Category Archives: Culture Wars

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To the 5 W & 1 H Folks:

The internet is an amazing thing.  Connections, connections, connections.  JK, I’m posting this for a reason and it’s not for credit actually.  I just want this connection out there – and if anyone can come up with an earlier blog post or news report on Ms O’Bagy’s Syrian Emergency Task Force position, please post it.  I wrote my post on September 3, 2013, 8:56 am.  I mentioned my post on The Diplomad 2.0 blog, September 3, 2013m,  10:03am, which certainly gets more traffic than my obscure backwoods blog.  After I posted my comment on Diplomad’s blog other journalists ran with this story.  There’s a lot of ego among you, but very little integrity.

I’ve tried since 1999 to get someone, anyone actually, to take my story, Messages of mhere (located in the archives section)  seriously – so far, no takers.  I followed advice and used pseudonyms in my story. I wrote it with a light touch, but the story itself is the truth.   All these years of attempting to get someone to listen to my story, well, truth, sure seems  a rare commodity.   Most of the people in this story would recognize themselves, if, someone with the right connections investigated this.  It shouldn’t be this hard to get someone to listen to you in America.

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The Obama Network……coming soon

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.

Byron York continues unraveling the FCC pilot program to monitor (my word choice there) newsrooms across America – “New Obama Initiative tramples First Amendment protections”.   After whining for decades about Rush Limbaugh and the evils of right-wing talk radio followed by  Gore and other liberals failed attempts to compete in the free market, we have this latest reincarnation of the Fairness Doctrine.  Yes, here they come again with another brazen attempt to silence their political opposition and indoctrinate the American people.  We’re now supposed to let partisan hacks and left-wing academics police newsrooms around the country to ensure compliance with providing “critical information” (whatever partisan gruel they’re serving).  The FCC pilot program is slated to run in SC, home of long-time Democratic Congressman, James Clyburn (famous for rants accusing Tea Party protestors of spitting and using racial slurs – despite no audio ever surfacing to back that – even though reporters were swarming all about and everyone these days has a cell phone at the ready).  And why SC, well, because Clyburn’s daughter, Mignon Clyburn, a Obama appointee to the  FCC, threw her (and her Daddy’s) political muscle into pushing this latest attempt to muzzle the free press in America (her comments here).  Not to worry though – the program is “voluntary”, which means, I am sure , that all those who don’t comply will be publicly named and nudged into line.

Wikipedia on the Fairness Doctrine

Breitbart reported on this new FCC program back in November 2013

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Just links

The lack of character and ethical void in the US military: good piece, “A Military that Looks like America”, at the In From the Cold blog.

An older link to a piece in the Strategic Studies, circa 2012, on the lack of clear ethical standards in the US Army:   Finding “The Right Way”: Toward  An Army Institutional Ethic, written by LTC Clark C. Barrett.  This paper offers a history of the Army’s character-building efforts, pitfalls with a written code, along with remedies to those pitfalls.  The missing fact in his paper is that when you start with substandard ingredients (lack of character in civilian society= a character deficit in the recruit pool too), it takes a whole lot of extra-effort to create spectacular dishes.

And you thought the Fairness Doctrine was dead, with the coffin nailed down tight, oops, it’s risen from the dead: from the WSJ, “The FCC Wades Into the Newsroom”.

A NASCAR war on women charge (alternately referred to as Danica Patrick’s driving record sucks). Richard Petty dared to state the obvious truth: “Tony Stewart picks the wrong person to get petty with over Danica Patrick”.  Small town stock car racing is better (trust me it is) than NASCAR and Danica’s already not excelled at Indy racing and now moved to NASCAR, so after this she can go join Sandra Fluke and claim the evil male patriarchy conspired against her.  She has gotten more attention, both press and endorsements, all because of her photogenic looks, while better male drivers struggle to make it in NASCAR.

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Trey

In early December I began this post, then hesitated, thinking what could I possibly add of value to address a topic, which multitudes of experts from academia, to philanthropic agencies, to churches on to public officials consider a problem too big to solve.  So, today being brave of heart, here’s an attempt to talk about homelessness in America, another one of those “insurmountable obstacles” in our land of plenty……  yes, especially plenty of excuses.

