Psychoserenity wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:
If you had a daughter and she got pregnant, and the school personnel saw fit to disregard your parental rights (and responsibilities) you might be livid as well.
What rights?
Providing a home for the child
Having contact with and living with the child
Protecting and maintaining the child
Disciplining the child
Choosing and providing for the child’s education
Choosing the child’s religion
Agreeing on the child’s health and medical care
Consenting to medical treatment for the child
Accessing the child’s medical and educational records
Naming the child
Responsibility for the child’s property
Allowing confidential information about the child to be disclosed
These are the basic rights and responsibilities of parents under English law (and American law) and most have been parental rights and responsibilities since early English common law and even pre-Christian Anglo-Saxon common law.
Psychoserenity wrote:
And how do these rights override someone's rights to confidential medical help?
Confidential from whom? The parents who are the legal guardians of the child? The parents aren't third parties, generally speaking, in that regard. I must confess, I haven't read recent English statutory law on the topic, so maybe there is a right of children to undergo medical procedures without their parents' knowledge.
And, I didn't say anything about anyone being denied medical help. I said that if you were a parent and someone did this without your knowledge, you'd probably be livid too.
Psychoserenity wrote:
The article discusses how school officials hushed it up out of fear the parents might want statutory rape prosecuted. I raised an eyebrow at that, because it sounds like being an accessory after the fact.
No - it says "girls sometimes did not want to tell their parents for fear they would react badly or demand prosecutions for statutory rape" i.e. they might be protecting their boyfriends.
And, if there is a statutory rape, and the counselor takes affirmative steps to protect the perpetrator from prosecution, that sounds like textbook accessory after the fact: A person who knowing that an offense has been committed assists an offender in eluding apprehension.