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No Child Left Alone

Getting the Government Out of Parenting

By (author) Abby W. Schachter
Format: Hardback
Publisher: Encounter Books,USA, New York, United States
Published: 29th Sep 2016
Dimensions: w 152mm h 228mm d 33mm
Weight: 595g
ISBN-10: 1594038619
ISBN-13: 9781594038617
Barcode No: 9781594038617
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Synopsis
Uncle Sam is the worst helicopter parent in America. Children are taken from their parents because they are obese. Parents are arrested for letting their children play outside alone. Sledding and swaddling are banned. From games to school to breast-feeding to daycare, the overbearing bureaucratic state keeps getting between kids and their parents. The state's safety, hygiene, and health regulations rule, and the government's judgment may not coincide with yours. Which foods and drinks to send to school, what toys to buy, whether to breast- or bottle-feed babies are all choices that used to be left to you and me. Not anymore. As a mom to four kids, I should be used to it, but I'm not. All the government-mandated parenting gets under my skin. And I'm not alone. No Child Left Alone explores the growing problem of an intrusive, interfering government and highlights those parents--all the Captain Mommies and Captain Daddies across America--fighting to take back control over their families.

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Captain Mommy \'kap-t?n 'mam-ee\ n. idiom Mother who encounters and resists the excessive intrusion into family life, most often through the use of overly expansive definitions of the state's role in protecting children. Example: Lenore Skenazy, founder of the Free-Range Kids movement is the first Captain Mommy. Captain Daddy \'kap-t?n 'dad-ee\ n. idiom Male version of a Captain Mommy. "I'd like to let my kids walk to school, but..." But what? You're the parent! They're your kids! You want to give them the freedom you loved--to walk, explore, stay home, go out, or even, once in a while, to get lost or goof up. To do things on their own. But... As Captain Mommy knows all too well, it's no longer straightforward. For the first five years after I founded the Free-Range Kids movement, parents who wanted to let their kids walk to school would end that sentence with, "But I don't want them to get kidnapped." Fair enough...even though the chances of that happening are so outlandishly small, that if for some reason you actually WANTED your child to be kidnapped by a stranger, do you know how long you'd have to keep him outside, unsupervised, for that to be statistically likely to happen? About 750,000 years. (And after the first 100,000 you really couldn't even call him a "kid" anymore.) But that's for another book. --from the Foreword by Lenore Skenazy