Just remember the law:
"These Are The 19 States That Still Let Public Schools Hit Kids"
Mar. 28, 2014, 11:55 AM
"In 19 states, it's legal for teachers or principals to punish public school students by hitting them repeatedly instead of just giving them detention."
http://www.businessinsider.com/19-states...ent-2014-3
"France Is Rebuked Over Corporal Punishment by Parents"
MARCH 4, 2015
"France has gotten a diplomatic slap on the wrist over spanking.
The Council of Europe faulted the country on Wednesday for failing to fully and clearly ban the corporal punishment of children, as it committed to do under a European treaty. The council’s ruling stemmed from a complaint lodged two years ago against France and several other European countries by a British child protection organization.
The ruling is a symbolic one, with no penalty attached, and the French government has no plans to respond with legislation. Even so, it has revived a long debate in France over the propriety of physically disciplining children, a practice banned in the nation’s schools but not in family settings."
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/05/world/....html?_r=0
The US is not Russia:
"Banned in 1917. Article 336 of the Labor Code of the Russian Federation states that a teacher who has used corporal punishment to a pupil (even once), shall be dismissed."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School_cor..._Provinces
"These Are The 19 States That Still Let Public Schools Hit Kids"
Mar. 28, 2014, 11:55 AM
"In 19 states, it's legal for teachers or principals to punish public school students by hitting them repeatedly instead of just giving them detention."
http://www.businessinsider.com/19-states...ent-2014-3
"France Is Rebuked Over Corporal Punishment by Parents"
MARCH 4, 2015
"France has gotten a diplomatic slap on the wrist over spanking.
The Council of Europe faulted the country on Wednesday for failing to fully and clearly ban the corporal punishment of children, as it committed to do under a European treaty. The council’s ruling stemmed from a complaint lodged two years ago against France and several other European countries by a British child protection organization.
The ruling is a symbolic one, with no penalty attached, and the French government has no plans to respond with legislation. Even so, it has revived a long debate in France over the propriety of physically disciplining children, a practice banned in the nation’s schools but not in family settings."
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/05/world/....html?_r=0
The US is not Russia:
"Banned in 1917. Article 336 of the Labor Code of the Russian Federation states that a teacher who has used corporal punishment to a pupil (even once), shall be dismissed."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School_cor..._Provinces