Kindness knows no degree
In many ways, yes, but not automatically. Literacy gives people access to information, ideas, and perspectives beyond their immediate surroundings. It helps develop critical thinking, communication skills, and the ability to question or reflect.
A literate person can read about history, science, ethics, and the experiences of others, all of which can broaden empathy and understanding. However, literacy alone doesn't guarantee goodness. A literate person can also misuse knowledge or be just as selfish or cruel as an illiterate one if they choose to be. So literacy can help someone become a better person, but character, values, and choices still matter.
Does it make for better parents and better neighbors?
Often, yes. A literate parent can help their children with homework, understand health information, or navigate opportunities for their family. Literacy can help parents protect their rights and advocate for their children.As neighbors, literate people may be better able to organize community efforts, solve disputes peacefully, or stay informed about issues that affect everyone. Again, though, literacy doesn't automatically make someone kind, generous, or cooperative.
My neighbors are educated but there is one of my neighbors who behaves like a local champion. In fact, he is always the one causing confusion and fighting with people like a thug. The way he behaves makes you wonder if he truly went to school because as an educated person there are certain things you shouldn't be doing. How can you claim that training a female child is a waste and still call yourself an educated and exposed person?. You are asking your neighbor not to send his son to school that its a waste of resources. Just because your are not successful as you thought
Does it make for better parents and better neighbors?
It doesn't completely reduce it but education somehow helps to reduce harmful behavior by replacing ignorance with knowledge. For example, learning about health and safety reduces risky mistakes. Studying ethics and history can help people understand the consequences of cruelty, prejudice, or violence. But education doesn't erase human flaws; greed, anger, fear, or pride can still drive people to harm others despite knowing better.
Highly educated people have also done terrible things in history. So, learning reduces ignorance but doesn't eliminate wrongdoing; it just gives people more tools to make wiser choices if they wish to. In the past, educated people were the pride of every community, but currently, it's the educated ones that are causing mayhem in society because an organ harvester is educated to be able to know how to operate on a human and dissect each organ careful especially the heart.
Being literate is good, but it doesn't reduce evil because human beings will always be human - selfish, greedy, and lacking empathy at some point. Most of our politicians are educated, but how is the economy? Do they have any single sympathy towards it citizen? Are they really making any changes for the betterment of the nation? What about the negligence of doctors towards patients? I don't want to talk about the rude behavior of nurses that has made many people choose to go to maternity homes instead. Being a better person is all about individual personality and mentality.
In conclusion, the real challenge is pairing knowledge with wisdom, compassion, and moral courage. When that happens, literacy can truly help build better people, better parents, and better neighbors. Education can do it percentage in people's life but home training can do alot.So let's try to be better individuals with our neighbors and families.
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Literacy and education can enhance understanding and critical thinking, they do not inherently lead to kindness or moral behavior, individual character and values ultimately determine how one uses knowledge.
Exactly