Culture Best Friends Need To Banned - Because "Inclusivity"

According to a piece in U.S. News and World Report, some schools in the United States and Europe “are attempting to ban the entire concept of children having best friends,” because it’s not inclusive and kids get hurt. “The notion of choosing best friends is deeply embedded in our culture,” child and family psychologist Dr. Barbara Greenberg writes in a piece titled “Should Schools Ban Kids from Having Best Friends?” “Nonetheless, there is, in my opinion, merit to the movement to ban having best friends,” she continues. According to Greenberg, “there is something dreadfully exclusionary occurring when a middle schooler tells the girl sitting next to her that she is best friends with the girl sitting in front of them.” “Child after child comes to my therapy office distressed when their best friend has now given someone else this coveted title,” she continues. President Trump's 8 Biggest Accomplishments Greenberg says “Bring it on” to the idea of banning “best friends.” She explains: I am a huge fan of social inclusion. The phrase best friend is inherently exclusionary. Among children and even teens, best friends shift rapidly. These shifts lead to emotional distress and would be significantly less likely if our kids spoke of close or even good friends rather than best friends. . . . There’s an unspoken ranking system; and where there is a ranking system, there are problems. I see kids who are never labeled best friends, and sadly, they sit alone at lunch tables and often in their homes while others are with their best friends. Is a best friend an “exclusionary” thing? Sure. Do kids without best friends feel like garbage sometimes? Absolutely. But the truth is, Greenberg is making the same incorrect assumption that so many people make when they advocate for banning language: that changing the language will change a single damn thing about the reality. It won’t. Instructing children, as Greenberg suggests, to talk about “close friends” instead of “best friends” isn’t going to change those friendships any more than suddenly referring to your ex as “my boyfriend” is going to mean that you’re back together. Think about it: Even if a school forbids children from using the phrase “best friend,” some kids will still have one person with whom they really connect, and it will be obvious to everyone that that two are closer to each other than to anyone else. Kids who don’t have best friends will still be aware of it when they, say, have to pick a partner for a project (if that’s even still allowed) and they keep getting the shaft from their “close friend” in favor of one of that “close friend’s” “close friends” —- the best friend. It’s tough to be in grade school without a best friend. I know; I did a few stints in that hellhole myself, and I spent a lot of gym classes having to partner up with a girl who bullied me (and smelled like cigarettes) — because I didn’t have a “best” friend, just “close” friends who were actually “best” friends with someone else. But would my school’s banning “best friends” have made any of that easier for me? No, because even though I was a kid, I was not a complete f***ing idiot. I could still easily tell you who were best friends, and that I did not have a best friend, because of these things called social cues. It would be nice to create a world without pain, and without exclusion, but that’s going to be a tough thing to do. For one thing, humans are by nature exclusionary. We’re all different, and we’ll all connect (or not connect) with one another in different ways. Every single person who has ever existed knows some people whom they like more than they like other people. It’s normal, and it’s not going to change — especially not by something so simple as refusing to call things what they are. READ MORE: Some Eyebrows Are Cultural Appropriation: OpEd Campus-Wide Email Tells White Girls to Stop Wearing Hoop Earrings Long, Adorned Nails Are Deemed Cultural Appropriation
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Sounds like the begining of losing yourself in a faceless mass, also known as communism.
 
This sounds ridiculous but I looked up what exactly they're doing and it doesn't sound that bad. Basically one or two schools have just started giving kids a new randomized assigned lunch table to eat at each day, basically to try to coerce them into interacting with people who they otherwise never would have. I don't really get how this is "banning best friends" but maybe there's something more to this I'm missing.
that's how it is with every shrieking snowflake
we need more X.. let's do more X
NO WE NEED TO GET RID OF Y REEEE

IE "we don't need more shows and stuff with minorities, we need to get rid of white cis het males REEEE"

they can't create, only destroy
 
that feeling when you're not even friendzoned, but acquaintancezoned
The worst part is, people who were like me growing up where it was just acquaintanceship would hurt a lot more. I'd feel bad for people who can't even be friends. God forbid some kids think "hey we like at least 3 same things let's meet more."
 
Sometimes I wonder if the end goal of liberalism isn't communism, but rather just all joining together as one giant pool of LCL No race, no class, no gender.

No individuality.

