Crowe plays this note fairly well in his early scenes, his downcast eyes and reserved, low voice in front of the king indicating that fealty that comes from
fear of punishment rather than devotion — a fear thoroughly justified when Robin's frank talk to his sovereign on the justness of these «holy wars» lands him in the stocks with proto — Merrie Men Will Scarlet (Scott Grimes), Little John (Kevin Durand), and Allan A'Dayle (Alan Doyle).
Not exact matches
fred... yes fred, i have a better way — but you sir, i have no need to keep this conversation going, for you are terribly thick headed, and beyond brainwashed by religion... you claim to believe the bible and what is has to say yet allow for me to be a di - ck to god without
fear of recourse or any form
of punishment from god — back in the day, i would have been smoted, now you losers claim that he will just torture me forever in hell as my
punishment — this implies that god has learned better ways to function as god — whoa, did anyone else just see what i said, god learned... thats
rather un-godly, to learn, being he is all knowing - but your right, i am wrong... jesus christ where did i put my fuk you card, oh god - dam - nit... i must have thrown it away with all the other garbage i don't use... well too bad.
Rather than simply following the rules because they
fear punishment (as they might with authoritarian parents), the children
of authoritative parents are able to see why the rules exist, understand that they are fair and acceptable, and strive to follow these rules to meet their own internalized sense
of what is right and wrong.
But the most demanding aspect
of Hyde is the Brother's Keeper code, for it is conscience,
rather than
fear of punishment, that is meant to guide behavior at Hyde.
Sadly, people may consider an animal that remains still to be exhibiting «good behavior»
rather than exhibiting
fear, which might be a more accurate description
of the stillness that results after
punishment - based techniques are used.
In other words, if the child isn't subject to too much parental control, it is more likely that their «good» behavior will stem from their own inner motivation
rather than being motivated by external rewards or because
of fearing punishments.
It polarises differences
rather than respecting differences and encourages behaviour driven by
fear of exposure,
punishment and self - justification.
It allows the parent to connect and teach
rather than isolate, and in the end, will strengthen the bond between parent and child
rather than invoke
fear of punishment.