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12 votes
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Japan to ban upskirting in sweeping sex crime reforms
11 votes -
Murhaf raises $230,000 selling charity flower pins in Sweden – sales skyrocket after a viral post about the boy, and a racist backlash, only brings in more money
2 votes -
Teachers in Denmark are using apps to audit their students' moods – some experts are heavily skeptical of the approach
7 votes -
Across the whole of Europe, a lot of women are pregnant or have conceived children from sperm donors through Danish sperm banks
7 votes -
China on edge as Mongolian boy is hailed as new Buddhist lama
10 votes -
Japan’s ‘evaporated’ people: Inside an industry that helps people disappear
6 votes -
Alone and exploited, migrant children work brutal jobs across the US
11 votes -
9yo son wants to join Discord to talk to friends. Any advice?
Well, as the headline says my son wants to join Discord to talk to his friends while playing Roblox on the iPad. Up until now he's been using Teams to communicate while playing. Recently his...
Well, as the headline says my son wants to join Discord to talk to his friends while playing Roblox on the iPad. Up until now he's been using Teams to communicate while playing. Recently his friends have been switching to Discord so naturally he wants that too.
I only know Discord by name so I'm looking for insight into how it works and how safe it is for children and in general. I'm aware that the age limit is 13.
10 votes -
Globetrotting Black nutritionist Flemmie P. Kittrell revolutionized early childhood education and illuminated ‘hidden hunger’
2 votes -
Texas parents voice concern over gun found in elementary bathroom
9 votes -
When Leo Babler was born with a deadly genetic disorder his parents built an adventure van, and made sure their son experienced the most beautiful wild places in the country during the time they had
4 votes -
Norway's golden generation of athletes proves the value of sport as a public good – commitment to making the “joy of sport” available to all is producing world-class talent
3 votes -
Longitudinal study of kindergarteners suggests spanking is harmful for children’s social competence
7 votes -
Age that kids acquire mobile phones not linked to well-being, says Stanford Medicine study
16 votes -
Norwegian Jehovah's Witnesses no longer registered as religious community – due to exclusionary practices when someone breaks religious rules
7 votes -
Sold a Story: How teaching kids to read went so wrong
12 votes -
Child workers found throughout Hyundai-Kia supply chain in Alabama
8 votes -
Finland defence minister to take two months' paternity leave amid NATO bid – Antti Kaikkonen says 'children are only little for a moment'
8 votes -
New Zealand parents refuse use of vaccinated blood in life-saving surgery on baby
14 votes -
John Lewis - The Beginner
5 votes -
India’s ghost weddings: where dead children are married off - Pretha Kalyanam
7 votes -
What have you learned from being a parent?
Question aimed at those here that have children. What are some of the things you’ve learned? How has having children changed your perspective?
19 votes -
Firefox for families: The TechTalk - Making awkward tech conversations with kids slightly less awkward
5 votes -
A Danish city built Google into its schools – then banned it
12 votes -
US child poverty rate at an all-time low
11 votes -
How Twitter’s child porn problem ruined its plans for an OnlyFans competitor
9 votes -
Vegan mom gets life in prison for starvation death of son in Florida
10 votes -
Thermal paste and toddlers
Last night my daughter's toddler bed fell apart and I had to fix it. Some screws had come loose so it was an easy fix. Brought my toolbox into their (her and her twin brother's) room around bed...
Last night my daughter's toddler bed fell apart and I had to fix it. Some screws had come loose so it was an easy fix. Brought my toolbox into their (her and her twin brother's) room around bed time, fixed the bed, then began the usual bedtime routine. My wife and I left the room and that was that.
Except I left my toolbox in there because I'm forgetful. And you'd think the pokey screwdrivers, gardening shears, and other dangerous tools in there would've been a problem, but nope. My kids weren't interested in that stuff. They pulled out my chalk line and unspooled it. Fortunately it had been heavily used in a project recently, so there wasn't much chalk in it. But they really seemed to like the small, mostly-empty tube of thermal paste I keep in there for computer projects.
If anyone has used thermal paste, you know how incredibly messy it is. It's this thick, dark paste that gets everywhere if you're not careful. And it's the kind of thing where even just a little bit of it can make a big mess. It was all over the walls and all over them. Fortunately they were kind enough to put the cap back on the tube when they were done (bless them).
