I'm not saying ALL studies start from the conclusion and work backwards, or are all for the purpose of supporting an agenda. But some are. Any study that establishes that spanking, across the board and without exception, is bad, is probably also wrong.
Why? Because you believe spanking is ok?
As I said, if you have a specific methodological criticism, post it. If you have evidence to the contrary, post it.
But YOU are the one starting from a conclusion and working backwards, not the the studies I posted here.
There is virually no statistical difference between crime and violence in a society that doesn't spank vs one that does. That's not comparing one that does vs. one that doesn't but one that transitions from doing it to not doing it.
I'd like to see the statistics you used to make this conclusion and how you determined what countries transitioned from spanking to not spanking.
The other problem that you have here is that you assume a linear correlation between spanking and crime rates. While studies have shown that spanking can be a predictor of criminality, you can't necessarily carry over those conclusions to other societies, because, again, culture is an influence.
If you look at Sweden, who banned spanking about thirty years ago, come measures of crime have gone up. But is that due to a lack of spanking? Could it be due to better reporting of crime? Could be be better enforcement of crime?
That having been said, about 80% of Americans say that they spank their kids. And over the past few decades violent crime has dropped. And again, this conclusion flies in the face of what many of you have been asserting here. Which is that spanking has become some sort of outlawed practice (it hasn't), that nobody does it any more (they do), and that the rise of "new age parenting" is to blame for folks such as the Aurora shooter.
Everyone has ignored this point so far.
Point being, there is no linear correlation. Simply looking at crime rates and whether or not people spank their kids doesn't account for the myriad of variables that could effect those statistics.
Spanking has been the defacto standard for child rearing through most of history. It's only recently that spanking has become this horrible thing, and it's bred neither a more or less violent generation. About the only valid conclusion that's come from the studies is that a child that is not spanked is less likely to spank their children.
Again, present factual evidence for this claim. While I don't debate the fact that many cultures have used spanking, I don't think it is clear at all that it is a "de facto standard" for "most of history."
I was spanked and I'd guess a good percentage of those here were as well. I'd also venture to say that it's not made any of us worse people or parents than we would have been otherwise. Spanking is a parental choice. Perhaps it's not always the ideal choice, but sometimes it's a necessary one.
Right, but that's all anecdotal evidence.
Look, it's fine to disagree with my conclusions. Y'all don't have to agree with me. But you should understand that you actually haven't made a cogent argument backed up with facts and evidence. All you've done is engage in cognitive dissonance because of your own confirmation bias. You don't want to believe that spanking is bad because you turned out fine. Hey, that's all well and good, and I'm glad that you're a happy, well adjusted human being. But consider the fact that just because everything worked out well for you, doesn't mean that there can't be harm associated with spanking.
That's it, just consider the possibility with an open mind, instead of bringing your own prior conclusions to the table.