Here it is Christmas morning and I should be diligently getting my Christmas dinner preparations underway, but I just had to spend a few minutes posting a link to this wonderful Christmas story again – Steve McCann’s, “Saved By Christmas”.
Category Archives: General Interest
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.
Filed under Culture Wars, Food for Thought, General Interest, Military, The Media
THE ONE and a few lesser stories…
Unexpected work demands hampered my blogging lately, so this will be just a short list of links. Number one, or should I say, THE ONE, oh my, what an ego maniac he is: Mark Steyn on him, larger than life here, and Thomas Lifson weaves a larger tapestry.
Came across a blog post at The Orthosphere about a futuristic 1950s paperback, “World Without Men”, by Charles Eric Maine, which ties in with my ongoing commentary on feminism’s darker side – the war against men. The blogger, Thomas Bertonneau, calls the fictional society created in this novel a totalitarian lesbiocracy and truly it’s a scary place to be. I intend to purchase this book and read it for myself. Just for the record, I adore men, but long for a return of stronger, more confident manhood in America. Enough with the metrosexuals and the feminist harpies controlling public discourse – I call for a return of the gentlemen to politely take charge again.
Here is a video and story about the NSA and 60 Minutes interview with NSA officials, to include the head of the agency, General Keith Alexander. I don’t know a thing about General Alexander, but watching him speak creeped me out. My female intuition started twitching and I kept thinking he’s lying based solely on his facial expressions and watching his eyes. I could never trust this man, based on my gut reaction and yet I have no solid basis for this feeling.
Fitting with my rural upbringing, I grew up listening to country music. It resonates with a realistic take on American culture and lately a couple of young female country artists caught my attention. Kacey Musgraves writes songs that have many conservatives on edge where she talks about alternative lifestyles and smoking weed. I love her frank take on American life from her real life experiences – it’s honest and refreshing actually – here’s Follow Your Arrow. Danielle Bradbury looks the part of a budding country music starlet, blond, blue-eyed, and cute as can be. Her song, The Heart of Dixie, while one of those with a female empowerment theme that usually grates on my nerves, centers on a road trip, with the bigger theme of leaving a troubled past behind you and being brave enough to seek a better future. I embrace those kinds of stories, regardless of gender, where the plot device of being on a journey offers endless possibilities for twists, turns and unexpected discoveries.
Since I veered onto the topic of road trips, I’ll mention a late 80s novel, The Bean Trees, by Barbara Kingsolver, whom one of my sons told me is a left-wing whack job, but hey I don’t judge novels by the politics of the author and I loved this road trip story. The sequel, Pigs In Heaven, continued the story without losing any of the spirit of the first novel.
Time to get ready for work now. Have a great day!
Filed under Culture Wars, General Interest, Politics
Change where we can believe again
Interesting poll about trust: “In God we trust, maybe, but not each other”. It made me think about my May blog post, “The Mom World Peace Solution”.
With any hope for building trust on the international stage diminishing daily, it’s no surprise that our little picture view trends the same as our big picture view. Arguing which one causes the other, well, that’s the chicken and egg dilemma, and really, in America all we need to know is that chicken has come home to roost – we’re headed down a very dangerous path where the lying and believing lies leaves people unsure and ready to believe the worst about others. It sure would be nice to have change where we can believe again.
Filed under Culture Wars, Foreign Policy, General Interest, Politics
Stuff
In the mad rush during the past couple days at work, many thoughts crossed my mind, with being caught up in the raging sea of mindless consumerism. Working in retail, being so dependent on constant face to face interaction with people, usually presents many challenges, but when these Black Friday sales hit, let’s just say it’s like being caught in a tempest. So, here, in random order are the things I thought about at work the past few days.
American consumerism, in all its meticulously researched and sales-tested, naked state, ranks as mindless, base, disgusting and deeply disturbing. Why do people who complain that they can’t pay their bills or don’t have enough money for the basics, squander their very limited resources for intrinsically useless stuff rather than hold on to it for the necessities?
On a day devoted to thanking God for the many blessings in our lives, it seems repugnant (to me at least), to rush to stores before the day is even done and push, shove, even taser your way to grab stuff, as if your very life depended on its acquisition? Oh, yeah, it’s all about acquiring this stuff for gifts for others – yep, it’s for Christmas…. where we celebrate God sending us a Savior (a gift). Where I work, the Marines set up a large drop box for donations of toys, which they hand out to needy children every year. The box at my store was empty when I left work late Thursday evening. We had a few scuffles with unruly customers getting physical in their mad struggles over sales merchandise, nothing that made the news, but still disturbing when considering each year the stories that do make the news get more violent and absurd. Where I work the scuffles are usually over cheap junk items, not over TVs or some pricey item – fighting over some cheap set of bed sheets and that type of under $10 merchandise.