We all know how these heart-wrenching stories go about homelessness, written to pull at our heartstrings by focusing on children, of course.  In December 2013 the New York Times ran a lengthy piece, replete with lots of photos and even a few videos of a young black girl in New York City’s shelter system titled,  “Invisible Child,  Girl in the Shadows: Dasani’s Homeless Life”.  This 12-year-old girl, Dasani, lives in a squalid room with her stepfather, mother and six siblings in one of the worst shelters in the city.

The reporter, Andrea Elliot, began interviewing this girl and her family in 2012 and while she presents this family’s plight with an overabundance of empathy, she veers off into blaming political and economic forces as the cause for this little girl’s plight,  when clearly having two drug addicts for parents would be the place to start heaping the blame.  Ms. Elliot treats the drug addicted parents to heaping doses of understanding, instead of stating the obvious – they’re unfit parents.   These poor children will have little hope if they remain in the care of two addicts, who can’t even take care of themselves, let alone 7 children.  Okay, call me a cold-hearted, judgmental, racist white lady, but thems the facts folks.  Certainly, read the piece, because it’s truly worth reading and if you can bear with me for a few more paragraphs, I’ll revisit Dasani’s life in more detail.

Also, in December 2013, Kevin D. Williamson, National Review’s roving reporter, wrote a piece about intractable poverty in “white” America titled, “The White Ghetto”.  Williamson wrote his piece from a keen tourist perspective – no children as political props to be found in his piece, where he travels to Kentucky, the heart of Appalachia and describes what he finds, “If the people here weren’t 98.5 percent white, we’d call it a reservation.”  Williamson wades through the history, demographic realities, economic travails and along the way debunks many of our preconceived notions about our social ills.  Williamson is a superb writer, so please read the piece, despite my less than spectacular description of his work. 

Now, I’ll tell you a story about a homeless young black man I met at the end of last summer.  One bright, late summer morning when I arrived at work, some fellow workers from the lawn and garden department told me they had found a boy sleeping on one of the porch swing displays on the patio when they got to work.  Now being a store that is open 24/7, customers come and go at all times of the day and night.

Most irritating to me have been the customers who come in during the wee hours of the morning, dragging along small children, who should be at home, sleeping in their own beds.  Thankfully, I only work overnight rarely for major resets of shelves, so I  bite my tongue during these encounters, because without fail, these poor tykes are crying or screaming, while the clueless parents meander along, oblivious to their offspring’s misery.  Some ignore the cacophony, others add to it by screaming at the poor kids.  Finding a homeless boy, well, this was something new, like a scene out of that Billie Letts novel, “Where The Heart Is”,  about a pregnant young woman living in a Wal-mart in a small Oklahoma town.

I walked out to the patio, where this boy was still sound asleep on the green porch swing, with his small backpack beside him.  He opened his eyes when I approached, furtive and tense.  So, I asked him what his name is and he mumbled, “Trey.”  Being a curious sort, I started talking to him and asking him questions.  He told me he was 18, but I think he told a fellow employee he was 19, not that it matters much – he was past the age where getting help is easy, as you’ll see.

His story was that he lived with his uncle in a nearby tiny town and his uncle decided to leave and go drive trucks for a living.  He said he was on his own now and had nowhere to live, no family to help him.  I referred him to a private charity here that offers food assistance and I also gave him cash to be able to eat for a few days, because when I asked him when was the last time he ate, he hesitatingly told me, “yesterday.”  I didn’t know if that was true, because this poor kid looked awfully thin.  And I gave him my name and phone number.  Now, when I asked him what his plans were, naturally his were totally unrealistic, given his circumstances.  He was dirty, has no home and he told me he would like to find a job.  No employer is going to hire some dirty, homeless kid, with no means to get to work and  no means to come to work clean and presentable.

I called that private charity and the lady told me to send him to them and they have referrals to help and she advised me not to give him cash, because cash might be used for drugs, alcohol, etc.  Over the intervening months, I saw Trey occasionally in the store and I gave him money for food a few times too.  Each time I talked to him, I urged him to go to various places where he might get help.  I told him to go to the police.  He told me he went to them.  He said he went downtown and was given a motel room for a month under some program for the homeless, but his time was up there and now he is on a waiting list for housing.  He said there’s a shortage of housing, so he’s back to being without a place to stay.

