Nautilus I read your first evidence piece.
It's still insufficient evidence to me.
It seems to be a series of assertions, backed up by a brief word snippet, or series of words. The snippets appeared conjectured. Here is one example.
p.7 If a child screams or cries “Just ignore him. Don’t be moved by it. Don’t pick him up.” If the child says he is hurt give him “a terrible tasting herbal potion.” p.9
What's the context?
Yes on the surface it looks bad to say just ignore a screaming child.
But what is the context?
Is the context about putting a child to bed for the 50th time at night because he keeps carrying on and on? If the kid is screaming, and claiming to be hurt, just as a way to keep from going to sleep, is a parent to keep running into the room every time a noise is made? What if the only way to break that is to let him keep on making noise, so he learns you can't be manipulated?
See when we aren't given contextual proof, and are just given negative assertions with bad sounding snippets that appear to support said negative assertions, we're left wondering who is saying what.
Contextual evidence is important.
If the context of the above is in the context of telling parents to ignore their kids if they're truly hurt, and hungry, then we got serious issues. But if the context is in the context of telling parents to ignore lil johnny who won't go to bed, who is trying to emotionally manipulate you through crying/screaming/claims to be hurt, then the author has a point. But we just don't know which is which, because NO ONE will give contextual proof, surrounding paragraph proof, or forbid, actual page length proof.
People are so quick to believe a negative assertion. All it seems to take to get agreement is to
1. Make said claim
2. Give non-contextual snippets of mean sounding words,
3. Get horror stories of people who claimed to have read it but who may have actually misread and misapplied it.
4. Get people to agree that said assertions are bad.
5. Once enough people hop on and agree said assertions are bad, claim the assertions are true because so many people say so.
Who cares about providing contextual proof to validate said claims, when doing the above is sooo much easier?