards recalls the real-world "Star Wars."
House conservatives are up in arms over a provision in the omnibus spending bill that could allow more than a quarter-million temporary guest workers into the United States.
FBI Director James Comey confirmed this week that the husband-and-wife attackers in San Bernardino were "showing signs in their communication of their joint commitment to jihad and to martyrdom" through private messages.
Over the past year in Cuba, violent beatings against pro-democracy activists have escalated, and the number of political dissidents being detained—more than 7,000—is on pace to break previous records.
Thirty-three years before there was "Star Wars: The Force Awakens," there was a real "Star Wars" program that changed the course of history. Here’s the remarkable and true story.
Kelvin Cochran, who served as a firefighter for 34 years, was fired after publishing and distributing a book that addressed issues of homosexuality, gay marriage, and premarital sex from a biblical perspective.
Kyle was absorbed in a videogame on his cellphone, so I asked his mom, “How long has Kyle had a stomach ache?” Mom said, “I’m thinking it’s been about two days.” Then Kyle replied, “Shut up, mom. You don’t know what you’re talking about.” And he gave a snorty laugh, without looking up from his videogame. Kyle is 10 years old.
I have been a physician for 29 years. This sort of language and behavior from a 10-year-old was very rare in the 1980s and 1990s. It would have been unusual a decade ago. It is common today. America’s children are immersed in a culture of disrespect: for parents, teachers, and one another. They learn it from television, even on the Disney Channel, where parents are portrayed as clueless, out-of-touch or absent. They learn it from celebrities or the Internet. They learn it from social media. They teach it to one another. They wear T-shirts emblazoned with slogans like “I’m not shy. I just don’t like you.”
The challenge of raising children in America today is different from 30 or 50 years ago. Back then popular culture supported the authority of parents, whether it was the “Andy Griffith Show” in the 1960s or “Family Ties” in the 1980s. Kids are not born knowing how to be respectful. They have to be taught.
Multiple lines of evidence, including cohort studies such as the National Longitudinal Study of Youth, now demonstrates that disrespectful children are more likely to grow up to be anxious and depressed, three times more likely to be overweight, more likely to be fragile, less healthy and less creative, compared with respectful children.
But don’t give up hope. Just as I see children like Kyle in my office, I also see children who are courteous, respectful, happy and confident. Same race, ethnicity and household income. But the parents are different, and they parent differently.
For the past seven years I’ve been talking with parents and their children, trying to understand why some children are respectful even though most of their peers are not. The difference is in the parents.
Here’s some of what those parents have taught me: Require respectful behavior at all times. It’s OK to disagree. It’s never OK to be disrespectful. Prioritize the family. The family meal at home is more important than piling on after-school extracurricular activities. Instead of boosting self-esteem, teach humility. Fight the cultural imperative to be “awesome.”
Moreover, no screens when you are with your child. Put your cellphone away. No electronic devices at the dinner table. Teach the art of face-to-face conversation. No devices in a public setting, such as the doctor’s office. Govern your children’s use of social media, television and any device with a screen.
If you’re going to make a change, don’t be subtle. New Year’s Day is as good a time as any to sit down with your children and explain that there are going to be some changes in this household: changes in how we talk, in how we behave, in how we treat one another. It is possible to create a culture of respect in the home while living in the U.S. today. It isn’t easy, but it can be done.
Dr. Sax is a practicing physician in West Chester, Pa., and the author of “The Collapse of Parenting,” out this month from Basic Books
Erdogan came to office in 2003 with a policy of "zero problems with neighbors," but has since led Turkey to problems with most, if not all, of them.
Turkey's foreign policy choices and current crises have combined to make Erdogan reach out to Israel for help.
Israel has weighed the price and found it acceptable: Israel will pay Turkey $20 million; Turkey will expel the Hamas leadership from Istanbul and will buy Israeli gas.
The restoration of relations with Israel is less a political reconciliation than an admission of the utter bankruptcy of Turkey's last five years of diplomatic endeavor.
Which way will Turkish President Erdogan go on Israel? Left: Erdogan (then Prime Minister) shakes hands with then Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, on May 1, 2005. Right: Erdogan shakes hands with Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh on January 3, 2012.
The announcement of the restoration of Israel-Turkish relations should be seen in the context of Turkey having nowhere else to go.
Turkey's relations with Israel have been strained, to put it mildly, since 2010 when, through a non-profit organization, Turkey funded the 2010 Gaza Flotilla aimed at breaking the Israeli-Egyptian blockade of the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip.