This is an article about responsibility on many fronts. My opinion (for what it's worth):
Your son has no responsibility to attend school, so missing it is a non-issue. That false "obligation" was thrust upon him without his consent. He has a natural responsibility to learn and grow, but that has nothing to do with attending an institution. If he wanted a note, I'd have given it, if he didn't care, neither would I.
The most important point is the misdirected outlet for his budding social interest. It is exceedingly admirable that he cares enough to protest, and equally so that you placed responsibility for the environment squarely upon him. My reply to his actions would be:
"Why on Earth would you go beg politicians to do anything? They are not there to help anyone but themselves. They're largely criminals who use and abuse others for personal gain, and if they will do this to people, why do you think they'd care about the planet? Don't look to them - it's not their responsibility to act on anyone's behalf - and certainly don't trust in them. Make the necessary changes yourself, and encourage others to do the same."
You gave him the last part, but the first part is extremely important too.
You really believe that such a speech wouldn't have hurt my son?
How would he look at me if I gave him a testimony of poverty that at the same time represented me as a victim of a society? Finally I myself went to school, adjusted myself and lived a life up to now, which can neither be told in complete resistance nor in complete adaptation? If I had spoken like you, I would have sown in my son's heart the mistrust of everything he cannot control.
At the interfaces to the areas where I am dealing with things with which I partly agree and partly disagree, how am I supposed to tell my son something with certainty that only has one effect: that he stands against those who meet him every day, since he will not succeed in meeting our Chancellor or others from the government in person? Do you not believe that he, so indoctrinated by me, will look for people whom he will make his enemies? This would not only turn those into enemies, whom he will probably never meet in person, but also those who deal with him on a daily basis.
What kind of suffering would I cause, misuse my son to bring anger and resignation upon him and at the same time make an admission of my own insignificance, not knowing that I would only bequeath what I would be ashamed of myself?
It is a fact that we do not have everything under control. It is important to distinguish where I can do something like self-efficacy and where I cannot.
I have found a good way with the teachers, not to regard them as agents of higher powers but as people who have ambivalent attitudes and try to move creatively within them. I openly said that it took me until eleven o'clock in the morning to realize how I wanted to express myself about the absence of my son and only after I thought about it, my heart had calmed down, I talked about it on the phone with my man, I sent an e-mail to the teacher asking her to call me back. I revealed that I had not yet been sure how to react.
How to deal with situations that unsettle you and where it takes hours or days to decide what the right thing to do is never easy. The "right thing" never has final statements or final solutions. We always move in a field of tension of uncertainties and decision moments. The safest option is to express yourself honestly and say, "You know what, I really haven't arrived at a position yet. How can we help our children to realize that disobedience does not mean giving a finger to the conflicts, but to engage in a lively exchange with those to whom one has just disobeyed?" It's good to find authorities in adults who are open to admit that what the students are a part of will accompany them from now on.
Don't you see the opportunity that has presented itself here between school, teachers, parents and children?
School is an institution that is seen as an authority to which one is in conflict. Precisely because it is, it is a good proxy for the government. We know that we need education and we know that much could be improved and changed. But we can only do that if we stay in touch and don't pretend that our children meet an enemy every day.
I admit that I got upset at you to formulate such a thing to my son. Certainly I will overcome it.
Go try having a lively exchange with the satanists who send your children off to war. See how receptive they are to your position. They already know what they're doing and don't care. They view you as their property, to be used however they see fit.
“Military men are just dumb, stupid animals to be used as pawns in foreign policy.” ― Henry Kissinger
This is the attitude of power-mongers at the highest levels of hierarchical and compartmentalized institutions (including schools), and these are the people with the influence to engineer society according to their whim. They have this power because it is granted to them by the majority of their victims, who are too good to accurately comprehend evil.
I do not mean to incite your anger, only to speak what I discern as Truth.
His teachers - whatever their intentions - are complicit in his slavery. His consent is not being respected in that environment. This is a fact. They act as authorities over him, implicitly threatening him with psychological punishment on a daily basis, and the entire institution of which they are an agent is anti-human; permitting no individuality, but holding all to an arbitrary and universal standard of behavior and education - one to which the student has no natural obligation.
