Posted on 01/27/2002 5:33:46 AM PST by mikenola
Edited on 04/13/2004 1:39:00 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.
(Excerpt) Read more at usatoday.com ...
First accutane drives a kid to pile a plane intoa building, now MSG makes someone torch themselves.
Where is the FDA to lockdown society (sarcasm)
It was lawsuits that got it that way in the first place. When you're an adult, you're an adult and you get to decide on your medical treatment.
My grimmest memories were exam days on cold, gray winter mornings, marching across the Harvard bridge along with hundreds of others towards the 19th-Century-ish double Domes of The Institute, as if called to our doom by the Morelocks in "The Time Machine".
All my rational thought went down the tube as I realized that I could not use this treatment center as a resource regardless of the old adage that a child is under the parent's care and responsibility until age 18.
In other words, I did not have the leagl authority to give my daughter the medical attention she needed but if she did something that caused property damage or some how hurt another person, I would be financially responsible to pay the damages.
Going the legal route, before a judge to prove she needed the treatment, would be timely and I don't think that would have helped her get better.
This comes from the rights for children movement in the State of Florida.
If one looks around, you may discover that some children seek emancipation from home and find refuge in little communities. These groups or communities also provide refuge for runaway children and the next generation of drug dealers, prostitutes male and female, and instruction in street survival.
Anyway, my daughter was going down that road and by the grace of God only, she is well past that issue and living a resposible adult life.
If the state continues to restrict parential authority and parents do not fight for their children's well being then we surely have a secular village raising our children with us paying the taxes to support it.
They say the stellar scientific institution, which they paid $34,000 a year for Elizabeth's education, should be held responsible for medical malpractice, gross negligence and wrongful death.
The parents sound as though they're pissed about the 34k. Were they able to return the vcr & tv? I suspect they knew nothing about their own daughter and this was the case long before her attending MIT. I also suspect Elizabeth was pressured to excel all costs and couldn't face telling her parents she was having problems.
American life has become shallow. The only meaning to life to many people is sex and drugs. They live for self and doing what "feels good." Life has no real meaning now and has become a drudgery. This is the America that the left wanted, and the one that they now have.
First year is still Pass/Fail, and most classes are graded on the curve, plus you get an extra GPA point for all classes (A = 5.0 rather than 4.0).
My son is in his final year at MIT, and was just accepted into the Masters of Engineering program. His first year was a shock, when he went from being the "smartest" kid in high school, to just one "kinda" smart kid among thousands.
MIT does all it can (legally) to keep parents informed and to provide help & counseling for the students. I agree with a previous comment, the suicide is the fault of the person who commits it, but we just can't seem to accept personal responsibility in this society anymore.
and.....someone was thinking that cancer, emphesema, alzheimers, heart attack or strokes would be third?
Its a shame when someone reaches the point of feeling that they're better off dead than alive.
I've always wondered why suicidal students at colleges and universities don't just quit school and try something else rather than end their lives. Maybe they don't think life would be meaningful without a degree. Maybe the stigma attached to failing one's parents (particularly for Asian youths) by dropping out of college is too much for them to handle.
"Come to Me, all who are weary and heavy-laden, and I will give you rest. Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For My yoke is easy and My burden is light." [Matt 11:28-30]
Indeed, lighter than the load this poor girl was trying to carry on her own.
--Boris
P.S. We got tired of the Maxwell's Equation t-shirts, and wanted to produce one with the full viscous Navier-Stokes equations...but two problems interposed themselves:
(1) We couldn't get enough people to pre-order, and
(2) Any readable type size resulted in the damned things wrapping around to the back of the shirt!
--Boris
That's always been MIT's great strength and challenge. I went through the same thing in the late sixties, suddenly finding myself surrounded by classmates who were all tops in their high school classes (and in many cases were singular geniuses). That level of competition and association is in large measure the explanation as to why MIT (and similar schools) provides such a good education.
But it is also a psychological shock, and many students have difficulty dealing with it. Especially since a lot of MIT students are introverted and lack social skills, having concentrated and excelled at academics instead. It probably didn't help that Elizabeth Shin was female. I don't know what the current statistics are, but women have historically constituted a small percentage of MIT's student population, which creates an additional dimension of pressures.
It's very sad that Elizabeth Shin committed suicide, but trying to blame MIT is absurd. If they had wanted a psychologically safe and unchallenging environment for their daughter, her parents should have sent Elizabeth to the local community college.
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