If you were to describe the effects of third impact to liberals who don't know what Evangelion is I guarantee it would sound wonderful to them.
In another thread, someone suggested reading This Perfect Day and it exactly this. All traces of individualism are being expunged from humanity via genetic engineering by a supercomputer.
 
Who need friends when you have allies?

Real talk: has there ever been even a single one of these (child and family psychologists) that's been worth a fetid rat's turd? Because I ain't never heard o' one.
Most of the highest profile ones are very suspect; the shit they advocate (e.g. saying No to a child will stunt their creativity) tend to create more problem down the road -- more business for their lucrative private practice, obviously

The child psychologists who actually work in a team with other health care personnel tend to be more helpful and genuinely caring.

The psychotherapist in the interview video (Nell Daly?) talks about "some place in the middle", yet the stuff she advocates ("everyone belongs; you don't want to make anyone feel excluded, or give them a sense of un-belonging in any community") doesn't sound "middle ground" to me. Rather, it puts an onus on the children, impelling them to monitor their behavior in order to live up to the adult, politicalized notion of "fairness" (which is a very different kettle of fish from what children mean by "fair") and "diversity" (which isn't even a concern to a child, or to most adults).
 
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If they want inclusivity, they'll have to give up segregation unless this only applies to non POCs...

Gentaro had the right attitude in befriending people who antagonize him:

tumblr_lzo88vwoPr1qj9e4io1_500.jpg
 
So, there is actually no great push to ban best friends? This is another case where the outrage is as exceptional as the source.

Wrong.

"Americans love reading how Europeans are superior parents. We read the books, whether it’s “Bringing Up Bébé: One American Mother Discovers the Wisdom of French Parenting” in 2012 or, out this month, “Achtung Baby: An American Mom on the German Art of Raising Self-Reliant Children,” and believe the hype. So when news broke that Prince George, the eldest son of Prince William and Duchess Kate, goes to a school that bans best friends — well, there was only one thing to do.

"Our schools began to ban best friends, too. Most parents know that schools have been doing this informally for some time, but psychologist Barbara Greenberg caused a stir with a recent piece in US News & World Report, noting that she sees a trend of American schools implementing an actual ban."

https://nypost.com/2018/01/14/the-mindless-attack-on-letting-kids-have-best-friends/
 
Wrong.

"Americans love reading how Europeans are superior parents. We read the books, whether it’s “Bringing Up Bébé: One American Mother Discovers the Wisdom of French Parenting” in 2012 or, out this month, “Achtung Baby: An American Mom on the German Art of Raising Self-Reliant Children,” and believe the hype. So when news broke that Prince George, the eldest son of Prince William and Duchess Kate, goes to a school that bans best friends — well, there was only one thing to do.

"Our schools began to ban best friends, too. Most parents know that schools have been doing this informally for some time, but psychologist Barbara Greenberg caused a stir with a recent piece in US News & World Report, noting that she sees a trend of American schools implementing an actual ban."

https://nypost.com/2018/01/14/the-mindless-attack-on-letting-kids-have-best-friends/
Even Americans buy into the "Europe is best" bullshit? Fucking hell.
 
That's quite an impressive word salad for a sad cunt who wants to ban two words because they hurt her fee-fees.
 
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This sounds ridiculous but I looked up what exactly they're doing and it doesn't sound that bad. Basically one or two schools have just started giving kids a new randomized assigned lunch table to eat at each day, basically to try to coerce them into interacting with people who they otherwise never would have. I don't really get how this is "banning best friends" but maybe there's something more to this I'm missing.

Even if it were merely separating friends and randomly assigned table-mates, this can still have unforeseen effects. Children are not expected to be morally sophisticated creatures; most are motivated by punishments and rewards (what they call Kohlberg stages 1 and 2) and see the world in these terms. Not being able to sit with best buds will be seen as a punishment, and the child will ask what have she done to deserve that. Not knowing the cause of her "punishment", and having no way to avoid this, may breed resentment and learned helplessness. What's more, if said "punishment" is being told to sit next to a booger-picking negro or a boy who wears ballet tutus and calls himself "Darla", I doubt the child would end up with favorable impressions to such demographics, or to this "diversity" project as a whole.
 