Of course, I noticed more than one shopping cart filled with small children, with their bare feet dangling (not even socks on their feet) or a jacket on their back, in the cold (it dipped below freezing here), yet these parents madly rushed about to fill their shopping carts with assorted toys, although I noticed not a pair of socks or a warm coat among their purchases.
As I watched the throng race to and fro, in mindless pursuit of stuff, well I thought about all the stuff I already have and decided I need to start paring down rather than acquiring more stuff, which I don’t need and start worrying about the stuff in my life that does matter. I thought we would be so much better off if we put this kind of energy into the stuff in our lives that should matter, our relationships, helping others, trying to improve ourselves. And on the material front, the stuff I do have, well, I would like to find time to work on my needlework and crafting, and even I gave a thought to buying some lovely specialty yarns they had in a big bin, but I resisted. I bought some last year at this annual sale and still haven’t used it. Of course, I notice there were no books included in the sale and anyway, if you want to find the one spot, where any time, day or night, there’s never a crowd, go to the books section of my store… yep, America, the land with plenty of stuff…. just not the right stuff.
Filed under Culture Wars, Food for Thought, General Interest
George Washington Issued the first Thanksgiving Proclamation
Thanksgiving Proclamation
[New York, 3 October 1789]
By the President of the United States of America. a Proclamation.
Whereas it is the duty of all Nations to acknowledge the providence of Almighty God, to obey his will, to be grateful for his benefits, and humbly to implore his protection and favor—and whereas both Houses of Congress have by their joint Committee requested me “to recommend to the People of the United States a day of public thanksgiving and prayer to be observed by acknowledging with grateful hearts the many signal favors of Almighty God especially by affording them an opportunity peaceably to establish a form of government for their safety and happiness.”
Now therefore I do recommend and assign Thursday the 26th day of November next to be devoted by the People of these States to the service of that great and glorious Being, who is the beneficent Author of all the good that was, that is, or that will be—That we may then all unite in rendering unto him our sincere and humble thanks—for his kind care and protection of the People of this Country previous to their becoming a Nation—for the signal and manifold mercies, and the favorable interpositions of his Providence which we experienced in the course and conclusion of the late war—for the great degree of tranquillity, union, and plenty, which we have since enjoyed—for the peaceable and rational manner, in which we have been enabled to establish constitutions of government for our safety and happiness, and particularly the national One now lately instituted—for the civil and religious liberty with which we are blessed; and the means we have of acquiring and diffusing useful knowledge; and in general for all the great and various favors which he hath been pleased to confer upon us.
and also that we may then unite in most humbly offering our prayers and supplications to the great Lord and Ruler of Nations and beseech him to pardon our national and other transgressions—to enable us all, whether in public or private stations, to perform our several and relative duties properly and punctually—to render our national government a blessing to all the people, by constantly being a Government of wise, just, and constitutional laws, discreetly and faithfully executed and obeyed—to protect and guide all Sovereigns and Nations (especially such as have shewn kindness unto us) and to bless them with good government, peace, and concord—To promote the knowledge and practice of true religion and virtue, and the encrease of science among them and us—and generally to grant unto all Mankind such a degree of temporal prosperity as he alone knows to be best.
Given under my hand at the City of New-York the third day of October in the year of our Lord 1789.
Go: Washington
Filed under American History, General Interest, Politics
A few quick links
Ed Driscoll at PJ Media offers several excellent video clips of Obama and top dems lying about Obamacare. (here)
Gay parent laments on her real life roadblocks to living life with kids true to her politically liberal ideology. You can feel her angst as she admits that she allowed her son to become a Cub Scout. Oh the horrors, she confesses that pack has helped her shy son develop much needed social skills and even more – the pack is doing good things in the community. (story here)
A short article at New English Review, The Stupidest Generation, by Larry Eubank illuminating the many signs that point to our declining ability to speak and write at a grade school level. (here)
“Al Qaeda has metastasized” according to this SFGate article, “Al Qaeda cancer spreading worldwide”. Now a libertybelle flashback from May 2013 on this very subject, “America at the crossroads“.
