Saturday, October 12, 2019
Flawless Heroes? :: essays research papers
 Flawless Heroes?           It is important for youth to have heroes but society cannot ignore the  facts and only report on the good side of those heroes. Everyone is human, and  they are going to make mistakes. Hopefully they learn from those mistakes, and  if those mistakes are brought to light and conveyed to the young people then  they too learn from those mistakes.       History has a duty to report on the entire story. To report anything  less would be wrong. To just simply say that Columbus was a perfect man who  never did anything wrong would paint an unrealistic picture of the past. Mr.  Gibbon, the author of this article seems to think that reality is a bad thing  and should not be taught in our classrooms. Today's youth however need to be  prepared for life in some way. They cannot be fed everything with a sugar  coated spoon. If they were given everything on a silver platter like that then  when they walked out into the real world for the first time they would not be  able to adjust and become a productive part of society.       Today's young people are in search of heroes as Mr. Gibbon suggests, but  every person is going to have some skeletons in their closet, hero or no hero.  To ask society to ignore the facts just so young people can feel that these  people are perfectly squeaky clean is wrong. Society cannot lie to them. There  is some value to teaching reality even though Mr. Gibbon doesn't seem to think  so.       Mr. Gibbon mentions that there is some sort of "tradition of exemplary  lives" in society's heroes that used to exist but no longer does. However there  never was such a tradition of wonderfully perfect people with perfect lives.  Back then people ignored the facts and decided to believe that these people were  perfect when the fact was that they were not perfect, they were just human.       You cannot shield today's young people. You can't just cover their eyes  to reality. Reality must be exposed and studied so they can try to understand  the world.       I agree with Gibbon that parents are the first and most important  educators and they must try to make their lives exemplary so their children will    					    
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