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This sounds ridiculous but I looked up what exactly they're doing and it doesn't sound that bad. Basically one or two schools have just started giving kids a new randomized assigned lunch table to eat at each day, basically to try to coerce them into interacting with people who they otherwise never would have. I don't really get how this is "banning best friends" but maybe there's something more to this I'm missing.
I can see where they're coming from but I'm not sure if it's really beneficial in the long run. For outgoing kids this might be fine but especially for the kids that struggle with social situations (introverted, shy, socially awkward, have something "wrong" with them etc.) being separated from their friend and thrown in with random kids they don't know probably is a fucking nightmare
 
I can see where they're coming from but I'm not sure if it's really beneficial in the long run. For outgoing kids this might be fine but especially for the kids that struggle with social situations (introverted, shy, socially awkward, have something "wrong" with them etc.) being separated from their friend and thrown in with random kids they don't know probably is a fucking nightmare

The point is to separate people from having individual relationships of their own choosing by preventing them from having repeated contacts with people on their own terms. It's sort of like the educational equivalent of randomly selected Moonie mass weddings, but on a friendship level. If people have no relationships that they choose on their own, they have to rely on the state. They certainly wouldn't be able to organize together, if the already very limited opportunity people have to make school friends are eliminated and replaced by random encounters.

There's an increasingly disturbing trend among so-called progressives to try to turn humanity into a hive of eusocial insects with nobody having individual traits, but just categorized by arbitrary shared traits and lumped into clades of those with similar traits, whether they want to be or not. I generally scoff at terms like "cultural Marxism," but really, this is, at its heart, Communism.

Totalitarian systems, by their very nature, do not want the people under their control to have one on one relationships with each other or a social support network outside that provided by the government. They don't want it to be "Us v. Big Brother." They want it to be just each individual on their own, taking whatever the government chooses to give them.

I hope that this is just a harmless, dumb fad, but Greenberg expressed what is underlying this. They actually want to ban the concept of friendship itself. I am hoping this is simply an aberrant utterly shitty human monster speaking for herself, but she's just saying what some institutions are already doing. They're just usually not so brazen as to state it explicitly, as if such a monstrous outcome would actually be a good thing.
 
The point is to separate people from having individual relationships of their own choosing by preventing them from having repeated contacts with people on their own terms. It's sort of like the educational equivalent of randomly selected Moonie mass weddings, but on a friendship level. If people have no relationships that they choose on their own, they have to rely on the state. They certainly wouldn't be able to organize together, if the already very limited opportunity people have to make school friends are eliminated and replaced by random encounters.

There's an increasingly disturbing trend among so-called progressives to try to turn humanity into a hive of eusocial insects with nobody having individual traits, but just categorized by arbitrary shared traits and lumped into clades of those with similar traits, whether they want to be or not. I generally scoff at terms like "cultural Marxism," but really, this is, at its heart, Communism.

Totalitarian systems, by their very nature, do not want the people under their control to have one on one relationships with each other or a social support network outside that provided by the government. They don't want it to be "Us v. Big Brother." They want it to be just each individual on their own, taking whatever the government chooses to give them.

I hope that this is just a harmless, dumb fad, but Greenberg expressed what is underlying this. They actually want to ban the concept of friendship itself. I am hoping this is simply an aberrant utterly shitty human monster speaking for herself, but she's just saying what some institutions are already doing. They're just usually not so brazen as to state it explicitly, as if such a monstrous outcome would actually be a good thing.

That's nice and all but I get the impression they're just making up bullshit so they don't have to admit they're copying anti-gang policies from prisons.
 
Wrong.

"Americans love reading how Europeans are superior parents. We read the books, whether it’s “Bringing Up Bébé: One American Mother Discovers the Wisdom of French Parenting” in 2012 or, out this month, “Achtung Baby: An American Mom on the German Art of Raising Self-Reliant Children,” and believe the hype. So when news broke that Prince George, the eldest son of Prince William and Duchess Kate, goes to a school that bans best friends — well, there was only one thing to do.

"Our schools began to ban best friends, too. Most parents know that schools have been doing this informally for some time, but psychologist Barbara Greenberg caused a stir with a recent piece in US News & World Report, noting that she sees a trend of American schools implementing an actual ban."

https://nypost.com/2018/01/14/the-mindless-attack-on-letting-kids-have-best-friends/

So superior, they let in droves of immigrants to rape, molest, and murder their children.
 
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Edit: Ah, someone already posted the video. Might as well give my thoughts then.

This is some serious dystopian levels of creepy. Who the hell is this lady to tell kids that they can't have "best friends"?
 
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