"Tom Sawyer and today's children: Same behavior, different treatment" I have a problem with this op-ed.
→[More:] Not in its opposition to "medicating into normalcy" problem children. But the conclusion "Tom Sawyer turns out fine in the end. In 19th-century Missouri, there were still many opportunities for impulsive kids who were bored and fidgety in school: The very qualities that made him so tiresome -- curiosity, hyperactivity, recklessness -- are precisely the ones that get him the girl, win him the treasure and make him a hero." Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn are FICTIONAL CHARACTERS, who I have long assumed "turned out fine" as Mark Twain's message that "19th-century Missouri" SHOULD give them better opportunities than it did in real life. Am I missing the point or is Ms. Applebaum?