I urged Trey to try some churches, because for a small town, we’ve got four pages of churches listed in the yellow pages and probably dozens more that aren’t listed.  You can’t go a quarter-mile here without running into several churches – we’ve got loads of “white” churches, loads of “black” churches, loads of “mixed demographics” churches and due to a large Korean population, we even have a lot of “Korean” churches too.  With so much Christian zeal around, you’d think finding a helping hand would be easy and you’d think we wouldn’t have homeless kids wandering around. He told me he stopped in one church and they told him they can’t help him.  Now, whether he really did seek help at all these places, I don’t know, but listening to him, it became obvious what he needed was an adult to take him by the hand and guide him.  He doesn’t seem capable to find his way to being self-sufficient, in the socially acceptable sense, on his own.  He mumbles, he avoids eye-contact, he seems to have some emotional or perhaps learning disabilities.  During one conversation he told me he was expelled from school in the 9th grade, so he’s very limited with opportunities.  He carries a notebook and seems to like to draw pictures though.

The week before Christmas, I saw Trey sitting in the shoe department sleeping one evening.  The weather had gotten cold and he had on a coat, but was wearing the same shorts he had on when I first met him.  I asked him how things were going and not much had changed, although he looked thinner and more desperate and he looked hopeless.

An elderly cashier asked me if he was okay and I gave her a bare bones summary of his plight.  She insisted she would call her daughter, who works for the department of family and children’s services here.  I told Trey I was getting off from work in a few minutes and then I would take him to the McDonald’s at the front of our store and get him something to eat.  I told the elderly cashier that is where we would be.  She met us at McDonald’s and her daughter gave the same referrals – the police, the private food charity, churches.  She explained that her daughter said it’s really hard once kids turn 18, because there aren’t many options.  She left and I sat down with Trey to eat our meal.  I could see him withdraw as the elderly cashier repeated the same referrals that he had tried.  He told me at one place they told him there’s a shelter in a city that’s not all that far away (but it’s too far to walk in the cold wearing shorts) and he doesn’t know anyone there, so he didn’t want to go there.   He ate one of his burgers, but I knew he wanted to keep the other one for later.  I gave him some more cash, but I had to get home to my husband, who is disabled and can’t be left too many hours unattended.

I had thought about bringing Trey home, but hesitated, because my husband is no position to defend himself, if I had misjudged this boy’s character.  I sought advice.  I asked a kind-hearted, black lady, who is an assistant manager at work, if she knows of any churches that might help.  I asked a black department manager, whom I know is a lay pastor in his church.  I emailed my friend, Gladius,  who is always a reliable source for great advice.  The kind black lady told me that black churches aren’t all that they should be and in her opinion mostly they want your money.  The black lay pastor, agreed with that assessment, but he told me that he would ask around.  Gladius advised me not to bring Trey to my home, because it’s too risky and he told me not to tell him where I live, because he might lead others, who are a threat to my home.  I hadn’t even considered that.  Gladius gave me a few more places to check into.  And Gladius told me white churches aren’t all they should be.  The lay pastor got back to me a week or so later and told me of a lady who runs some sort of small private place for the homeless, but he didn’t know much about it.

I didn’t see Trey for a while, but recently he returned and he avoids me.  I assume he’s given up on anyone ever really helping him and one of the security guys in my store pointed him out to me as someone they are watching, because he’s shoplifting frequently now.  It seems likely that Trey will become just one more statistic of a young black man making his way through the criminal justice system, but if I had been better at helping him, this could have been avoided.  Sure, it’s easy to say, it’s not my problem, or that I did all that I could do, but the truth is he arrived in my town, with only the clothes on his back and I know he needs help.  I keep thinking I should have done more to help him, because that’s what neighbors are supposed to do.

It’s easy to stereotype, based on our perceptions of various ethnic and racial cultural situations, but at the end of the day, Trey is a kid – he’s not a man by any stretch of the imagination.  He doesn’t know how to find a way to a productive, happy fulfilling life on his own.  And I wonder how well I would have fared if I found myself with no family or friends to turn to, hungry and alone with only the clothes on my back at 18 or 19 and coming from his type of home environment.

In the urban plight piece, the little girl, Dasani, has dedicated teachers and the principal of her school, mentoring her.  She might make it, despite having unreliable parents (drug addicted parents are not reliable – sorry, they’re not).

In Williamson’s report from the “white ghetto”, it’s not out-of-wedlock births that’s the issue, it’s the cascading effect of scarce jobs, crushing generational poverty, drug and alcohol addiction and a litany of bad personal money-management skills that seem almost a genetic trait among America’s poor, which truly is the case among America’s poorest, regardless of race and ethnicity.  A barrage of more government programs, replete with state of the art “referral capabilities” and federally subsidized hand-outs won’t change the culture that produces this sort of human misery and hopelessness.

