The Annals of Mac North

Archive for June 10th, 2006

Fridge fixed, lappy still crippled. I’m getting worried that I won’t be able to make the school’s video. Every attachable component I’ve added to the system gets offlined. It’s always easy to reproduce, but difficult to characterize.

The last three days with Brian, Jeff, and Sam were good fun. They got a glimpse into the small-town life, and even came to two days’ worth of lessons. The students were really excited after the first 10 minutes of shock and bashfulness. They were like celebrities or rock stars. The fellas also tried Japanese style karaoke, proper sushi, and ramen.

And now it’s time for rather harsh rebuking. Please refer to this news story. Basically, a ’straight-A’ high school student meets someone thru myspace and decides to meet them in real life. That person happened to be in Jordan, so the girl gets a passport and flies. This is a choice cross-section of what I hope isn’t but dreadfully know is an average American parent:

Someone…
Shawn Lester told The Saginaw News that her daughter has “never given me a day’s trouble. … I just don’t understand with all these new laws protecting America how a 16-year-old kid could get out of the country.”

And now for the kicks (yes, plural) in the teeth:

(1) Rules protect who?

  • Part of me goes “Awwww! Isn’t that cute! A sincere believer in ‘We the people’.” Since when did the rules and laws of the land have the best interests of the //people// in mind? The companies and corporations did more than hide the manufacturing process from the general person (well, not hide - there is still a small ‘Made in <cheap labor human rights violator>’ sticker on everything you buy - but ask a random walker how or where their computer was made, and you may just get a clueless answer, if any at all). They’ve also hidden the process of government - people must still have that School House Rock song stuck in their heads. Laws are made because they are paid for.

(2) Children are supposed to be protected by rules?

  • Typical blame passing. If you don’t have a relationship with your kid beyond “How was school today?” or “What do you want to study at college?” then you’re destined to be suprised when the kid leaves the country. But I don’t know this mother - maybe she’s busy with her own career, or Starbucks coffee crew, or yoga classes. Know your kids, woman; that’s been is your primary responsibility for the last 16 years when you signed up to use the delivery room. Did you forget or something? And where’s the father in all of this? Raising a kid is a job for two people in most cases.

(3) Is the news media so forgetful?

  • It’s like this is the first time a kid has _ever_ been deceived on the internet. Does anyone remember the AOL days? Sensational amnesiatic journalism makes my brain want to scream, but I usually end up just shaking my head and being more cynical.