Free Palestine

Free Palestine

Sunday, February 19, 2012

A parent’s obvious preference of one child over another can provoke sibling rivalry and resentment as siblings compete for their parents’ attention

A parent’s obvious preference of one child over another can provoke sibling rivalry and resentment as siblings compete for their parents’ attention, says developmental psychology professor Beth Kelley.


Whether it’s because of intelligence, charisma or physical attractiveness, it’s no secret that some parents favour one child over another.

If you have siblings, you’ve likely witnessed the undeniable favouritism seen in families and perhaps even been a preferred child yourself.

However, a parent’s clear and systematic preference of one child over another can have far-reaching effects.

Mike Levine, ArtSci ’12, said though he hasn’t breached the subject of favouritism with his parents, it’s been a reoccurring theme throughout his life.

His 18-year-old sister Amanda is the favourite because of her musical talents, he said.

“My sister’s a really good opera singer, and I’m not good at literally anything,” he said. “Whenever guests are over they always show videos of her singing or on YouTube … It’s all about her opera talent.”

However, Levine said picking favourites seems natural.

“I think it’s really hard not,” he said. “As a kid, you feel like you favour your dad or your mom, and it’s just as hard with parents as it is as a kid. It’s inevitable.”

A 2005 study from the University of California Davis followed almost 400 families for three years, conducting a total of nine interviews with each set of parents and their children.

After asking them questions and videotaping family interactions, the study concluded that, “65 per cent of mothers and 70 per cent of fathers exhibited a preference for one child, usually the older one.”

Social Darwinism can point to biological reasons for parents’ favoritism. According to a Sept. 22 article in Time Magazine, Time journalist Jeffrey Kluger argues that just like in the animal kingdom, parents are biologically inclined to favour their biggest and healthiest offspring.

These children are seen as the most capable of replicating the family’s genes in future generations.

Queen’s professor of developmental psychology Beth Kelley said parent favouritism can take factors such as physical attractiveness and personality into account.

“There’s research that shows parents pay more attention to their more attractive children, which is kind of scary,” Kelley said. “Parents often bond easier with children who have the same temperament as themselves.”

Favouritism often occurs in families where parents have children from a previous marriage, she said.

“In step families, parents clearly unfavour or favour children. Parents could favour their biological children over step-children even though they try consciously not to,” she said.

Parental favouritism isn’t always intentional.

“Parents adapt their behaviour to what they think meets the child’s needs. Some kids need more supervision, encouragement or structure and rules than others,” she said. “Some kids could misinterpret this as favouring.”

It’s difficult to find an objective way to measure how parents treats their children, because each individual interprets the parent-child relationship differently, Kelley said.

“We see how our parents treat us through the lens of all our experiences and relationships, and how we’ve been treated by our friends and romantic partners,” she said.

Perceived favouritism can provoke sibling rivalry as brothers and sisters compete for their parents’ affection.

In addition, academic achievement is potentially affected by favouritism, Kelly said.

“Certainly the feeling of being loved and valued is related to self esteem and self esteem is related to academic motivation,” she said. “The better your self esteem is, the more empowered you feel to strive to achieve and stick to a difficult task.”

If a child feels favoured by their parents, their other relationships will be affected, Kelley said.

“The relationship one has with their parents and how they feel they’ve been treated is very important,” she said. “Whether you think your parent really loves you and is sensitive to your needs … this is projected on to all your other relationships.

“It’s an internal working model. If you feel your parents didn’t love you as much as your other siblings, you will think other people don’t like you as much as you would like. It’s a self-fulfilling prophecy.”

A study conducted in 2003 by Frank Sulloway at the University of California Berkeley, showed that parental favouritism had a significant effect on personality.

The study found that middle children were less likely than either first-borns or last-borns to report they had been favoured by their parents.

In addition, respondents who said they were favoured by their parents attained higher scores on conscientiousness, and lower scores on openness to experience and neuroticism.

Regardless of perceived favouritism within a household, strong social relationships are built in many ways, Kelley said.

