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Anne Michaud: editor & senior writer

Archive for the ‘Children’ Category

We need better involuntary commitment rules for mentally ill

Thursday, January 3rd, 2013

Tomorrow will mark three weeks since the Newtown, Conn., school massacre. The wretchedness of that day has touched off a national debate about preventing mass murders — as it should. But lately the conversation has narrowed to gun control.

In a year-end interview, responding to a question about the political fights ahead, President Barack Obama voiced his support for banning assault rifles and high-capacity clips, and for better background checks for gun buyers. What I didn’t hear from the president was a vow to strengthen our mental health system to treat people like Adam Lanza before they descend into madness. Whatever Lanza’s technical diagnosis — schizophrenia? — executing two classrooms of first-graders is by definition mad.

Gun control is easier to discuss, because there is an identifiable, organized opposition in the National Rifle Association. But mental illness is harder to recognize, reach and heal. (more…)

We can no longer ignore need for gun control, care for mentally ill

Sunday, December 16th, 2012

Make it stop.

That’s how I react to yet another horrible mass killing. Like the third-grade class at Sandy Hook Elementary School that huddled into a corner – “squished,” as one student described it – and the gym students hidden in a closet, I just want to shrink into a defensive posture. Don’t tell me any more.

Don’t offer any explanations or reasons. We’ve heard too many. There is no good reason why, when I talk to my children about mass murder, they’ve heard it all before in their 14- and 15-year lifetimes. As a country, we should not be resigning ourselves to this reality.

We need to face up to two facts we’ve been avoiding: that we have permitted an outrageous access to guns and level of gun violence. And we are pitifully inadequate at dealing with people in mental and emotional crisis. (more…)

Can mommy bloggers harness their political power?

Wednesday, December 12th, 2012

When weighing the good and bad technology has brought us, here’s one to add to the plus column: mommy blogs.

The cutesy name is deceptive. These online diaries reveal the messy reality of raising children American-style – which has been relatively isolated in each family home. But these web writers chronicling the ups and downs of parenthood have fashioned community support for millions.

Starting small in the late 1990s, the mommy-blog phenomenon has exploded to about 4 million writers in North America, according to online marketers, and many times more readers. One of the most popular writers, Heather Armstrong of Dooce.com, has over a million followers on Twitter. Mommy blogs have multiplied so rapidly that parent website Babble.com expanded its annual Top 50 ranking last year to the Top 100 Mom Blogs. The 2012 list came out last week. (more…)

Focus on pay equity for women misses a host of other important family issues

Thursday, October 25th, 2012

It’s dismaying that pay equity for women is the family issue that emerged most loudly from the recent round of presidential debates. Pay equity by itself is a simplistic measure that obscures more complex and urgent public policy reforms.

Judging how fair our workplaces are by whether men and women are paid equally is like judging a teenager based on an SAT score. That single number doesn’t tell you anything about the kid’s study habits — not to mention character or passions.

Similarly, the oft-repeated assertion that women earn 77 cents to a man’s dollar says very little. The number is an average of full-time workers, rather than a comparison of men and women in the same jobs with the same experience. A 2009 study by the economics consulting firm CONSAD Research Corporation showed that when the wage gap is analyzed by occupations, regional markets, job titles and more, women make about 94 percent of what men make. (more…)



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