| | Dad who shot 15-year-old's laptop was out of lineFebruary 15, 2012 - Andrea JohnsonEarlier this month Tommy Jordan, an IT professional and North Carolina father of a mouthy 15-year-old daughter, made headlines after he shot his daughter's laptop nine times with a .45. and posted it on her Facebook page, where the video went viral. Young Hannah's transgression was posting an occasionally profane rant on Facebook about the household chores her father and his wife expect her to do: "I'm not your (expletive) slave. It's not my responsibility to clean up your (expletive). We have a cleaning lady for a reason," her Facebook post said. "If you want coffee, get off your (expletive) and get it yourself. If you want a garden, shovel the fertilizer yourself, don't sit back on your (expletive) and watch me do it ... I'm going to hate to see the day you get too old to wipe your own (expletive) and you call me up. I won't be there." Hannah had blocked her family from seeing the rant on Facebook, but her father still stumbled across the posting. According to Tommy Jordan's own posting, he had spent hours the day before updating the laptop she used to post her Facebook rant. Tommy Jordan took away Hannah's laptop, then filmed his own 8-minute rant in which he tells the girl that her chores take an hour a day to do at most, reminds her that he put himself through college working as a volunteer firefighter and that she has yet to find a job to earn her own money, and says she was previously grounded for three months for doing something similar. Then he puts nine rounds in her laptop and finishes by saying, ""You don't have that hard a life, but you're about to ... It's about to get a whole lot harder today. I'm gonna post this on your Facebook wall, so all those kids that thought it was cool for how rebellious you were can see what happens." Hannah won't get another laptop until she earns the money for one, according to the video. According to a later statement Tommy Jordan made, which was quoted by Rod Dreher on his American Conservative blog, numerous people called social services and social workers paid a visit to his home, but found no signs of anything amiss: "Apparently both the local police and the department of social services are OK with it. Yes they came. Of course they came," Dreher wrote that Jordan posted on his Facebook page. "They received enough "Oh my god he's going to kill his daughter" comments that they had to. I knew that the moment it went viral.. it was too late and it was inevitable. I'm only surprised it took as long as it did to be honest. "The police by the way said "Kudos, Sir" and most of them made their kids watch it. I actually had a "thank you" from an entire detectives squad. And another police officer is using it in a positive manner in his presentation for the school system. How's about those apples? Didn't expect THAT when you called the cops did you? "The kind lady from Child Protective Services looked all through the house, the yard, and found ours to be a healthy home. She saw the unloaded guns in their rack with the magazines removed and stored separately and safely. Funny thing: The case officer asked to see "the gun"…. "Umm, sir, may I see the actual..umm.. weapon used for the video?" She wasn't at all scared of me but I could tell she doesn't like guns as a general rule. To each their own though. She was comfortable that I was adhering to NC gun safety regulations for the protection of minors, and that's all she needed. But of course if you want to continue, I'm just going to leave a pot of coffee on for the next officers who come by. (Digress: Maybe I can get Krispy Kreme to sponsor me with lifetime donuts? Oh God that would be heaven. Dunkin? Crap… KK all the way….) "She asked if I minded if she interviewed my daughter privately but that I didn't have to agree. I let her meet in private and then she and I met for about an hour and a half. At the end of the day, no I'm not losing my kids, no one's in danger of being ripped from our home that I know of, and I actually got to spend some time with the nice lady and learn some cool parenting tips that I didn't know.. I use them on my 8 year old son, but not on my fifteen year old daughter.. but now I will! There were a few things I thought she was "too old" for, but after talking to the case worker, I feel like it's worth a shot to try them. Maybe I'll sell those secrets in my next book! (Seriously? You just got mad didn't you? I'm kidding. Besides, that would still only give me two pages of material- one parent tip page and one page on handgun selection techniques appropriate for different electronic destructive purposes.)" So what do you make of Jordan's parenting technique? Personally, I think both father and daughter acted badly. The father's actions make it pretty clear where the child learned how to express her negative