Solutions start with people, not with more government intervention.

Local folks trying new ideas and more people offering a helping hand would surely provide many more needed ideas and potential solutions.  I felt pretty useless with my first attempt at helping a homeless person, but I’m still thinking about ways to help Trey and I keep hoping that he doesn’t end up in jail.

At  Christmas time I hesitantly mentioned Trey to my younger sister, fully expecting another of her oft-repeated lectures over the years, about how I need to quit adopting stray people and their problems and how I can’t save the world.  This time she surprised me and told me that locally back home they’re trying to get a program going for kids like Trey, who reach adulthood and aren’t eligible for programs for children any longer.   These kids still need a place to live and adult guidance to avoid becoming statistics of young people passing through the criminal justice system.  Local efforts sure appeal to me more than federal behemoths that always come with endless mazes of red tape and multi-tiered bureaucratic hoops to jump through.  None of this is helping Trey and I wish I had just brought him home, but I didn’t know enough about him to risk my husband’s safety.

Does one more kid falling through the cracks matter?

He should matter in America.

I wonder how much money is raised through private charities and allocated through government sources in America.  I wonder how many homeless people there really are in America and then I wonder how much money per homeless person that all comes out to.    While talking to the lay pastor at work, he asked an elderly black lady, whom we both know is very active in her church, if her church has a program for the homeless.  She told me they do a walk every year to raise money for the homeless.

As with most things in America, I suspect the answer is that we’re good at raising money and awareness, but not so stellar at using that money and awareness to effectively reach those in need.  What Trey needs is parents who care about his well-being and in lieu of that he needs some adults who care about him.  Government programs don’t offer caring – they excel at referrals.  And  yes, I failed him too and I’m still worrying about him, especially when the temperatures dropped last week.  What if he got sick – no one would even know.

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Where have all the real men gone?

I came across this article, “The 5 Traits The Modern Man Is Missing”,  from a news/blog site called Elite Daily: The Voice of Generation-Y, via another blog Musings from a Middle-Aged Man, written by a retired police officer.   I read his blog frequently, because he comes up with many interesting links to stories about government overreach into our lives and is particularly interested in the federal gambits on gun control.  Now, being of a pacifist nature (ok, that’s a lie – I fight when severely provoked……… usually by bullies), but hey, I don’t own any guns, never even thought about owning a gun, but I sure understand the views of those who do own guns.  And I understand where Obama’s fundamental transformation is leading us: courtesy of Allen West, in simple cartoon format, “Barry Explains Cloward-Piven Strategy”.

Barry, of course, fits into this thread so well, as he exemplifies, the modern man, described in the Elite Daily article.  At the risk of being called a racist, right-wing extremist, Barry rode the Affirmative Action train all the way to the White House, despite not ever holding down any job outside of the far-left political agitating sphere.  That provided the springboard into politics and the rest is history.  Five years into this gig, even many of his supporters admit he doesn’t seem competent to do this job.   Honesty checks itself at the partisan political gate, so these same folks will still support him.  Just speaking as a mom and a grandmother, President Obama’s worst failing  sure seems to be laziness – yes, I know, I have one kid like this too – brilliant, but sadly,  very lazy.  We have a President who glories in the public acclaim and perks of being President, but he has no real interest in actually working hard to perform the duties that come with the title.  On the right we have weepy Boehner and  McCain, reminiscent of Colonel Kurtz in Apocalypse Now………. ready to wage his own wars everywhere.  Enough with these milk-toast specimens of manhood, where are all the real men?  Are they extinct?  Do great men still exist?  Let me know when you find one, please, we might need to clone him.

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Fear, the great political motivator

Lacking the required science/math gene, I don’t engage in debates over matters pertaining to these two fields.  You won’t find posts here on the merits of lack thereof of global warming, because truthfully who am I to judge the merits of the research?  However, politics is another matter and the hot button global warming political issue sure seems to be a case where the science follows the political dictates.  Ethan Epstein presents an interesting look at climate science’s recent history (The Weekly Standard: “What Catastrophe?”)  and introduces Richard Lindzen, the contrarian  Alfred P. Sloan professor of meteorology at MIT, a leading critic of the global warming alarmist stance:

“If Lindzen is right about this and global warming is nothing to worry about, why do so many climate scientists, many with résumés just as impressive as his, preach imminent doom? He says it mostly comes down to the money—to the incentive structure of academic research funded by government grants. Almost all funding for climate research comes from the government, which, he says, makes scientists essentially vassals of the state. And generating fear, Lindzen contends, is now the best way to ensure that policymakers keep the spigot open.”