We tried to use wipes, but to no avail. So the first thing we did this morning was give them a bath and used a wash cloth to clean it all off. I also did some quick googling to see if thermal paste was toxic (it isn't), but 90% of the answers online were jokes about it improving your body temperature and allowing you to overclock yourself. Fucking hilarious stuff, but maybe not so much when you're making sure your kids are alright. They should be fine though.
Anyway, how're ya'lls days going so far?
18 votes -
After their daughters were beat by a girl in sports, Utah parents triggered investigation into whether she was transgender
13 votes -
New LGBTQ+ plan presented by the Danish government includes a proposal to expand access to legal gender change to all children regardless of age
4 votes -
Reward efforts, not outcomes
5 votes -
Denmark's controversial family policy sees many Danish parents fleeing to nearby countries, especially to the German border city of Flensburg
4 votes -
A homework task prompts kids to reflect deeply on learning, and its limits
6 votes -
Hate crime investigation underway after alleged Proud Boys storm Drag Queen Story Hour at Bay Area library
5 votes -
Short-sightedness has become an epidemic
7 votes -
Judge blocks Texas investigating families of trans youth
18 votes -
A culture that kills its children has no future
8 votes -
The impact of digital media on children’s intelligence
10 votes -
Too many kids show worrying signs of fragility from a very young age. Here’s what we can do about it | Parenting kids with anxiety
23 votes -
Charles Darwin's young children painted pictures and wrote stories on the back of draft manuscripts of Darwin's books and notes, and therefore a few original copies of his important works survived
6 votes -
Illinois law bans schools from fining students. So local police are doing it for them.
6 votes -
A major update in our assessment of water quality interventions
5 votes -
I can't stand how many adults actively campaign for the suffering of children
The title says it all, really. Today there was a story about the Flordia Department of Education rejecting a record number of books for containing Critical Race Theory. But when I read the article...
The title says it all, really.
Today there was a story about the Flordia Department of Education rejecting a record number of books for containing Critical Race Theory. But when I read the article it said that it was rejecting these books for other things - for Common Core and for a thing called Social-Emotional Learning, or SEL.
SEL is not a term I'm familiar with, so I looked it up. There's an organization that advocates for it called CASEL who has a more in-depth writeup, but to put things as simply as possible, it's the idea that lesson plans should include material to improve a person's social and emotional growth and is largely concerned with students' mental health. I couldn't understand why anyone would have a problem with this kind of thing; kids today are put through a lot of stressful situations and it looks like mental health for children has been an issue that has exploded over the past few years. So I found and read an article about why it's controversial and I'm practically in tears over here.
Right now we are living in a world where children are tortured so much that they attempt to kill themselves and there are grown adults - legitimate parents of their own children - who are fighting against the people who are trying to help them. And all of the answers to why they are doing this are just absolutely insane to me. Some of them don't want their children to realize they were racist. Some of them don't want to ever discover the concept of sexuality or gender identity for fear that their child might not be straight cis baby factories. But overall, it seems like they oppose it because it threatens their control over their children, as if they were puppets to command.
I already knew how fucked up they were when they were trying to pass that Don't Say Gay bill, but this is just absolutely next level insanity. I'm sure they don't realize that the concept of SEL exists largely because there are so many children in the world who have had to deal with parents who think and act like these people do.
Utah Parents Unite, an activist group that says it’s fighting indoctrination and mask mandates in schools, urged its members to lobby against a bill to expand suicide prevention programs to elementary schools, where, the group said, “suicides are not happening.” (National data obtained by NBC News show that the number of children ages 6-12 who visited children’s hospitals for suicidal thoughts or self-harm has more than doubled since 2016.)
ARGH!
26 votes -
How Japan built cities where you could send your toddler on an errand
24 votes -
Bullying can make children's lives a misery and cause lifelong health problems – but scientists are discovering powerful ways to fight it
17 votes -
Texas Governor Greg Abbott orders state agencies to investigate gender-transitioning procedures as child abuse
22 votes -
The data are clear: The boys are not all right
13 votes -
When hundreds of vampire-hunting children invaded a Scottish cemetery — and helped spur a comic book ban
5 votes -
More young American kids are getting sick from cannabis edibles
7 votes