emotions and poor impulse control. Hannah acted like a typical teenage brat; the father responded in a dramatic fashion that will live in infamy for the next several decades, long after Hannah is a mother herself. Both father's and daughter's words will live to haunt them in cyberspace for longer than it should and this video will probably pop up every time someone Googles either of their names. That's too great a punishment for a teenager venting about her chores. I also think it was wasteful for the dad to shoot the laptop. If he really wanted to send a message to the girl, he could have taken it away, wiped its hard drive and made Hannah give it to a needy family. He also could have taken it away from her for a few months and made her earn it back. Shooting the laptop, where much of the girl's life was probably stored, seems too personal a punishment. It verges uncomfortably on domestic violence. I also wonder what this kid did that Tommy Jordan thought was bad enough to ground her for three months. That's a pretty harsh punishment for a teenager, far longer than I would think is necessary to get a message across. My best guess is that this is a family that needs counseling, not to air their disputes on Facebook. Regardless of what you think of the laptop-shooting dad, this is a good reminder for kids and parents that nothing you post online is private. Article Comments(33)FromNDFeb-19-12 5:10 PM The ADHD kid I referred to was more than a little difficult, he was headed for serious, serious trouble, if things hadn't turned around. The mentors that helped to foster him also helped him and his mom and step-dad, grandparents, to all get on the same page, but there were no guns. Nobody needed to get the gun out and start shooting things as a last ditch effort. In addition my daughter had many things and privileges growing up, it never corrupted her. She was respectful to us because we were that way to her. She learned to behave because of reasonable discipline and us not being so overbearing as to cause resentment from her. Having things isn't the issue it's the relationship of the parent and child. Our daughter calls and visits and want's to be involved. She's not saying she won't be there when we're old, and she had everything growing up. She's not disrespectful and spoiled because of things. OldDogFeb-19-12 2:41 PM jbillings 50 years ago people didn't "shack up" 50 years ago it was almost unheard of for a girl to get pregnant outside of marriage.. So I didn't shack up with my wife. I our first child was born 2 years after our wedding.. Just FYI I have kids, grandkids and great grand-kids who all keep me pretty informed on "life as they see it" going on around them each and every day. We are very blessed that all our family are good Christians and live by the Bible. They wait for marriage to try out the sex act. They marry for love and not for sex. That's almost unheard of in most communities nowadays so I guess my family is a bit old fashioned. And none of them live off the state or the federal government.. Sounds JB like you are opposed to a life learning education in school versus a sports play day right? FromNDFeb-19-12 11:53 AM Yes, and let's hope her dad can grow up and learn some better parenting skills to help him cope and deal with his daughter more appropriately and still be effective. jbillingsFeb-19-12 5:06 AM It sounds like her dad was trying to be a good father but gave her too much and was trying to give her a reality check but not much less than his actions would do so... I agree that it was wasteful but I believe it was beneficial to the girl in the long-term. It didn't involve her directly in the act of the firing but it did show her it to get it sunk into her head whilst she has time to mature until she gets a new computer. @OldDog: Your wife probably shacked up with /married you for exactly the same reasons you are trying to try to act like these 'young'uns' are doing in our area. Maybe you should let your much-much-better-half speak for a while now... FromNDFeb-18-12 8:45 PM Yes having those classes available are great and a good idea. Everyone should have to have them. When I took them years ago it was just girls in them and the boys took shop and ag. But even with that you just skim the surface in actual coping and relating skills. I think what usually happens is if a parent does well it's because they grew up in that environment and just relate well because of their own experience, otherwise a person doesn't know where they're going wrong and they're clueless. Unless they go to school for four years. I wouldn't know what to do with an ADHD child. That's the boy I was referring to earlier. He takes medications and was in a mentoring program. I can't think of it's name. They provide temporary fostering so the child can go stay with others during the worst times to get some space, but are