Treating Children as Adults
This week, the Supreme Court, in a 7-2 decision, ruled that the state of California could not bar the sale of violent video games to minors. The majority opinion, written by quasi-originalist Justice Antonin Scalia, argued that the First Amendment requires that government not mandate that minors be controlled by their parents. Purer originalist Judge Clarence Thomas took the opposite view. “Although much has changed in this country since the Revolution,” he wrote, “the notion that parents have authority over their children and that the law can support that authority persists today.”
This week, the Supreme Court, in a 7-2 decision, ruled that the state of California could not bar the sale of violent video games to minors. The majority opinion, written by quasi-originalist Justice Antonin Scalia, argued that the First Amendment requires that government not mandate that minors be controlled by their parents. Purer originalist Judge Clarence Thomas took the opposite view. “Although much has changed in this country since the Revolution,” he wrote, “the notion that parents have authority over their children and that the law can support that authority persists today.”
This is the debate that defines our time. The treatment of minors as tiny adults is a dangerous move that threatens the foundations of our society. Civilized societies have always recognized that parents must control their children until the kids reach maturity – that’s how we’ve historically passed along morals and information. If we left children to their own devices, there is little doubt that they would engage in every selfish pursuit they could – kids aren’t the naturally altruistic folks non-parents seem to think they are – and hurt themselves in the process. They wouldn’t go to school, they wouldn’t go to church, and they certainly wouldn’t embrace their parents’ value systems.
But today’s left, and many on the libertarian right, have embraced the concept of children making their own decisions. Paternalism has become a dirty word, even though parents are supposed to be paternal. New generations should not have to rediscover old truths – reinventing the wheel takes time, effort and pain. They should be able to inherit the received wisdom of the past, glean from it, and then make their own decisions.
Historically, this has meant that parents control what their children see and hear. To a point, the more control parents have had, the better. There is a reason that unwed motherhood is the leading indicator of many of our most pressing social problems: Without a father in the home, children often run out of control and grow into irresponsible adults. Government should do its utmost to maintain enough respect for the family unit to allow adults to raise their children.
Now, however, we’ve moved into a brave new world in which children are thought to be adults who are far away. The left has pushed for lowered age of consent; they’ve pushed for children to be able to attain abortions without parental permission; they’ve pushed for heightened sex education, so children can make “informed” decisions without the input of their guardians.
This is not only scientifically inaccurate, but it’s also morally incoherent. Children are children because they are not fully developed human beings. Science tells us that adolescents are biologically driven to embrace risky and stupid behavior. The part of the brain called the prefrontal cortex, which actually controls for risky behavior, isn’t fully developed until children are fully grown. Leave children and adolescents to their own devices, and they will not make good decisions – they will attack any boundaries and cross any lines.
What is government’s role in all of this? Justice Scalia believes that government should not put more power in the hands of parents – government should essentially be neutral between children and those who raise them. Justice Thomas believes that government should create a system wherein parents get the last word. In today’s world, more than ever, it is important that children not be treated with libertarian casualness requiring parents to be all-knowing and all-seeing. Instead, government should place control firmly in the hands of parents, requiring children to go to their parents for advice and guidance.
Freedom and responsibility for actions go hand in hand; only adults can be held responsible for their actions and the actions of their children. Therefore, only adults should have the freedom to choose on behalf of their children. Any other moral system is a fundamental rejection of the superstructure of civilization in favor of a moral chimera.
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