Filed under Culture Wars, Foreign Policy, General Interest, Islam, Politics
How to fend for their young
This post will be one of those nostalgic trips down memory lane about my family again, so I’ll warn you up front and you can abandon it quickly if you’re looking for straight politics. G. Murphy Donovan’s childhood story, “The Cranberry Rumble”, which I mentioned a few days ago, sent me down memory lane thinking about holiday meals. I couldn’t think of one where anything remarkable happened like the Thanksgiving in his story. Our family holiday meals were relentlessly boring and I remember when I was young we would go to my maternal grandmother’s for Christmas, but we spent Thanksgiving at home with our immediate family. In my grandmother’s small kitchen, the table could not hold the families of aunts, uncles, cousins, etc, so my grandmother set the table for the children first. The adults got us corralled and seated, where we ate our fill and then went outside to play. Any family get-together ran the same course, where the adults made sure to fix the children’s plates first and get them seated and fed. Children came first in my family.
My mother, whose birthday fell on Veteran’s Day, passed away in 2001 and she served as the shining example of an independent spirit for American womanhood, long before feminism ever came along to enthrall the whining female masses demanding “female empowerment”. My Mom never considered herself a feminist and she found their selfish, endless carping repugnant, yet she could put almost any of them to shame with her ability to handle manual labor, domestic tasks, juggle a nursing career and six kids with never a complaint or expectation of help from anyone. She knew the best way to be an independent person is to be self-reliant. She worked harder than any person I have ever met. Mom loved to fix things and she repaired everything from our TV set when it went on the blink to chipped china, to all our many scrapes and more serious injuries. On top of all that she was a superb cook and baker, kept the house immaculate, insisted on rules and routine more efficiently than a drill sergeant, yet found time to be our most faithful cheerleader and moral support when we needed it most. The kitchen table, or wherever families gather for meals, serves as the civilizational center, around the globe and my Mom, like generations of mothers before, knew this instinctively.
My oldest sister always veered toward gourmet type cooking, leading to many bumping of heads in our small kitchen at holiday time, where my Mom insisted on traditional PA Dutch food and my oldest sister would argue and plead for us to expand our culinary horizons. Mom let her bake some different desserts occasionally and she excelled at making things like braided loaves of bread and fancy rolls, but the rest of us liked plain old store-bought brown and serve rolls best. My next older sister avoided the kitchen, except to eat and she rarely got roped into any part of cooking any meal. She had a knack for breaking any small appliance she touched, so it was best to exclude her from the kitchen work space. Odd thing that somehow she perfected making pie dough and became the family’s best pie baker in adulthood, despite being a less than great cook (one of her signature dishes was veal parmigiana – frozen breaded veal patties smothered with overcooked spaghetti, jarred sauce and Parmesan cheese from the green shaker, tossed in a casserole dish and baked). My biggest contribution to any meal was to be the reliable, food prep person – just tell me how small you want the vegetables, chopped, diced, minced and I will happily cut away. Oh, you want someone to stand there and stir that pot non-stop until it reaches a full boil, that’s a job for me. I follow instructions well and any tedious task in the kitchen suits me perfectly. My youngest sister could be relied upon to help with any task too and she served as the one to smooth over the personality clashes that inevitability arose with so many strong personalities working in such a confined space.
As I thought about holiday meals, none stuck out in my memory, but a very ordinary meal popped into my mind. My youngest sister possesses one of the calmest, most agreeable personalities imaginable. Unlike me, who loved to get on my soapbox about any issue I felt strongly about and also had a penchant for allowing my cousin, Randy, next door to goad me into doing things where I knew I would get in trouble. The usual taunt, “you’re too scared to do X, Y or Z!” led to my declarations that I wasn’t scared, whereupon I’d charge forward with whatever the dare was. One time he picked up some crumpled, old pack of chewing tobacco at our small local ball field that looked like it had been in that parking area for years. Randy told me that he knew I was too scared to try it and of course I took a wad and chewed it. I might note, he didn’t try it. My sister (the less than great cook one, who also became a state trooper), ever the reliable narc, couldn’t run fast enough to tell Mom what I had done. I had beat her into the house and raced in the bathroom to rinse out my mouth, but Mom came charging in there and there I stood with brown tobacco juice dribbling down my face. I lied and told Mom I hadn’t done it and learned that brazen lying wasn’t the way to go with her.
