Posted on 05/04/2015 8:44:21 AM PDT by Kaslin

On my recent business trip to Switzerland, one story dominated the coverage on AmericaThe Baltimore Rioting. I couldnt understand the Swiss newscasters, but I saw the live-action coverage. A participant question during a break help me realize the impact of such coverage, Is the treatment of blacks by the police in America getting worse?
I confided that there was a big difference between the peaceful demonstrators and the majority of those taking advantage of the situation to loot and destroy. Bad police officers exist, but the vast majority are good men and women doing a tough job as fairly as they can. I stated that I didnt think there was more abuse, just more video recordings and media outlets ready to put anything negative on the air before they had all the facts.
While searching the Internet back in the hotel, I watched one, strong mother, Toya Graham, slap her son dressed in a facemask and hoodie and drag him away from the scene.
As we approach Mothers Day, her response is a good start for what we need from far more mothers in America. This mother of six went into the heart of the riots to bring her boy home. Good mothers have been doing this for generations. They taught us right and wrong and dished out a heavy dose of tough love when we made the wrong choices.
The President and all the politically correct leaders are calling for better policing and more dialogue and understanding across the races. I think America needs far more no-nonsense Toya Grahams willing to take back control of their kids.
My mother passed away last year, but I know very well the kind of one-way dialogue she would have had with me if Id taken part in any violent rioting or looting:
What were you thinking! You know very well that what you were doing was wrong. No son of ours should be out there throwing bricks, shouting at the police or taking what isnt theirs!
Dont you tell me everyone else was doing it. You arent everyone else. So dont you blame them or give me anymore excuses. Dont you blame the police either. You are going to have to handle your share of bad police, bad bosses, and bad people in your life. You want to get even? Succeed anyway.
And if you think I embarrassed you by dragging you away in front of your friends and those cameras, you embarrassed us by bringing shame on our whole family by your actions. Next time, I wont bring you home; Ill take you over to the police station and let you spend a night in jail! Do you understand me?
Now, is this radio all you stole? Is there anything else? Empty out your pockets. You know what youre going to do? When this rioting calms down, youre going to take this radio back to that store. Youre going to apologize for your actions, take money out of that fund youve been saving for those basketball shoes, and youre going to pay for that radio.
No, you cant keep the radio. You know what else youre going to do? Youre going to help that owner clean up his store every Saturday until his store is back to normal. Youre right; no one else will have to do this. But you arent nobody else. Youre my son and youre responsible for what you do.
Starting this Sunday, youre going back to church with me. We started giving you more freedom, but you proved today that you havent earned the trust that freedom requires. God didnt leave us ten suggestions! Those are ten commandments.
Dads coming home soon. You go to your room, start praying, and start thinking about what youre going to say that will convince him that youre sorry and ready to change.
This Mothers Day, thank your mother for caring enough to apply the tough love you needed.
What we saw in Baltimore is the village had run amok One mother saw her son and disciplined him in front of the village.
So much for the value and personal responsibility and accountability of a village that the State controls.
it DOESN’T take a village!! I know firsthand. My old man died when I was 15 an I ran WILD. never heard from father’s brothers, my uncle ralph, god bless him tried to help but worked from 7am to 7pm every day and I didn’t live with him
It takes a father!!!!!
my life is ok but would have been MUCH different if I had pop to 25. not crying, just stating a fact.
teaching yourself to be a nan is like learning math on your ow instead of with a teacher You might learn it, but you really bumble it along the way.
Hey democrats: you made this.
The treatment of blacks by blacks is getting worse.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.