If it is a public school, or if their school receives any government financing, these teachers also benefit from blood money garnered through coercive taxation. The fact that they may be nice or that they "mean well" is irrelevant to their moral standing. The road to hell is said to be paved thusly.
If this does not accurately reflect your views, I would not suggest you speak this to him, but how can you see this any other way? I do not believe he should make them his enemy, but they have certainly made themselves his enemy (in practice if not in intent). There is no virtue in hiding or obfuscating the truth in order to spare his feelings, or in attempting to cunningly direct his growth by a deceptive presentation of the facts.
There is nothing to talk about with teachers until they discontinue their association with government-imposed, compulsory educational standards. Until that time, they are agents of fascism and complicit with evil.
He is being victimized, as an ongoing condition, and purposefully so by those who make these decisions on the highest level. How you cope with that fact is up to you, and you may do so without anger (although anger is not an invalid emotion in the face of injustice). You may certainly council him in sound coping practices, but the truth stands and should be acknowledged, no matter how uncomfortable that may be.
Likewise, his petitioning those who act in an inherently immoral capacity - those in government - is ill-advised under any circumstances. They have no rightful authority, and to ask them for anything is only to support the lie that they do. Go petition the offenders directly, asking them to stop polluting.
Do not ask for a man to make "law", as if such a thing were even possible. God (or whatever the source of the universe) has the unique power to make valid Law, not man, and man's law is either in accord with it and thus redundant and unnecessary, or out of accord with it and thus illegitimate.
P.S.
I already answered that:
No, they did not make them his enemy. There is a HUGE difference between practice and intent. They do their best to serve their students as people of integrity with their own minds and hearts, openly showing their criticisms towards government and working actively for bettering and supporting their students school life.
I totally can make up the difference between evil intent and good intent. Which is in the case of my son and all his co-students a matter of great importance.
We had a teacher of which I found he was a person with little integrity and big ego and with whom I got into several arguments until he bettered himself and stopped using me and my son as a box of sorrows. More important was that my son was witnessing me standing up for him.
My son is a smart kid - whatever he might encounter in the future, he already learned up from elementary school that his parents cannot protect him from all what the world is presenting him. Children don't need to be presented those facts, they very well experience them on their own. But they do NOT need adults who put raw things onto them which they are not old enough for.
I must ask you at this point if it might have been the case that adults imposed on you their unvarnished truth and burdened you as a child with carrying and passing on their own anger and resignation. I need not an answer bu only want to pass this question to you.
Stay well.
What if there was a war, and no one showed up?
What if there was a compulsory indoctrination camp and no teachers showed up? You see the point. They are complicit. The institution exists because they accept those jobs. Same with police, same with military.
I was raised "protected" from harsh realities as much as possible. For this reason, it took years of immense effort and confusion to figure out what was going on. As you said, they experience it - you cannot protect them. So in trying to achieve the impossible, you withhold accurate explanation, and so they have the experience without being armed with the knowledge to process it accurately.
All those days of being miserable because I didn't understand why I had to wake up when I was tired; why I had to leave when I wanted to stay home; why I had to learn about things I didn't care about; and why I couldn't learn about things I did care about. The thousands of instances of unnecessary stress over exams, unfinished homework, reports and projects due, how my parents would react to my grades or slight disobedience at school. And no satisfying answer for why any of this was happening.
THIS IS ABUSE
And keep in mind, I had the best possible school experience: A or B+ student throughout; learning came easy. Very popular; had lots of fun with friends. Very respectful; teachers liked me and went easy on me.
Children are people - they can "handle" reality if it's presented to them appropriately. What they can't handle is living in a fantasy then having reality come crashing down upon them at the age of reason; or being presented with experiences without any means of understanding them. I believe our society bears this out sufficiently - a world of disenchanted, morose people, living lives of quiet desperation, subconsciously missing Santa Claus and the other rosey deceptions of childhood.
Just calling it like I see it. I get that these people are deceived, not malicious, but this does not make them moral actors. There's a difference between being a nice and being good person. They don't care to figure out what morality fundamentally IS, and have accepted the perspective of their culture without due investigation. This is a failing of their natural responsibility as a potentially intelligent being, and their negligence is causing harm to others. I don't see any way around this conclusion.