“Lindzen contrasts this with the immediate aftermath of World War II, when American science was at something of a peak. “Science had established its relevance with the A-bomb, with radar, for that matter the proximity fuse,” he notes. Americans and their political leadership were profoundly grateful to the science community; scientists, unlike today, didn’t have to abase themselves by approaching the government hat in hand. Science funding was all but assured”. 

Epstein writes, “But with the cuts to basic science funding that occurred around the time of the Vietnam war, taxpayer support for research was no longer a political no-brainer. “It was recognized that gratitude only went so far,” Lindzen says, “and fear was going to be a greater motivator. And so that’s when people began thinking about .  .  . how to perpetuate fear that would motivate the support of science.”  So, here the issue moves from the science to the political realm and therein lies the problem with so much of the global warming hype – a crisis creates a political nudge (to borrow from a Cass Sunstein book on political propaganda about how to motivate people and get them to accept changes deemed for their own good – the nanny state guidebook, if you will).  Among academia there has been a narrowing of the mind in recent decades and those who dare challenge the prevailing orthodoxy quickly find themselves publicly cast into the marginalized Fox News viewer pot, as just another far-right loon.    Climate change, née global-warming, rests as settled science and no skepticism or questioning is allowed.

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Some more links

Bizarre reporting angle on CNN: a young Iranian woman dies from injuries sustained from her husband beating her and CNN fixates on her touching death story???  Oh, the wonders of technology, where the hospital staff located this woman’s family in Iran and linked up.  The two female reporters wax on about how this woman’s death helped 7 other people with organ transplants.  The glaring omission – NO details about the assailant or crime.  We know she was beaten to death and all they emotionally fixated on is the marvels of modern technology, which allowed her family thousands of miles away to watch her die….  Was the husband arrested?  What charges is he facing?  Any clues as to motive?

From Kerry’s mouth to Allah’s ears: “We are going to do everything that is possible to help them.” (Washington Post story here). In the same article,  Kerry’s new Middle East policy explains it all so clearly (sing along…… “walking away from the troubles in my life”….)

CNN reports on the same Kerry statements emphasizing, the US will help the Iraqis fight Al Qaeda, but we won’t put any boots on the ground.

A vision of the future perhaps, a bookless library in Texas leaves me feeling rather cold and empty inside.  Now, here’s a cute idea I came across last year that runs back in time: setting up your own Little Free Library.

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“the best opportunity to succeed” (code for lower standards)

Here are two small news bits that demonstrate the big picture/little picture way strident feminists view issues and tool their propaganda accordingly.  For these women, men are the problem, but hey, they’ve won every battle thus far and in the halls of power in America, men behave like cowed eunuchs, ever-cautious to fetch and carry the feminist agenda load.  Hanna Rosin penned a short opinion piece, “Men Are Obsolete”, in Time, which offers a few bullet-point statements to make the big picture case and it behooves men to avoid beating their chests, screaming about how life has gotten so unfair for them or huddling in safe tree houses, where they can defiantly post a sign, “NO GIRLS ALLOWED”.  Ms Rosin’s sentiments rise far above snarky bravado.  In point of fact, from Obamacare’s forcing equality in requiring men to pay for maternity coverage, in the name of “fairness”, to President Obama opening combat positions to women, the ardent feminists have won and they’re declaring victory.

In the little picture world, where the political plays out in the real world,  the feminist vision collapses and  puts a lie to Ms Rosin and the Sisterhood’s cocksure(less) world view: “Marines delay female fitness plan after half fail” (USA Today).  Having been a guinea pig in the feminization of the American military plan for a very short time decades ago, I’ll share with you how this goes.  The political factions within the Pentagon will begin tinkering with new ways to make it appear that women can do these heavy-lifting, grueling combat tasks by eliminating as many of the tasks from the physical standards as necessary to get women into these positions.  The physical standards for men will lower and all sorts of concessions will be made to soften the ride for women to succeed in these jobs.  They’ll desperately seek a few über herculean gruntettes to become the face of the new Amazon band of sisters for the full court press, to “prove” women are just as strong as men.  Here’s the Marine Corps capitulation to political correctness:

Marine Corps Commandant Gen. James Amos wants training officials to “continue to gather data and ensure that female Marines are provided with the best opportunity to succeed,” Capt. Maureen Krebs, a Marine spokeswoman, said Thursday.

