Tag Archive for Stanford

Students and “Real” vs “Fake” News

One of the reasons I coached and taught high school speech and debate was my firm belief that everyone needs to have rational-thinking skills.  (Okay.  So I also loved interacting with kids who were smart and/or liked a challenge.)

I’m dismayed to see the Stanford study that shows that students, for the most part, are NOT ABLE to distinguish between news that is real and news that is fake.

So many false “facts” bombard us, most notably from the recent political campaigns but also via Facebook, Twitter, and other social media.  Then it’s spread by well-meaning people on their own social media sites, through their emails, or by word of mouth–BEFORE reason has been applied or the “facts” checked for their accuracy or slant, which gives those “facts” a life of their own because more and more unthinking people accept them and pass them on.

The place to start is with those students.  Teachers, parents, and friends should challenge them to THINK, to VERIFY, to APPLY REASON in everything they hear or read–to develop logical thinking skills.

Those skills have always been important; they’re needed even more today if our country and our human decency is to survive.

 

 

He Just “Got Some Action”

I’m not sure what I’m more livid about–Brock Turner’s 6-month sentence for 3 felony sex-count convictions or his father’s attitude toward the situation.

Ex-Stanford swimmer Turner viciously attacked a young woman, changing her life forever.  (Yes. The violence of rape sticks with you the rest of your life.)  Her impact statement in court poignantly and intelligently explains what she went through, how she’s feeling now, and what she expects her future to be like.  The judge heard that–and still gave Turner only 6 months in jail plus probation.

His father’s reaction?  That a long prison sentence for his son was not appropriate for “20 minutes of action.”  To be honest, I don’t know if, as many people feel, he was saying that his son “got a little action,” thus minimizing the violence to the level of a consenting sex-game.  I don’t know, either, if Mr. Turner thinks that all sentences should be  based on the length of time they took (let’s see, a man takes 10 seconds to aim and shoot the gun that kills another man…).  Or if he’s even using his brain at all.

I don’t wonder where Brock got his attitudes from.  I do wonder if maybe the dad should serve a long stretch in prison for the 20 years of child-raising that led to this woman’s being raped.