Nigeria, Feb. 23 -- There is a quiet grief many parents and elders carry today. It does not shout or trend, but it lingers-each time teenagers behave like adults before learning how to be children, each time values are replaced with fleeting fashions, and each time society applauds what it once corrected. What we are witnessing is not merely a change in fashion or attitude, but a deeper shift in moral architecture. The foundations that once guided childhood are being loosened, sometimes carelessly, sometimes deliberately, and often without fully considering the long-term consequences. This is not simply a generational disagreement; it is a moral question about how a society prepares its young for adulthood, and it should concern anyone wh...