Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Parents Wrestle With How To Explain Trump's Win In U.S. Election To Their Kids

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Nov, 2016 11:38 AM
    TORONTO — The incendiary U.S. election is proving to be a challenging teachable moment for some Canadian parents who are struggling to explain the surprising results to their curious children.
     
    But at least they can comfort their youngsters with the fact they live in a country that has embraced much different values than the divisive ones that marked the U.S. campaign, says Oakville, Ont., dad Jason Little.
     
    The morning after America elected Donald Trump as its next president, Little says his nine-year-old daughter stunned him by asking whether Trump would start a world war.
     
    "I only cared about baseball at that age. It's just really a hard conversation to start," Little said Wednesday.
     
    He says his daughter had been following Hillary Clinton's bid to become the country's first female president, but she didn't take her loss as a signal that women can't be leaders.
     
    "For her, it's more: he's a bad person, she's a good person," he says.
     
     
     
    "She was more, I think, mixed in her response — disappointed, sad, angry, all at the same time."
     
    Little says he and his wife tried to emphasize their belief that people are generally good, despite the misogyny, xenophobia and racial hatred that marked Trump's campaign.
     
    Little stressed that there would be enough people around Trump to prevent anything bad from happening, but admits his kids are exposed to a surprising amount of political hyperbole thanks to chatter at school and the YouTube stars they follow.
     
    "They hear all the bad things magnified about him," says Little, who also has an 11-year-old son.
     
    In her concession speech, Clinton seemed to acknowledge the potential impact of her defeat on young girls who might be demoralized by the vote.
     
    "To all the little girls how are watching this: Never doubt that you are valuable and powerful and deserving of every chance and opportunity in the world to pursue and achieve your own dreams."
     
     
     
    Little says the election results — and how they were interpreted by kids — dominated chatter with other parents on the walk to school on Wednesday.
     
    "I don't know why it's just so front and centre at that young age in the school but all the parents we walk to school with, it was all the same," says the 42-year-old dad.
     
    "One of the parents said their kid woke up in the middle of the night with a nightmare about the election. And I'm like, 'Holy cow, this is something.'"
     
    Little says they haven't shielded their kids from the news, even though the U.S. campaign was especially nasty and demeaning. If anything, that helped highlight how different politics are in Canada, he said.
     
    "A year ago we watched the election with Trudeau and they love him. Just to see the difference in the reaction and the coverage I think is comforting," he says,
     
     
    "They know we're kind of a nice country. We just keep reinforcing the same thing: respect people, people have their opinions, they're entitled to their opinion."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Vancouver Proposes Licensed Short-term Airbnb Rentals To Increase Supply

    Mayor Gregor Robertson says the new regulations would allow short-term rentals in principal residences that are either owned or rented.  

    Vancouver Proposes Licensed Short-term Airbnb Rentals To Increase Supply

    BlackBerry To Stop Making Its Signature Smartphones, Work To Be Outsourced

    BlackBerry will stop making its signature smartphones, the company said Wednesday after facing repeated calls to leave the hardware business that was once the basis of its reputation as a global technology leader.

    BlackBerry To Stop Making Its Signature Smartphones, Work To Be Outsourced

    Trudeau Liberals Plan To Regulate Vaping Products To Help Shield Young People

    Trudeau Liberals Plan To Regulate Vaping Products To Help Shield Young People
      Health Canada offered few other details Tuesday beyond saying it would both protect young people from nicotine and allow adult smokers to use vaping as a quit-smoking aid or as a potentially less harmful alternative to tobacco.

    Trudeau Liberals Plan To Regulate Vaping Products To Help Shield Young People

    Woman With Alzheimer's Told By Condo Board To Get Rid Of Specially Trained Dog

    Woman With Alzheimer's Told By Condo Board To Get Rid Of Specially Trained Dog
    WINNIPEG — The Manitoba Human Rights Commission is investigating a complaint about a woman with Alzheimer's being told by her condominium board that she can no longer keep her specially trained dog.

    Woman With Alzheimer's Told By Condo Board To Get Rid Of Specially Trained Dog

    'Pure Love:' Sister Remembers Slain Calgary Stampeder Mylan Hicks

    'Pure Love:' Sister Remembers Slain Calgary Stampeder Mylan Hicks
    DETROIT — The sister of slain Calgary Stampeder Mylan Hicks says the 23 year old was "pure love."

    'Pure Love:' Sister Remembers Slain Calgary Stampeder Mylan Hicks

    Rachel Notley Dismisses Concerns Minimum Wage Hike, Carbon Tax Will Hurt Alberta Economy

    Rachel Notley Dismisses Concerns Minimum Wage Hike, Carbon Tax Will Hurt Alberta Economy
    CALGARY — Alberta Premier Rachel Notley says she rejects the notion that a minimum-wage hike and carbon tax will hurt the provincial economy.

    Rachel Notley Dismisses Concerns Minimum Wage Hike, Carbon Tax Will Hurt Alberta Economy