I got into trouble frequently by allowing Randy to use that same, “you’re too scared” tactic and my narc sister got into plenty of trouble too, but my youngest sister had the most pristine character and she never did anything wrong. We all adored her, because what’s not to adore about someone who is always nice, always kind, always good. So imagine our shock when the perfect child revolts at of all places the supper table, sitting right next to Pop. It was an ordinary supper and Pop always ate way too much bread with his meals and he liked to slather butter and either strawberry jam or grape jelly on his bread. We all talked a lot at the supper table, so when Pop scolded my youngest sister, you could have heard a pin drop in the kitchen that night. There sat my youngest sister, defiantly arguing with Pop that the reason she put a large glob of grape jelly on her potatoes was because she had asked for the butter more than once and no one listened to her. Pop told her that she had to sit there and eat those potatoes. Who knew that underneath that calm, lurked a pretty impressive temper. My youngest sister is retired from the Air Force and served in Afghanistan in the early years, shortly before her retirement. Several years ago, through the family grapevine, I heard that the local pastor was making political commentary about GWB and the war stuff and that Sunday, my nephew had insisted they sit way up front in church. My serene sister got up and walked right out of church in the midst of the sermon that morning. My kids were shocked when they heard this, but I knew that underneath that calm is a strong well of righteous anger.
My three sisters rank as a very talented group of women who have had successful careers, pursue many hobbies and can be expected to do the unexpected. For the past few years, they decided that Thanksgiving will be the traditional holiday meal and during that get together they vote on a foreign country, which will be the themed cuisine for Christmas dinner that year. Then they research that ethnic cuisine and decide on which dishes to make. They had Chinese Christmas dinner one year and I sure wish I lived closer and could have been there for that one. Had my Mom been around for this new Christmas tradition, I feel certain she would have liked the idea, although Pop would have reacted like he did when he came to Fort Bragg to visit one time and we took my parents to a Japanese restaurant. Pop only ate a few bites before deciding he didn’t like Japanese food and as we were leaving that restaurant Pop asked my husband, “Are there any steakhouses in this town?” When my parents visited us in Germany, my Pop decided after his first German meal that he didn’t like German food, which struck me as bizarre considering he was PA Dutch and ate German food his entire life. So, as we traveled around Germany, all meals had to be planned around finding American fast food places or eating on a US military installation. My Mom loved trying different types of food and exploring new places. She once told me she wouldn’t mind getting on a plane and going anywhere in the world, because wherever she ended up she’d find something interesting.
At holiday time it’s common to reach back into those nostalgic childhood memories of holidays gone by, but I feel fortunate for having enough good memories of my parents and childhood to warm me any day of the year. The other day my youngest sister emailed me to remark upon Mom’s birthday and she said it best, “Nearly everyday there is something that I wish I could ask her advice about or share with her. She was a very wise person. She was good at helping us pick ourselves back up, dusting us off and making us try again.” So many people today won’t even try the first time, let alone try again when they stumble or fail.
We had the first cooler days this past week here in this Southern state where I now live. Over the years when visiting, my Mom angrily talked about how many young mothers she saw around the Army who didn’t have the sense to properly dress their children for the weather. I had morphed into my Mom, as I had to bite my tongue more than once as I saw young Moms bundled up in winter coats and boots with babies in the shopping carts – with not even socks on the babies’ feet or jackets on them. Hooray for liberating women from the bounds of motherhood – I am sure your children (if they survive infancy) will be so proud of you…. I find it doubtful these kids will be remembering their Moms, like my siblings and I remember our Mom.
Now for the political commentary, my youngest daughter lives in another state and she decided she wanted to be a “Big Sister” in that program. Her “little” adores her, but earlier this year my daughter and son-in-law moved to another city. My daughter’s “little” called her a few days ago to tell her that her step-dad is in jail for beating her. The teacher saw the bruises and called the police. This girl’s prize mother has a few kids with this piece of garbage and is pregnant. Last year when my daughter brought her “little” to her home to bake cookies, the “little’s” mother came over too and she waxed on about how she’d like to bake cookies at her house, but she doesn’t have cookie sheets. My daughter gave her the very nice cookie sheets I bought the year before. After many adventures with the “little’s” family, like the cockroach infestation that had my daughter wondering if she should call child protective services, now there’s this one. My daughter called me distressed, because her “little” told her this isn’t the first time he’s beaten her. Last year at Christmas when my daughter gave her “little” a Christmas present, this girl unwrapped the present carefully. She told my daughter she wanted to keep the wrapping paper and rewrap that present, so she would have a present to open on Christmas morning, because her loser parents didn’t have money to get the things they had put on layaway at a store. Whenever you hear about a child like this “little”, rest assured there’s a litany of abuses, neglect and trail of tears that follows.