“Parents are not the only people that socialize you,” she said. “Even if you don’t have a great relationship with them, those difficulties can be made up by really good friends, supportive teachers and extended family.”

Kerry Mendelsohn, ArtSci ’13, said she often feels favoured by her parents.

Mendelsohn said she’s typically stronger academically than her brothers.

“When they’re praising you, you feel like you’re favoured in that moment,” she said. “You want to uphold that title almost, I think it’s motivation to succeed and do well.”

Throughout her childhood, Mendelsohn provoked less anger from her parents compared to her two older brothers, she said.

“Being the youngest and being the only girl, I would get yelled at a lot less for similar crimes,” she said. “My dad was a lot rougher when he was mad at the older brothers.”

Favouritism is hard to miss, Mendelsohn said.

“Favouritism is really consolidated and obvious, I think a lot of kids can try too hard to impress their parents, you could feel rejected if you don’t uphold to their standards,” she said.

According to Mendelsohn, both her brothers would disagree that she was the favourite.

“Good parents will make every child feel like they’re the favorite.”

— With files from Katherine Fernandez-Blance

Google turns iPhones into spy phones


Google has been spying on millions of iPhone users around the world, according to a leading newspaper in the United States.

In a special report published on Friday, The Wall Street Journalsaid Google, working together with numerous advertising agencies, placed a special computer code on millions of iPhones that permits the companies to track user behavior. 

Google has denied that it monitors the activities of iPhone users and said the imbedded code, or cookies, tracks users and is only made active when users opt-in to one of Google's services, for example Gmail. 

However, the company admitted that the code unintentionally allowed additional Google Web advertising cookies to be installed on users' phones without their permission. 

Apple's Safari web browser obstructs tracking behavior, but Google's code "tricks" the Safari browser into monitoring iPhone user behavior, the report said. 

Stanford University researcher Jonathan Mayer recently discovered the code. Acting on Mayer's advice, a technical advisor to the The Wall Street Journal discovered that the Google tracking code was installed on iPhones by 23 of the top 100 websites. 

The code was implanted on advertisements from Fandango.com, Match.com, AOL.com, TMZ.com, UrbanDictionary.com, and a number of other sites. 

After the code is installed, Google can follow user movement across a large number of websites. 

30 Kenyan civilians killed on Somali border, Al-Shabab main suspects


The Al-Qaeda-allied al-Shabab militant group is suspected of having killed at least 30 Kenyan civilians since Kenya’s government sent troops into southern Somalia to fight against the militants, Press TV reports.

Kenyan police spokesman Eric Kiraithe said on Saturday that the killings are believed to have been carried out by followers of the Somali militant group. He added that most of the attacks were carried out in towns on both sides of the border between the two nations. 

Kenya has beefed up security along its border with Somalia since it dispatched soldiers over the border into the conflict-plagued country last October to pursue al-Shabab militants, which it accuses of being behind the kidnapping of several foreigners in its territory. However, al-Shabab has denied involvement in the kidnappings. 

Somali President Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed said his UN-backed transitional government was opposed to the Kenyan military incursion, which is reportedly being assisted by the United States and France. 

Somalia has been without an effective central government since 1991, when warlords overthrew former dictator Mohamed Siad Barre. 

The weak Western-backed transitional government in Mogadishu has been battling al-Shabab fighters for the past five years and is propped up by a 10,000-strong African Union force consisting of troops from Uganda, Burundi, and Djibouti.

UK funding violence in DR Congo


British media has once again imposed a news blackout on yet another protest staged by Congolese community in Britain against the Democratic Republic of Congo government and election-related violence occurring in the African nation.

More than one hundred Congolese protesters marched in Whitehall on Thursday, to voice their outrage against the silence of British government and media about Congo "corrupt election" results and mounting humanitarian crises in the country. 

While holding anti-UK government banners, the protesters condemned the coalition government and Prime Minister David Cameron for supporting a "genocidal regime". They also shouted against UK’s state-run TV BBC for turning its back on Congolese just because they are black. 

