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Are kids even treated like humans?

So I've been thinking for a while about this subject, and I finally decided to make a post about this some time after I saw a YouTuber say what I put on the title of this post.

Thing is, I've noticed that very often young people and especially kids are treated as lesser beings, like if they were not humans beings with problems and lives of their own but just an annoyance that people have to keep up with.

I remember when I was a kid and I wanted to cross a zebra crossing cars would just pass by without stopping more often than not. Now that I'm an adult they stop pretty much every time. I suspect it was because they didn't want to stop for someone they consider to be lesser than them.

Also, a lot of people seem to think that being a kid means that you just play videogames or whatever all day, but don't these people remember when they were kids? I sure do. Going to school has been the worst thing I've ever had to endure. The only difference with having a job is that you don't get paid.

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  • I honestly don't have any thoughts on this right now other than we need to discuss this. At the time of me writing this, there are no comments on this post.

    This issue is often dismissed, but we Marxists criticize and breakdown every amount of our society in hopes of building a new one, and the role of children and/or childhood shouldn't be an exception to this.

    Also, what are your guys' thoughts on the concept of youth liberation? Do you support the idea or reject it? Should it be implemented immediately under socialism, implemented gradually as productive forces grow, or not be considered at all?

    • I support Marxist abolition of the family and education reforms to get rid of the "factory model of education."

      That being said, I don't think getting rid of education entirely, for example, is a good idea.

    • I support the concept of youth liberation. I can say without a doubt that if I had an "out" from my family, that I would have taken it. Aldous Huxley writes of a concept in his fiction novel Island, where families are assigned to a unit. If children need an escape from their immediate family, they're able to stay with other families in the unit. I think the saying "it takes a village" is true and we've been ignoring it for at least the last century here in the west.

      • Yeah I take that phrase to be literal. I have a lot more to say in that regard and I'll update this later.

        But the total atomization of the family under capitalism is, in my opinion, the underlying root cause of a lot of strife within our families.

    • I believe the DPRK is the only nation with direct youth representation in their government, so it certainly is a question many marxist states have considered before.

    • Any resources on what the concept of youth liberation is and how it might be implemented? This is the first time I've heard of it... (Yes, I know I could look it up, but considering how search engines can be biased or low-quality, I would rather ask someone already familiar with the concept.)

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