Bad family situations aren’t something new, but despite more information, more opportunities for women, more material wealth, our ability to do the basics, like feed our kids properly and shelter them from the cold, seem beyond the grasp of way too many American mothers. In the mix of all this female empowerment claptrap, there’s a glaring absence of something that most mothers used to know – how to fend for their young. If my daughter’s “little” were a rarity it would still be sad, but behind all those impersonal statistics on children in America, are way too many in situations like hers or worse. Those politically in tune feminist mouthpieces won’t be there to take in any of these children falling through the cracks, nor do they see them as they travel among the elite “educating” women on women’s rights. Laura Bush, a kind-hearted woman, attended an event at Georgetown, along with Hillary Clinton, America’s premiere champion of women and children, and John Kerry yesterday to talk about women’s rights in Afghanistan. It’s sure easier to focus on the plight of women and children in some far off country than to peek beneath the surface and see so many American children in need. Civilization begins with the family gathered together to share meals – if we fail at that simple task, we can’t possibly survive. You want to rescue America, try to teach young men and women to be responsible parents and for crying out loud, sit down together and share meals, not just during the holidays, but throughout the entire year.
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And in regards to women in Afghanistan, hello, President Obama is pretty much handing that country back to the Taliban and the drug warlords when we pull-out, so having Hillary and John Kerry lamenting the plight of Afghan women seems hypocritical in the extreme. So besides being clueless on how to bake cookies, Hillary’s also not even very good at understanding foreign policy either. Laura Bush means well, but the political situation we leave on the ground there will erase most, if not all, of the gains made by Afghan women. John Kerry, well who knows why he showed up at Georgetown for this event and depending on which way the political winds blow, he can reliably be for or against any political situation or cause. He’s a man for all political seasons. Now, that I got all that off of my chest, I can think about my Thanksgiving menu.
Filed under Culture Wars, Food for Thought, General Interest, Politics, Uncategorized
The Quest For American Leadership In The 21st Century: A Few Home Truths
I came across this piece I wrote a few years back, so it’s a bit dated (just like me), but the sentiments still apply today.
The Quest For American Leadership In the 21st Century:
A Few Home Truths
by libertybelle
Ronald Reagan once said, “All great change in America begins at the dinner table.”, a simple statement of trust in the great, good sense of average Americans to hash out the pressing politics of the day. One of the saddest commentaries in recent years on the state of America, came from pop culture icon, Oprah Winfrey, who devoted an entire show to teaching American parents the importance of finding time for family dinners. Despite the statistics on divorce, out of wedlock births and the steady mass media messaging, the importance of the American family emerged on Oprah, with a host of “experts” on hand, to teach us about family dinner time. Millions of Oprah followers, I am sure, began talking amongst their friends and just as they buy the books she recommends, most assuredly many started trying to fit family dinners into their weekly schedule. How do family dinners and the quest for American leadership fit together? In our fast-paced, multi-tasking society, few common threads strengthen the waft and weave of our national fabric, so perhaps the family dinner table emerges as the place to begin this quest.
A young, single mother, with two young daughters, asked me a question this past Christmas that left me stunned for a moment. She wanted to know how to start family traditions. Growing up in a large family, in rural America in the 1960s, our family life ran like clock work and I never consciously thought about family traditions; they were just there. Sheltered from the turmoil and social upheaval of that decade, our family and community life continued relatively unscathed. My father, a blue collar worker, taught us by example, putting a value-based education in simple terms, “if you give your word; you keep it”. My mother enforced discipline, family dinner at 5 p.m., with the table set properly, cleaning the house from top to bottom on Saturday morning, with her assigning tasks with the efficiency of a drill sergeant and marching us to Sunday school in crisply ironed clothes and spotless shoes. My mother, placing high value on proper attire, shined shoes for all six children, when we were young, teaching us along the way how to do that task ourselves.
This young mother works hard trying to provide for her children, with the father providing child support on a sporadic basis. Her mother, with a chronic drug problem, offered no secure foundation for her to learn how to build a strong family. Multiply her situation, to hundreds of thousands of American children growing up without learning basic values, bereft of the security of a stable family life and the social chaos in America comes as no surprise. So, perhaps the Oprah dinner time show provided a public service. In lieu of parents instilling basic values, a mass-media produced line of “experts”, flashing ivy-league credentials or pop icon celebrity status, fill the void. Why on earth would anyone turn to Suzanne Somers for medical advice or Dr. Phil for advice on family problems?