“Western injustice in Congo must stop”, “Cameron give DR Congo democracy a chance”, “War and murder in DR Congo all for your laptop and iphone,” the banners read. 

Over the past few years, Congo has faced numerous problems such as grinding poverty, crumbling infrastructure, and a war in the east of the country that has dragged on for over a decade and left over 5.4 million people dead. 

Political observers also condemn UK’s silence about the crisis in Congo, stressing when it came to Syria, Libya or Egypt, the media was talking about it every day, but has turned a blind eye to the "Congo massacre". 

African critics believe that all killing in Congo will finance Britain and its allies with the minerals, and due to their business in the conflict-hit country they have preferred to keep silence. 

Congo is rich in diamonds, oil and minerals including tin, tantalum, tungsten which are widely used by the UK firms for producing mobile phones and laptops. The brutal way through which these materials are exploited, such as mass rape and the massacre of children, has led them to be dubbed as "blood minerals." 

Last December, hundreds of Congolese protested outside the Congolese Embassy in London in opposition to the re-election of President Joseph Kabila against long-time opposition leader Etienne Tshisekedi. They also expressed their outrage against the apparent lack of interest from the Western world and media over Congo’s corrupt situation.

US, Israel behind Iranophobia in Middle East


Iran's Ambassador to Beirut Ghazanfar Roknabadi says the US and the Israeli regime are behind the Iranophobia in the region in a bid to scare regional states from the country’s military might.

“The US and the Zionist regime [of Israel] are behind the Iranophobia in the region, but we (Iran) are trying to put an end to [these] anti-Iran rumors,” the Iranian official said Saturday with regards to the concern of some Arab states about Iran’s military might. 

He added that in response to any threat by the Zionist regime Iran is completely prepared. 

“Iran will not start a possible war with the Zionist regime but will deliver a decisive response to any aggression by the regime,” he added. 

This remarks come as earlier this month the Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak said if Western sanctions against Iran fail to stop its nuclear program, military action against the country must be placed on the agenda. 

The United States, Israel and their European allies accuse Tehran of pursuing military objectives in its nuclear program and used this pretext to sway the UN Security Council to impose four rounds of sanctions against the Islamic Republic. 

Washington and Tel Aviv have also threatened Tehran with the option of a military strike against its nuclear facilities. 

Tehran, however, refutes such allegations as baseless and maintains that as a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and a member of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) it has every right to develop and acquire nuclear technology for peaceful purposes. 

Iranian officials have promised a crushing response to any military strike against the country, warning that any such measure could result in a war that would spread beyond the Middle East.

Britain is happy with DR Congo crises



A British writer has condemned the UK government for financing the mounting humanitarian crises in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where the civilians have remained the victims of mass killings, severe torture, and widespread rape.

The British government and media have turned a blind eye to the sever crisis taking place in the central African nation, because “the crisis in Congo is of no interest to UK government and media, and surprisingly they are happy with the violence occurring in the country,” Judith Ammanthis told Press TV in a phone interview.

She also criticized the media for imposing a news blackout on the latest protest of Congolese community in Britain who shouted against the silence of British government about Congo "corrupt election" results and crisis in the conflict-hit country.

“UK media and particularly BBC have effectively followed the interests of UK government, that is apparently pleased with the bloody conflicts of Congo,” she added.

President Joseph Kabila has been strongly supported by the western governments, as his People's Party for Reconstruction and Democracy was responsible for militarizing the mining industry, and continued to sell off the Congolese owned mining assets to western firms, specially to UK-based mining company, Eurasian Natural Resources Corporation, that has profited greatly from the situation in Congo.

As long as the British firms are exploiting the country’s oil and minerals including tin, tantalum, tungsten, Britain will ignore the humanitarian crisis such as child labor, slave labor, mass rape and the massacre of children, she also stressed.

“It’s quite scandalous that UK government has not addressed the Congo crises, but it is very transparent why this is happening, because it is of no interest to them whether people die or don’t die, they only consider UK’s financial interests in the region,” Ammanthis added.