still involved with the parents. The mentoring really had the most effect I think. I'm not sure if there was professional counseling. AndreaJohnsonFeb-18-12 7:35 PM Most high school students do end up taking one or more classes that teach parenting, food preparation and budgeting skills. They called it home economics when I was in high school and these days it's Family and Consumer Sciences. OldDogFeb-18-12 6:06 PM So maybe just for the heck of it we should get rid of sports in the school systems and rep[lace it with money skills, and parenting skills and food consumption skills. Then we would have mature thin kids going into a relationship knowing who has to pay the bills, what to feed your kids and how to raise your kids. We waste all this Government money teaching kids how to play football and how many of them use that as a social skill when they enter the life on the outside? Our education system is failing our kids and has already failed the parents of these kids as seen by the unfit, unhealthy disrespectful society we view and interact with each day. FromNDFeb-18-12 2:44 PM I couldn't believe the judge in Texas or his wife joining in with him. That's the prime example of what I'm talking about. A lot of times kids are judged for what's wrong with them but so often it's about what they're dealing with. Sometimes it's abuse and others it's a parent not knowing what to do and they are ineffective. That's why getting some help with parental skills is so great. It can really make a change. I've seen it. Sheila35Feb-18-12 2:25 PM I watched the video and read the followup. The dad actually seems reasonable and he's not losing it like that judge in Texas did. I don't disagree with him, I just don't know if he had to get as dramatic about it as he did. The other thing that bothers me is the thought that some truly abusive parent might see it and think that the approval this guy got applies to them when there's a difference between what they're doing and what he did. It might encourage them to go straight into overkill, and maybe we'll start to see a lot of abuse being posted on Youtube for approval. FromNDFeb-18-12 11:36 AM Ultimately one way or the other, parents are the one's creating the environment for their children. I had a relatively easy child to raise but I realize it can be difficult with some kids. I've seen where it looked like the worst for this one kid's future but through intervention and outside support things turned around. He could have really gone the wrong way. The adults, his mom and grandparents, didn't know any better how to handle him. He grew up and tuned out okay, thankfully. Sheila35Feb-18-12 11:19 AM I tend to hold adults to a higher standard than I do children. I make allowances for the mistakes made by younger people because they don't know better yet. They do learn and they can be taught, but pulling a power and control trip and humiliating them isn't the way to achieve it. They'll miss the point of the exercise every time and all they'll remember is how you were nasty to them. You might as well have not done it for all the good it will do them or you or anyone. Do we really want to teach kids that destroying someone else's property is the best way to teach them a lesson? Way to show them how to land in jail one day. FromNDFeb-18-12 2:48 AM I remember hearing Alec Baldwins rant to his daughter that he left on her answering machine. It was played a lot on TV. He said some pretty awful things to her. Totally disrespectful and mean. He was bitter. He used four letter words. Is he always that way? I can't imagine how that must have been for her. So,is she bitter? Does she say horrible things about him and rant to her friends? Does she say four letter words in reference to him, or dish it right back? Hopefully she doesn't turn out like him and treat others that way. This girl in the laptop situation might be spoiled, I'm on the fence about it. I'm leaning towards...like father like daughter. No parent is perfect but we all affect our kids. They can take after us. AndreaJohnsonFeb-17-12 7:31 PM I think the way the parent does the disciplining does make a big difference. It makes me glad I had and have such good parents. FromNDFeb-17-12 5:15 PM You know, I disciplined and lectured our daughter almost constantly it seems, when she was growing up, but I was reasonable and kind about it and wasn't so harsh that my daughter, now says, that it didn't even seem like discipline. We laugh over it sometimes, over all my "hinting" about what she should be doing. But she did learn that there were boundaries and she's a very kindhearted empathic mature responsible person today. So that's why I'm wondering about the girls bitter comments. It's not just if you discipline but how. There's a saying "Spare the rod and spoil the child", but there's another one that says "If you are too harsh you will