Well, that's what you mean! I started asking the "what if" questions about twenty years ago and as much as I tried to solve the problems of the world in my head, as much as I thought everyone had to boycott what is generally perceived as powerful, I always got into a mental misery because I came to a dead end. Doesn't that sound familiar to you?
You can trust that I am in a homeostatic exchange with my son that contains so much more than text lines could ever express.
The time of confusion and searching is a normal thing and so is the questioning of the status quo. Every young person goes through this. At some point it is appropriate to move into more moderate waters and consider other alternatives, including growing up.
You cannot look into the minds and hearts of other people and therefore cannot make them equally unworthy because of their professional or other affiliations. You are not walking in their shoes, you need not be their judge.
You are now an adult and no longer a child. Everything that was withheld from you or that was not made known to you has now become your own task. If you find that your parents and teachers have educated and raised you wrongly, it is now up to you to develop as you see fit.
I do not know if you are a father yourself. But if so, then you will know that in being with the child you as a parent are also in a dynamic relationship that involves a continuous learning process. Not only children develop with their parents but also parents develop with their children. On this way of maturing all people make mistakes and they do a lot right. They are morally fallible and they are good people. There is no real end to this, except when everyone in the family is dead. You too.
Otherwise, I really have no idea what you are talking about when you wish for the elimination of all the institutions and systems that have evolved over the millennia of human history up to here, and which contain a complexity that is beyond any simple view and solution. By pretending to be able to provide a simple solution to what you identify as a problem, you can only fail and feel powerless and angry. I don't know if you know anything about systemics, but I recommend that you dig into it.
Some of the notions people have have grown over centuries. They take just as long to disappear as they appeared. Everything is a process and not a sudden phenomenon. You wish for relief and satisfaction during your lifetime and a better world around you. In my view of the world it won't happen the way I want it to be in total. I can take influence on what is possible, there I can change things. Going into the dialogue with the present institutions, not turning my back on them and ridiculing the people I cannot pick as servants of deception.
I come from a refugee family, my parents have experienced imprisonment, hunger and war. They were born into a time that included great unrest and movements that could come back at any time. They have experienced forty years of unrest and then forty years of stability (at least my mother, who became 86).
I can now waste my life and live in fear and anger. But I can also try to appreciate the life given to me.
I must admit that you give me the creeps with insisting on morality and truth.
Well, is there such thing as Truth? Are there things that exist in this physical realm, events that have actually taken place, natural processes in play? What's wrong with speaking of them as such? This is the realm of science and philosophy.
Is there such thing as morality? Behaviors which will produce results more or less conducive to man's thriving? Does not every living thing have conditions that serve them better or worse? What's wrong with stating that this phenomenon exists? Why would these concepts generate discomfort?
It is wrong to tell a family that if their child does not conform to the arbitrary educational standards of a select group of strangers, their children will be stolen from them. This is not subject for rational debate - it is definitively so. It's a threat of terrible violence, and anyone who participates in keeping that system in place is complicit in that evil. What is untrue about these statements?
It seems you want to say that everything is up in the air; that we all need to compromise with each other because everyone's opinion is equally valid. No, a person who has the opinion that the sky is a black-and-white checkerboard is not on equal footing with a person who says it is blue. One person is correct and the other is wrong. To act as if the first person's opinion should be respected serves no one, not even them.
There is a very simple solution: Stop committing and/or advocating evil. Each of us can only do this for ourselves. As it regards others, all we can do is implore them to stop. This is what I do by sharing relevant knowledge that I have discovered, and I don't see why that's a problem. I'm not cutting anyone out of the loop, and I invite any and all to challenge my ideas with rational rebuttal. But I'm not going to pretend that there's no such thing as right or wrong relative to the truth of this reality, or to the subset of that truth called morality.
I understand that I will not likely see meaningful change in my lifetime, but I feel it a duty to speak Truth as I am able to demonstrate it, and to hold others to the same standard. This is the natural responsibility of every intelligent being. Just as you have responsibility to do no harm with your hands, you have that same responsibility to do no harm with you mind. People who think wrongly, act wrongly; so we must encourage everyone to bring their thoughts into alignment with reality, not just act from capricious, unfounded opinions.
You may take exception with my attitude, but if the ideas I present are true, then we have a responsibility to heed them.
So you made up your mind.