In Boot Camp by Todd Strasser, the main character, Garrett, is treated with paternalism that is cruel in its intent. As he is being taken to a militaristic boot camp called Lake Harmony in upstate New York, the man transporting him tells him, "Your parents sent you to Lake Harmony because they love you" (page 2). His captors, or "transporters," tell him that they are bringing him to the boot camp for his own good, but his detention in the boot camp is a form of cruelty and imprisonment.
In a similar way, Aibileen and Minny, black maids in The Help, are robbed of their own free will and controlled by whites who state that they have Aibileen's and Minny's best interests in mind. As Aibileen says, "Sides stealing, worse thing you'n do for your career as a maid is to have a smart mouth" (page 17). Like Garrett, whose parents dislike his choosing his own relationships and charting his own course, Aibileen and Minny are supposed to do what their employers want and are supposed to keep their true thoughts to themselves. The white women who employ Aibileen and Minny decide on a Home Help Sanitation Initiative, which involves building outhouses for their black domestic help to use, because, as they state, "99% of all colored diseases are carried in the urine" (page 158). This is another form of paternalism. The white employers are treating their maids with disrespect but tell them it is for everyone's best interest. In this way, the white employers are similar to Garrett's parents in Boot Camp.
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