crush their spirit". AndreaJohnsonFeb-17-12 4:50 PM The dad said the girl's first reaction was to have a crying fit and seeing his video was "a horrible day in her life," but then they talked about it and she's not hurt or traumatized. Hopefully this episode is not typical of either dad or daughter. I think it was a mistake for both of them to air their dirty laundry in public like this and I hope the dad considers getting everyone some counseling to avoid future problems. FromNDFeb-17-12 4:11 PM You know, I highly doubt that shooting her computer helped that girl to change her attitude of contempt at all. She very likely feels justified in her attitude even more and this just further cemented it. It's too bad that things weren't averted before she got so bitter and it came to all this. I wonder if she's just spoiled or mistreated? AndreaJohnsonFeb-17-12 3:58 PM I think the country has gone way overboard prosecuting statutory rape claims, to be honest. A lot of those laws are draconian and don't do anyone much good. But that's another subject entirely. There's nothing to suggest that this kid is anything but a spoiled brat venting on Facebook because she doesn't like doing her chores. OldDogFeb-17-12 11:50 AM So Shelia you are defending this defiant teenager by saying she should move out as soon as possible. Now you and I both know that she is unable to pay rent, buy food, and everything else she desires with a minimum wage job. So her next brilliant move being as she is MUCH wiser then her parents is to shack up with some guys. So her at 17 shacking up with a guy 18 makes him a criminal and her a nice sweet little innocent girl who is just too dammm smart for everyone around her right? I use to defend the female species but I don't anymore. About 50% of them are OK and the other 50% are out for taking anything they can get by any means they see fit. Sorta like the 50% that lives off the federal government. These sweet little innocent girls know how much one baby pays in the form of a government check so why not have 2 or 3 and double or triple your income.. Sheila35Feb-17-12 10:11 AM Where have you seen this happen time and time again? In the sensational made up stories on Fox? Anyway, we went over the teen pregnancy thing. According to the American Academy of Pediatrics, up to about 70% of the time teen pregnancies are fathered by grown men who belong in prison for it, along with providing support for the kids they drop in the girls' and by extension, society's lap. An adult has far more responsibility legally than a minor, but we don't want to go after them because it's condoned. Who's creating burdens on society? Also, is that how you think of children? As burdens? FromNDFeb-17-12 9:49 AM I hope this girl has some time to grow up before she goes out on her own. A lot of times these kids act out in rebellion for the way they are mistreated first by the parent other times it is because they are spoiled. I've seen it in families where a parent will be harsh with one and spoil another and you get problems with both kids. We really don't know one way or another what led up to their problems. OldDogFeb-17-12 8:26 AM She will sink and then she will become Pregnant and then she will become another of the burdens on our financial system. I have seen it time and time again. For every kid who is more intelligent then their parents at age 17 about 20% can actually move out and make it on their own. The rest move out and become burdens on our social system. Look up the stats.. The rest of the story is all these parents who cannot control their kids were taught in our educational system and now their kids are taught in our educational system and remember when they took away the right to spank your child and we have been in a downward sprial ever since in our society. But then Shelia why should I say anything because after all I am too old and know nothing and you are right in their with that teenager. Sheila35Feb-17-12 1:18 AM OldDog, you seem to be the one saying she deserves the consequences of her decisions, so why would emancipation be any different? If she chooses to do it, she sinks or swims, but it would be her choice and she'd have to live with the consequences of it. I was just saying that it would probably make both of them happier, since they don't seem to be able to agree on things with her living under his roof. OldDogFeb-16-12 8:46 PM There is even a sign out now.. Goes something like this ."TEENAGERS! Tired of being harrassed by your parents? ACT NOW!! Move out, get a job, pay your own way while you still know everything!" OldDogFeb-16-12 8:45 PM Yeah right Shelia when your parents don't have a clue the best thing for this kid to do Is move out get a job and pay her own way.. Works every time..Living proof living on the streets all those emancipated kids.. Post a Comment | in: News, Blogs & Events Web |