You can be sure the data gathered will be sufficiently adjusted to insure the previous upper-body strength standards weren’t really necessary and next will be lowering the weight loads for combat troops to carry on their backs and oh, of course, those grueling 12 mile foot marches carrying 70 lbs of gear in three hours will be deemed superfluous too.  No need to be strong enough to scale walls or carry your own gear, the argument will go, after all, this is the modern military and we travel by vehicles now.  Yep, expect to hear a full-throated diversionary argument for mechanized infantry to emerge……..

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“Please sir, I want some more”…

Rep. Jack Kingston instigated one big food fight recently when a secretly taped video by his political opponent got hyped to show Kingston as an heartless elitist, intent on making poor children grovel, well actually “work” for their free lunches.  The political left, in typical partisan fashion, swept the floor with Kingston, instead of looking at the important lesson he, perhaps inelegantly, was trying to discuss.  He explained his views more clearly during a CNN interview.

It would not be a good idea to tie aprons on only children receiving free lunches, but the idea of making all children do some chores in their lunchroom, classroom and school would be a good first step toward teaching kids to respect community property and also to teach them many other lessons, like the importance of work, civic responsibility and on a much more basic level, how to be part of a team.   Somehow, among the political left, any suggestion that learning to do manual labor offers valuable character-building lessons, incites shrill recitations about the evils of child labor and vivid imagery-filled prose alluding to Oliver Twist begging, “Please sir, I want some more.”  C’mon, so many kids and their parents exhibit such a sense of entitlement over perceived victimization and the Democratic Party toils away to keep this constituency firmly entrenched in poverty, which requires relentless propaganda and setting up straw men to set ablaze in the public square.  Kingston surely felt that heat recently.

With refreshing clarity, a writer at National Review, Jillian Kay Melchior, scrubbed away the ashes left from Kingston’s unfortunate liberal fire bombing and explained why exactly work provides valuable lessons, for all children. (“Why All Children Should Learn To Work”).  We, as a society, embrace full-throated exhortations about “rights”, but any who dare offer the ticket to individual liberty (learning about responsibilities), speedily get marginalized, pegged as insensitive to the poor, or worse get tarred with the racist label. One liberal pundit suggested Kingston’s suggestion would be using  poor, minority children  as slave labor.  Yep, that’s how absurd things get at the mere suggestion that  kids should learn to work and that there is no such thing as a free lunch.

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Control of the Home Roost

This post will surely anger, irritate, and cause many parents to call me ignorant of their child’s “problems”, but since this is my blog and my opinions – feel free to disagree and find a nice cozy “support group” for other parents like you – the millions of parents who drug their young children as a first course for behavioral problems, rather than exhaust changing your parenting techniques.  I’ve been reading about and talking to parents for over 26 years about this subject and my mind is made up on the matter.  Americans love creating new “medical maladies” for bad behavior, from early childhood all through adulthood it’s easier to create serious-sounding ailments and dole out drugs to treat the “symptoms”, when the truth lies that in most cases the ailment is nothing more than a bad behavioral “choice”.  We’ve turned alcoholism and drug abuse into diseases and worked our way back to creating psychiatric conditions in need of medical intervention as soon as children start interacting with their world.  Pharmaceutical companies responded with a boon of pills to pop and we’ve got an entire society in need of a cold turkey detox from this vicious, free fall collapse of morality and dependence on “experts” rather than taking responsibility for our behavior and the behavior of our children. G. Murphy Donovan tackles the larger picture of our cultural lunacy in a piece at The American Thinker yesterday, “The Psychobabble Bubble“.