The election of President Obama, the Tea Party movement and soaring popularity of Glenn Beck indicate millions of Americans yearn for a better America, divergent as their messages may appear. President Obama ran on a message of transforming America, leveling the playing field, expanding opportunities for all, and beating down the status quo. Those on the right of the political spectrum, calm down, I am speaking about the message, not the reality. The Tea Party movement appears to be a genuine populist uprising, with a few common themes of smaller government and fiscal responsibility as their message. Due to a lack of a national platform or organizational structure, I suppose we will see every type from good ole sweet tea to herbal concoctions, of course, we will probably be spared a green tea group.
Where to start with Glenn Beck, let’s see, his chalkboard antics aside, his message centers on a demand for honest government, a return to the original intent of the founding fathers, as encapsulated in The Constitution. His call to read about our founding fathers and our original founding documents definitely deserves praise. However, I urge people to tread lightly at accepting the simplisitc bows he ties all his theories in, targeting, those nefarious Progressives with the blame for all that ails us.
Discontented with unresponsive national leaders, Americans increasingly are losing faith in the two-party system, providing an opportunity for grass roots populism to flourish. Before jumping on any political bandwagon, prudence requires serious study, reflection, and most of all stepping back and thinking for yourself. Learning to evaluate events and politics, free of media-fueled, partisan flame-throwing should be the starting point. Now, back to the family dinner table, a few family dinner time conversations will quickly cure you of a belief that one political shoe fits all. Promote civil discourse, at home, among friends and in public forums. Civil discourse requires listening to opposing opinions and ideas, not shouting down the other side. Be an American first, remembering we can always find room to squeeze in another point of view at our political table. Including dissenting voices into the national dialogue, rather than shouting them down, as demonstrated by those disgraceful Congressional town hall meetings last summer, offers the path to forging consensus and building national unity.
President Abraham Lincoln stated “Let reverence for the laws be breathed by every American mother to the lisping babe that prattles on her lap. Let it be taught in schools, in seminaries, and in colleges. Let it be written in primers, spelling books, and in almanacs. Let it be preached from the pulpit, proclaimed in legislative halls, and enforced in the courts of justice. And, in short, let it become the political religion of the nation.” Few would argue that our leaders should be men of good character. Defining what constitutes good character, a task that should be simple, will produce a confusing array of answers, if you do a quick survey of your friends. Going back to my father’s, “if you give your word; you keep it” belief, demanding our national leaders possess basic honesty, propels us further in this quest than dissecting political platforms, plank by plank, ever will.
The challenges facing America, from the war against radical Jihadists to our escalating economic crisis, demand leaders willing to build renewed faith in our governmental institutions; to find solutions and protect our nation or we face the very real possibility of massive civil unrest and collapse. Machiavelli, endlessly quoted for his “the ends justify the means” line, offered advice for republics too. He stated, “A republic may, likewise, be brought back to its original form, without recourse to ordinances for enforcing justice, by the mere virtues of a single citizen, by reason that these virtues are of such influence and authority that good men love to imitate them, and bad men are ashamed to depart from them.” We need to demand that type of leader in this century.
The quest for our 21st century American leaders starts with you. Step One: Think for yourself; move away from being swayed by political partisans hurling talking points at you. Take the time to study issues, candidates and find your own moral compass. President George Washington, my favorite founding father, wrote a list titled, Rules of Civility & Decent Behavior In Company and Conversation”, 110 rules covering everything from admonitions not to clean your teeth with the tablecloth to don’t run in the streets. He ended with #110: “Labour to keep alive in your breast that Little Spark of Celestial Fire Called Conscience.” That should be your guide.
Step Two: Be the leader of your own destiny. Don’t be a follower of populist movements. left or right, unless you have completed Step One. Before becoming a political lemming, allowing professional media figures to press your political hot buttons, calmly discuss issues with family and friends. In our 24 hour news cycle, internet-connected world, misinformation, disinformation and outright lies can circle the globe in minutes. Don’t let these control your political reasoning, refer back to Step One.
Step Three: Follow the rules. President Lincoln’s call for reverence for the laws provides the keystone to rebuilding a stronger America. When political aspirants lack personal integrity, obfuscate on public issues, or find excuses for not following the rules; move on and continue your quest for worthy leaders. To honor those who sacrificed all, to secure our blessings of liberty, at the very least we all have a duty to become informed citizens, who demand men and women of character to lead us in this century.
Filed under American Character, General Interest, Politics