America is raising fearless rule-breakers: remove punishment, and kids stop fearing consequences—then violence follows. Punishment isn’t cruelty; it’s survival training. Without it, today’s children become tomorrow’s uncontrollable threat. When punishment disappears, chaos takes over. Kids learn no limits, no fear, no control. That “kindness” you defend today becomes the violence you fear tomorrow.
I have been teaching in America for more than 18 years,
and I have seen the system from the inside—raw, unfiltered, and sometimes ugly.
I started at Baltimore City Public Schools as a substitute teacher, walking
into classrooms where discipline was already slipping through the cracks like
water through broken pipes. Later, after earning my master’s degree and Ph.D.,
I moved into university classrooms. Different level, same problem. The faces
got older, but the behavior? Not much changed. And that tells you something is
deeply wrong at the foundation.
One thing I have learned about America is this: many
parents and schools are terrified of the word “punishment.” They dodge it like
it is a loaded weapon. They soften it, rename it, bury it under polite
language. They say “consequences,” “behavioral correction,” “restorative
practices.” Anything but the truth. But let me call a spade a spade—punishment
is not a dirty word. It is a necessary one.
Last night, Thursday, April 23, 2026, I watched something
that made my stomach turn. A group of about 12 middle school kids surrounded a
girl by the roadside and beat her like they had no conscience. Not one slap.
Not one push. A full-blown attack. Kicks. Blows. Even kicks to the head while
she was already down, struggling, defenseless. That is not childish mischief.
That is violence. That is savagery. And then came the school’s response—those
responsible would be “consequenced.” Consequenced? That is the word they chose?
When language becomes weak, action becomes weaker.
Let me be blunt. One thing American parents and schools
must understand when it comes to raising children is clear: punishment is the
greatest gifts you can give a child. Not cruelty. Not abuse. Punishment. There
is a difference, and any serious adult knows it. Punishment teaches
accountability. It draws a hard, visible line between right and wrong. It tells
a child, “If you cross this line, something will happen.” And that “something”
must be real, not theoretical.
Remove punishment from a child’s life, and what do you
get? You get a child who grows up without respect for authority. A child who
believes rules are suggestions. A child who thinks consequences are negotiable.
A child who acts first and thinks later—if they think at all. That is not
freedom. That is chaos disguised as compassion.
If kids were angels, then yes, we would not need
punishment. But kids are not angels. They are impulsive. They are emotional.
They test limits. They push boundaries. That is human nature. Even Sigmund
Freud, flawed as some of his ideas were, understood that humans are driven by
impulses that must be controlled. Without structure, those impulses take over.
Without discipline, instinct wins.
And history backs this up. Look at the breakdown of
discipline policies in American schools over the past few decades. According to
data from the National Center for Education Statistics, about 20% of public
schools reported serious violent incidents in a single year. That is not a
small number. That is a warning siren. At the same time, many districts have
reduced suspensions and expulsions in the name of equity and reform. The
intention may sound noble, but the result? When you remove the teeth from
discipline, you empower the bite of misconduct.
Even Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports
that youth violence remains a leading cause of injury and death among
adolescents in the United States. That does not happen in a vacuum. That is the
outcome of years of diluted authority and blurred boundaries. When children are
not corrected early, they escalate later. A child who is not punished for
bullying in middle school can grow into a teenager who commits assault. The
line is straight, whether people want to admit it or not.
I have stood in classrooms where students looked teachers
in the eye and said, “You can’t do anything to me.” And they were right. That
is the tragedy. Authority without enforcement is a joke. And kids know a joke
when they see one. If the fence is weak, the goats will roam.
Let me say something that many are afraid to say:
removing punishment does not create kinder children—it creates bolder
offenders. When a child learns that the worst outcome of bad behavior is a
conversation or a “restorative circle,” that child is not learning
responsibility. That child is learning strategy. They are learning how far they
can go without real consequences. And once they find that line, they push it
further.
There is a reason why structured environments—whether in
the military, sports, or even certain strict schools—produce disciplined
individuals. Boundaries. Consequences. Accountability. The formula is not
complicated. It is just unpopular in a culture that confuses comfort with care.
Now, let me flip the coin. Add punishment—real, fair,
consistent punishment—and watch what happens. Children begin to think before
they act. They weigh outcomes. They develop internal control because they have
experienced external control. Over time, that external discipline becomes
internal discipline. That is how character is built. Not through endless
talking, but through action and consequence.
I am not talking about brutality. I am talking about
structured, proportionate punishment. Lose privileges. Get suspended when
necessary. Face real consequences that hurt just enough to teach a lesson.
Pain, when controlled and purposeful, is a teacher. Not all pain is evil. Some
pain saves.
Countries that maintain stricter school discipline often
report lower levels of school violence. Even in parts of Asia, Africa, and Europe, where discipline is enforced more
firmly, classrooms tend to have higher levels of order and respect. That is not
a coincidence. That is cause and effect.
Right now, America is trying to raise children without
friction, without discomfort, without consequence. But life does not work that
way. The real world punishes. Break the law, you go to jail. Fail to meet
standards, you lose opportunities. Ignore rules, you pay the price. When
children are shielded from these truths, they do not become better
prepared—they become dangerously unprepared.
So let me say it clearly, without dressing it up: remove
punishment, and you will raise savages. Add punishment—real, fair, and
consistent—and you will raise children who grow into responsible, disciplined
adults. Maybe not angels in the literal sense, but individuals who understand
right from wrong and act accordingly.
What I saw on April 23, 2026, was not just a fight. It
was a symptom. A warning. A reflection of a system that has lost its backbone.
And until America stops running from the word “punishment,” until it stops
replacing strength with soft language, these scenes will not fade. They will
multiply.
When you spare the rod entirely, you do not save the
child—you sacrifice the future.
This article stands on
its own, but some readers may also enjoy the titles in my “Brief Book
Series”. Read it here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.