Long ago (26 years ago), I took my second son to an Army medical facility for a well-baby check-up.  He was 2 years old.  Now, this son was child number three and I was used to caring for my own babies and since I grew-up out in the country within a large family and even larger extended family, I had spent my life around lots of children.  I worked as a babysitter from the time I was 13 years old, I got stuck with the youngest preschoolers during vacation Bible school at church in summertime as a teenager.  Small children, with their varied behavioral challenges were nothing new to me.  I knew my son was perfectly normal.  Mind you this was a “well-baby” visit, so there I sat for a very long time in the waiting room and then longer still in the actual examination room awaiting the pediatrician.  My son was tired of sitting on my lap so long and once we were in the examination room,  I let him get down off my lap and move around.  He loved to run and explore everything, but he still conformed to living by my rules and yes, I had set mealtimes, set nap time and once I weaned my kids off of the bottle they learned the rule of sitting at the table for snack time and drinks.  I didn’t allow my kids to wander around the house with food and drinks and this rule held into their teens.  I constantly told them, “We eat at the table!” – it wasn’t optional.  I taught them how to set the table and basic table manners by consistent reinforcement – that’s how you train dogs and that’s how you train people too.

So, there we were sitting there waiting, waiting, waiting and finally the doctor entered the room, so I scooped my son back onto my lap and he squirmed and wanted to get down and run some more.  That minute or so of him squirming led to the pediatrician telling me my son was “hyperactive” and should be medicated for this – to avoid future problems.  My first reaction was “Oh no, there’s something wrong with him”, which was swiftly followed by the rebellious thought,  “I know my son and this man has been around my son a couple of minutes, what the hell does he know about him.”  Mind you my son wasn’t screaming, he was just squirming a lot and when the doctor told me to set him down, my son took off running around exploring the office.  He insisted that my son is hyperactive, but I sat there watching my son and his behavior seemed like normal two-year old behavior.  So, I politely told this “expert”  that we like our son just the way he is and that we were here for a well-baby check-up.  I refused medication.

My son always busily explored the world around him and once he learned to read, he explored books as actively as the world.  He loves to take things apart and try to put them back together, after he figured out how they work.  When we first got a PC, he quickly became the family tech support expert.  Now, this son is the only one of my kids who was shy like me and he kind of hangs back and listens when in a crowd.  He doesn’t like competing with other people, because he’s so busy with his own personal quests.  He sets a lot of personal goals –  this supposedly hyperactive child spent years reading through 800+ page computer manuals, exhaustively learning everything he could about computers – hardware stuff and software stuff.  He loves math and signed out calculus books during one summer vacation as a young teen  (long before he studied calculus in school), because he said, “Calculus is fun!”

We urged him to go to college right out of high school, but he didn’t want to do that, despite having excellent grades.  He enlisted in the Air Force and worked on electronic systems on fighter planes.  He deployed to Iraq once and did well in the Air Force, with his commanders urging him to consider attending the Air Force Academy, but he had other plans.  He finished his four-year stint, came home and went to college.  He graduated summa cum laude with a degree in physics and although he wanted to go to grad school immediately, he changed that plan upon marrying a girl here.  She didn’t want to move away from her family, so he decided to find a job here.  He landed a good job doing software design for a company that does a lot of contract work for the Air Force and then moved on to a better job working for an aeronautical corporation as a software engineer – despite taking not a single computer class in college – he is self-taught.  He still plans to go to grad school and pursue theoretical physics research, which he got hooked on in college, working for the head of the physics department  as a research assistant.  He attended several American  Physical Society meetings around the country with this professor, who presents his research there too.  We’re very proud of him and I often remind him that long ago some doctor wanted us to drug him into submission, but I am so glad I told that doctor we like him just the way he is.

This isn’t meant to sound like I am a great a parent or my kids are so great, because I have another son who has problems.  He also is a brilliant, talented young man too, but he hit some roadblocks and hasn’t figured out how to move past them and as a parent, these roadblocks are frustrating and filled with anguish. For this post I want to stick to the ritalin generation topic.

A few days ago, America’s paper of record, The New York Times, ran a front page story,“The Selling of Attention Deficit Disorder”, decades late, but at long last a counter-movement to this insidiously destructive epidemic of medical malpractice seems to be gaining some traction. Dr. Keith Connors, an early advocate for drug therapy for childhood ADD now looks back at the statistics and states:

“The numbers make it look like an epidemic. Well, it’s not. It’s preposterous,” Dr. Conners, a psychologist and professor emeritus at Duke University, said in a subsequent interview. “This is a concoction to justify the giving out of medication at unprecedented and unjustifiable levels.”

