Parents have an obligation to prepare their kids for adult life and this includes teaching them appropriate social behaviors

It’s not at all unreasonable to expect children to speak appropriately to everyone. In fact, it’s strange to assume that this is too much to ask. We’re all capable of controlling our speech when required to do so and, far from being an onerous demand, our forced civility actually helps keep us happier, calmer, and healthier. Emotional flare-ups, hostile language, and conflict harms us as well as those around us.
In the workplace, it’s generally unacceptable to degrade people for any reason and, no matter what we think or feel, the desire to hold on to our jobs gives us the strength to control our tongues. Similarly, in school, students will generally be called to account for verbal abuse, bullying, disrespect to authority, and other verbal offenses and consequently, they generally manage to control how they speak. Why should it be any different at home?
Parents have an obligation to prepare their kids for adult life and part of this includes teaching them appropriate social behaviors. The more skilled a child is in this realm, the happier and more successful he’ll be. Practicing rudeness to siblings improves the skill of rudeness; it makes unpleasant communication more “natural” and available to the one who uses it throughout childhood.
On the other hand, parents who would like their kids to master respectful speech — especially in the face of provocation, disappointment, frustration, or other difficult scenarios — can teach, encourage, and reinforce such speech in everyday family interactions. They can also discipline unacceptable speech, if this proves necessary. They would do this the way they would teach any other skill that matters to them.
Create a free account to keep reading.