DesertPirate
Sailing from the desert
- Joined
- Mar 20, 2006
- Posts
- 20,432
I know that for some people, the fear is that your children will just mimic you. And so, you're not really raising free thinkers, but small clones who repeat you but don't understand why. It's a valid fear, in some cases. Certainly, there are children (and adults) who say, "I'm support XYZ because we have always done that in my family."
At our house, it doesn't roll that way. My oldest daughter is almost 13. As I mentioned in Selena's thread, it took me a while to pick a candidate to support this time around. I looked at all three of the major contenders with the same level of study. I read their websites, read/watched their speeches, looked at media reports, etc. In the process, my oldest sat just behind me and to my left and read over my shoulder. We talked about the candidates extensively. In the end, I picked Obama. She picked Edwards. She was quite sad when he ended his candidacy, in fact. When I asked her why she was supporting him, she told me "I liked what he said about education. It made the most sense."
Education isn't on my top three issues in a candidate (maybe it should be after this whole "No child left behind" fiasco). She had an issue that was important to her and found a candidate she liked.
*so proud mama*
When I was a kid my Dad wanted to know if I was paying attention, he would take the opposite of me in any political discussion just to test my thinking

Really taught me how to think on the fly accurately

He was a college professor