http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-15288865+http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-15193530First link has a few mini video clips explaining the extent of the problem.Some of the text from the 1st link:
11/2/2011 11:00:44 PM
There is another difference between Texas and Vermont: Immigrants. Immigrants are more likely to abuse their children, more likely to drop out of school, and more likely to live in poverty. How about they compare Texas to a high tax state that also has immigrants, such as California.
11/2/2011 11:15:36 PM
^ Or they could compare Vermont and New Hampshire. Almost mirror images in terms of demographics (also they are literally almost mirror images) but New Hampshire has no income tax or sales tax.[Edited on November 3, 2011 at 12:21 AM. Reason : ]
11/3/2011 12:20:15 AM
we only care about kids before they are born in this country.
11/3/2011 12:40:08 AM
^^^california has the exact same percentage hispanic population, and less than half the fatality ratehttp://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/cb/pubs/cm09/cm09.pdf - pg. 59
11/3/2011 12:41:51 AM
To add to ^,(deaths per 100,000)California: 1.96Arizona: 1.73New Mexico: 1.96South Carolina: 2.59Puerto Rico: 0.52Tennessee: 3.08DC: 4.38Florida: 3.84Louisiana: 3.56Kentucky: 3.35Alabama: 1.24Indiana: 3.1544.0% of the victims were white22.3% were African-American20.7% were Hispanic
11/3/2011 12:58:23 AM
11/3/2011 2:05:37 AM
Please. How many parents in the South still beat their kids? I'd wager a majority of them. "Spare the rod" and all, amirite?
11/3/2011 8:47:11 AM
^ None I know of. Of course, I don't live in Texas. They are always removing children from religious cults down there.
11/3/2011 9:02:41 AM
Honestly? Outside of the city, here in NC, like every family I know of still beats their kids. Hell even in the city a good amount still do. I get some flak at work from other dads sometimes when I mention the effectiveness of time out.
11/3/2011 9:16:58 AM
Sounds like less mouths on the welfare to me.
11/3/2011 11:59:45 AM
^ Yes because a dollar of your tax money is worth more than a child's life
11/3/2011 12:17:49 PM
Maybe HUR is from Texas?
11/3/2011 12:57:19 PM
I think there are regular discussions on child mortality and social services in the United States, but it's a bit complex. Social services and domestic violence are a state and even local (county/municipal) issue here in the United States. Therefore, news coverage of the issue tends to be seen in the state and local sections of the community newspapers, not the headlines of the national newspapers.When it comes to addressing the issue, because this issue falls under state and local jurisdictions, there is a massive patchwork of inconsistent policies and funding levels across the nation. This means that the reasons for the failures vary widely state-by-state and therefore require different solutions in each jurisdiction (urban states have specific issues, border states with large numbers of immigrants another, etc.). There's little the Federal government can do to make sweeping changes both because of the localized nature and constitutional restrictions, and therefore, it's a campaign that has to be fought locally.
11/3/2011 4:00:06 PM
I hate to sound callous, but is 1 extra death in 100,000 children really that much of a crisis?I strongly suspect it has something to do with this:
11/3/2011 4:05:41 PM
Why is aaronburro not in this thread?
11/3/2011 4:11:26 PM
^^Yes, I would definitely agree!But teen pregnancy alone isn't that awful. It's also that we tend to punish teen parents by giving them all the responsibility and expecting them to step up to the job...as if the same kids who can't use condoms properly will magically become capable of the most difficult job in the world."You grown now. Good luck."
11/3/2011 5:28:36 PM
Keep the government out of it. Let the free market decide.
11/3/2011 5:52:08 PM
Damn, Sweden and Denmark killing babies like it's going out of style
11/4/2011 12:12:05 AM