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Politicians telling people how to raise kids annoying, wrong

Originally Published: 11/15/07 6:58pm Modified: 11/15/07 7:14pm No comments

In her column titled Birth control good idea for middle schoolers (SN 11/14), Kelly Kane assumes “the parents that are angry over these school districts’ decision to approve birth control are those that are not close with their children.” Allow me to assume that Ms. Kane has never been a parent — at least not the parent of an 11-year-old child.

Did it ever occur to her that perhaps some parents are angry that important medical decisions involving their children will be made without their knowledge or consent? Or that they are angry with government officials who interfere with their right to raise their children as they see fit? Perhaps if Ms. Kane is ever blessed with children, she’ll understand the anger when a political busybody tries to tell her the “correct” way to raise her children.

Furthermore, I trust she’ll understand the absurdity of one of her statements: “If they had a good relationship with their middle schoolers then they would not be so nervous about what decisions their middle schoolers will be making on their own.”

Most 11-year-olds are not emotionally or intellectually equipped to handle making many of their own important decisions, regardless of their parental relationships. Ms. Kane ignores this fact at her future children’s risk.

Steve Sutton

1988 MSU graduate


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