the bleak reality of being a child in the US

Stalin

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 4, 2008
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3,747
anyone here happy with this state of affairs ?

"..Talking about changes experienced by kids today often runs the risk of sounding reactionary, not to mention naive. No, there wasn’t as much talk about autism, or transgender kids, or any number of topics growing up in the 80s and 90s, because they weren’t understood or discussed in the same way – not because they didn’t exist. But it’s striking, watching the new HBO documentary Thoughts and Prayers, the degree to which it shows a demonstrable change from the experiences of someone growing up 30 or 40 years ago versus today: the absolute universality of emergency action plans that go beyond the scope of the fire drills you might remember.

Thoughts and Prayers surveys many of those lockdown drills, and the many supplements available to contemporary schools designed to offer further protection from an active shooter: bulletproof backpacks, in-classroom shelters and astoundingly elaborate real-life simulations, complete with stunningly realistic makeup for bullet wounds.

This change isn’t lost on directors Zackary Canepari and Jessica Dimmock. “Zack and I have an eight-year-old daughter,” Dimmock said in a joint interview, “and the idea for this film came about because she was coming up in school, and we were facing the thing that basically every American parent faces. Almost every kid in America does drills like this, across the board. We definitely did not grow up doing this, either, and I think there will be a huge part of the audience that will look at this and be like, ‘wow, right, I knew this was happening, but [still surprised] to see it.’ And there will be this whole other part of the audience that will be like, ‘yeah, Mom, Dad, I do this three times a year and have since I was five years old.’”

In some ways, Thoughts and Prayers feels like an update to Michael Moore’s Oscar-winning documentary Bowling for Columbine, which Canepari and Dimmock both praised. But it’s a starker version, without direct editorializing or satire. The film shows the elaborate drills, shows the pitches for new safety measures, and shows teenagers talking intelligently (and sometimes heartbreakingly) about the anxieties of growing up in an era of mass shootings. Most parents will watch it with increasing queasiness, and not because the movie gives them a specific villain as a target for their ire.

“Everyone we profile in the film is genuinely trying to make a difference,” Dimmock said. “These are people that in the absence of political reform, are trying to do it the only way that they can – which is through capitalism and industry.” Hence, an endless parade of stopgap measures that presume someone will, at some point, show up at a school with a semiautomatic weapon, looking to kill. Some of the tech designed to combat this, as the film-makers pointed out in our conversation, might seem innovative. (There are tables, for example, that flip on their sides to serve as bulletproof shields.) Put together, though, it’s a different story. “When you see them all in succession,” Dimmock said, “it’s hard to feel like this will be the way we’re going to get out of it.”

She went on to point out what the movie leaves more implicit: that the school-safety industry is dominated by former military and law-enforcement officers. Many of them, she said, know about safety from their experiences in war zones. “So these are people that have done several tours in Afghanistan, and then are coming back and have a good idea about how to be tactically aware – but are creating programs for third-graders. Our criticism is not necessarily to those individual instructors, but that the expertise absolutely is applicable to something like a war zone. So, wait, do we live in a war zone? Is that what’s going on here? And then, if that answer is yes, maybe we should spend more attention on not living in a war zone.”


comrade stlain
moscow
 
Werbung:
anyone here happy with this state of affairs ?

"..Talking about changes experienced by kids today often runs the risk of sounding reactionary, not to mention naive. No, there wasn’t as much talk about autism, or transgender kids, or any number of topics growing up in the 80s and 90s, because they weren’t understood or discussed in the same way – not because they didn’t exist. But it’s striking, watching the new HBO documentary Thoughts and Prayers, the degree to which it shows a demonstrable change from the experiences of someone growing up 30 or 40 years ago versus today: the absolute universality of emergency action plans that go beyond the scope of the fire drills you might remember.

Thoughts and Prayers surveys many of those lockdown drills, and the many supplements available to contemporary schools designed to offer further protection from an active shooter: bulletproof backpacks, in-classroom shelters and astoundingly elaborate real-life simulations, complete with stunningly realistic makeup for bullet wounds.

This change isn’t lost on directors Zackary Canepari and Jessica Dimmock. “Zack and I have an eight-year-old daughter,” Dimmock said in a joint interview, “and the idea for this film came about because she was coming up in school, and we were facing the thing that basically every American parent faces. Almost every kid in America does drills like this, across the board. We definitely did not grow up doing this, either, and I think there will be a huge part of the audience that will look at this and be like, ‘wow, right, I knew this was happening, but [still surprised] to see it.’ And there will be this whole other part of the audience that will be like, ‘yeah, Mom, Dad, I do this three times a year and have since I was five years old.’”

In some ways, Thoughts and Prayers feels like an update to Michael Moore’s Oscar-winning documentary Bowling for Columbine, which Canepari and Dimmock both praised. But it’s a starker version, without direct editorializing or satire. The film shows the elaborate drills, shows the pitches for new safety measures, and shows teenagers talking intelligently (and sometimes heartbreakingly) about the anxieties of growing up in an era of mass shootings. Most parents will watch it with increasing queasiness, and not because the movie gives them a specific villain as a target for their ire.

“Everyone we profile in the film is genuinely trying to make a difference,” Dimmock said. “These are people that in the absence of political reform, are trying to do it the only way that they can – which is through capitalism and industry.” Hence, an endless parade of stopgap measures that presume someone will, at some point, show up at a school with a semiautomatic weapon, looking to kill. Some of the tech designed to combat this, as the film-makers pointed out in our conversation, might seem innovative. (There are tables, for example, that flip on their sides to serve as bulletproof shields.) Put together, though, it’s a different story. “When you see them all in succession,” Dimmock said, “it’s hard to feel like this will be the way we’re going to get out of it.”

She went on to point out what the movie leaves more implicit: that the school-safety industry is dominated by former military and law-enforcement officers. Many of them, she said, know about safety from their experiences in war zones. “So these are people that have done several tours in Afghanistan, and then are coming back and have a good idea about how to be tactically aware – but are creating programs for third-graders. Our criticism is not necessarily to those individual instructors, but that the expertise absolutely is applicable to something like a war zone. So, wait, do we live in a war zone? Is that what’s going on here? And then, if that answer is yes, maybe we should spend more attention on not living in a war zone.”


comrade stlain
moscow
Right-thinking Americans care about children and do what they can to rescue and protect children in spite of radical leftist opposition.

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Activist Democrat judge sabotages National Guard surge in Memphis after 100 children rescued

Tennessee Courts
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Activist Democrat judge sabotages National Guard surge in Memphis after 100 children rescued​

Cooper Williamson
November 18, 2025


Davidson County Chancellor Patricia Head Moskal allowed time for the government to appeal the decision.


Officials, including activist judges, refuse to let Republican efforts to fight crime go unpunished, with the most recent challenge coming from Tennessee.
 
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