These statistics which so alarm Connors, quoting from the Times piece, “that the number of children on medication for the disorder had soared to 3.5 million from 600,000 in 1990” and he considers these numbers a national disaster of dangerous proportions”.  When I look back to how my son could have been a part of that statistic, I am always so thankful that my mother, a dedicated registered nurse, refused to buy into so much of the mental health industry’s push toward the Oprahization of medicine, where creating national awareness using flimsy “experts” converted America from a self-reliant culture to a self-absorbed culture where the national pastime centers on investing extraordinary amounts of time into self-awareness and self-empowerment, with the requisite prescriptions of medication to soften the ride, toward finding yourself. 

Around the Army, we moved frequently, our kids had to leave friends behind, start over at new schools and make new friends constantly.  My husband spent large amounts of time away from home training with the Army.  The central focus in my life, being a stay-at-home mother, was making sure my kids had a set routine and adjusted to these changes.  Sure, I learned as I moved more often, but my kids adjusted well and of course there were a few instances of small problems here and there, but my kids thrived in school and they made friends quickly.  Now, my son mentioned in this post had a small issue when we moved back from Germany after 5 years living there.  His teacher (4th grade if my memory serves me) called me one day early in the school year to discuss my son’s reading “problems”.  She told me he does not know how to read, which stunned me, because my son was an excellent reader. I asked her how she determined this and she said when she called on him to read out loud he couldn’t read well and stumbled over most of the words.  I told her that he is very shy and he doesn’t know any of the kids or her.  I assured her that he was an excellent reader, as his school records from his previous school could affirm.  I urged her that with some patience he would become comfortable in this new classroom.  He did and he was an excellent student there too.

I met many parents around the Army who didn’t spend much time focusing on their kids and the kids got shuffled along, while the parents indulged in their own self-absorbed activities, leaving the kids to run wild.  You combine frequent moving, absent parents, and lack of structure in the home and it’s no wonder the military rates for these so-called behavioral maladies are much higher.

Here’s one of those home truths that Army commanders and the support agencies that deal with Army families know, but won’t ever articulate – way too many young Army families have a “welfare mentality”, which the Army perpetuates by sloganeering stuff like, “we take care of our own” or you’re part of the “Army family”.  A fortune is spent on providing services for families in the Army and since I dedicated a lot of time to helping in Army family support activities and I lived in Army communities, I feel qualified to say this.  Efforts have been made to work toward teaching “self-reliance”, but when you encourage dependency through your messaging and then expect self-reliance when soldiers deploy, you’ve set up your support agencies to be bombarded.  If you live in an environment prone to disorder, like moving all the time, creating stability in your home becomes even more crucial to children’s welfare.  If you show me a kid with ADD, I’ll show you a home where there is either a lack of structure and routine, a lack of consistent discipline or both.  Kids are like dogs – some are easier to train than others, but all except a very minuscule fraction are beyond training.

We’ve got way too many parents who have never learned any self-restraint, self-discipline or how to follow a routine and then you stick kids into this chaotic mix and naturally the more disordered the home routine, the worse the kids behave. Set some rules and a routine and the vast majority of kids thrive and kids with problems benefit the most from a structured routine and consistent discipline.  We all  thrive if there is order in our lives.

In recent years the “experts” have grown their list from ADD to ADHD and now it’s autism and Asperger’s syndrome too.  I walk away when parents start regaling me with this crap, because in most (maybe even all) of these situations, I look at the parents and then I have my answer as to “the real problem”.  The problem runs deeper than bad parenting, it runs to men and particularly women buying into other people’s ideas on parental roles and how to view these roles – with the push toward women pursuing careers in lieu of staying home full-time with children.  Fathers latched onto  the feminist push out the door and way too many play peripheral roles in their children’s lives rather than playing a central leadership role in the home.   A home is a place where civilization is nurtured and if we abandon that, our culture suffers.  Mary Eberstadt penned an excellent piece at National Review Online today, “Why Ritalin Still Rules”, leaving this prescient observation on the rampant drugging of American children –  “In the ashes of the sexual revolution, someone has found a gold mine.”  

You want a simple solution – Quit buying into other people’s bullshit!  Think for yourself!  Quit listening to so many celebrity experts, mental health experts, and commercials selling magic pills.  Make your family the central focus of your life.  Start by learning to live by a routine and some rules yourself, then expand out to getting some organization in your family’s routine.  American culture is in chaos, because American homes are in chaos – it’s way past time for American women to regain control of the home roost.

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