Category Archives: The Media

Brain-sucking spiders

May the conspiracy gods rest tonight, Australian officials report they located a debris field.   Let’s hope CNN’s Don Lemon can safely take off his tinfoil hat and stop worrying about the possibility of a black hole swallowing up unsuspecting airliners…..  JK, came up with this simple no frills explanation.  For the sake our collective sanity, let us hope this Australian debris field is the missing Malaysian jetliner and may the families receive some long overdue closure.  Long ago, when news reporting had time constraints on air and word count constraints in print, Ms Anna Raccoon (blogger extraordinaire) discussed at length the new age journalists compared to old-school reporters in a recent post, “Forgive Us Our Press Passes”.  In her usual erudite style, Ms Raccoon writes:

“They ‘reported’ the news from wherever the editor had had the sense of humour to send them. ‘Timbuktu’? They hired a camel. ‘Baghdad’? Then they hired a bodyguard – and an interpreter too. They didn’t sit in an expensive hotel suite in Beijing offering ‘live updates’ on the situation nearly 3,000 miles away in Kuala Lumpur.”

Yes, Ms Raccoon, so true, nor did they sit in a TV studio and speculate about Black Holes or….

“Here’s another theory I’ll just throw out there: what about the plane entered a wormhole into another dimension? I don’t know if that’s how the science works, though.”

Yes, in place of hunting down facts we present crackpot theories as worth our time exploring….  After uttering ridiculous nonsense like this can anyone ever take him seriously as a news reporter?

When my kids were young and one of them said something ridiculous, I would put my hand on his/her head and ruffle the hair with my fingers as I laughingly exclaimed, “Oh no, it’s a brain-sucking spider that got you!” (sometimes if the utterance was totally idiotic, I even added, “Oh no, it’s starving!”).   Who knew brain-sucking spiders wiped out most of the journalistic community…..  Or I could speculate that the brain-sucking spiders died out from lack of a food source.  Who knows, conspiracy theories abound.

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Theodore Dalrymple’s Excellent Essay

 “One of the things that surprised me was the ease with which an entire press corps could accept the most obvious untruth, usually convenient to some interested party or other, without any external compulsion to do so. I can only suppose that one of modern education’s purposes is to prevent people from thinking for themselves.”

It must be something about plumbers.  We had Joe the Plumber reveal Obama’s true character with just a momentary conversation.  Serendipitously,  Theodore Dalrymple presents the most insightful essay on Ukraine through his conversation with his Ukrainian plumber in Paris, just before this crisis.  His must read essay ,“The Wisdom of a Ukrainian Plumber”, is located at Taki’s Magazine, which contains lots of great article.

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If

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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Filed under Culture Wars, Foreign Policy, General Interest, Messages of mhere, Military, Pet Peeves, Politics, The Constitution, The Media

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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Ukraine Unrest

Our media likes to run with stories offering one-sided, very poorly researched reporting on many foreign events and the Ukraine is another in a long line.  First, let’s realize the Cold War era is over and a new, shifting geopolitical map exists.  George Friedman describes this best:

When the Soviet Union collapsed, its western frontier moved east nearly a thousand miles, from the West German border to the Russian border with Belarus. From the Hindu Kush its border moved northward a thousand miles to the Russian border with Kazakhstan. Russia was pushed from the border of Turkey northward to the northern Caucasus, where it is still struggling to keep its foothold in the region. Russian power has now retreated farther east than it has been in centuries. During the Cold War it had moved farther west than ever before. In the coming decades, Russian power will settle somewhere between those two lines.
– Friedman, George (2010-01-18). The Next 100 Years: A Forecast for the 21st Century (p. 70). Allison & Busby. Kindle Edition.

To understand this in geopolitical terms, Moscow now sits with the west poised almost a thousand miles closer to Moscow.  That, combined with the dramatic loss of control over large swaths of the former USSR, makes it imperative for Russia to try and exert influence in its neighboring countries.  Of course, Putin wants to regain Russian standing in the world, so we see him in the Middle East,  working on Sino-Soviet cooperation, trying to turn Sochi into a Russian PR win, and even moving in Central America.  At least this is my take on matters.

Stratfor, George Friedman’s excellent global intelligence site, offered a very good analysis of the history and background to the latest uprising in the Ukraine: “Protestors in Lviv Raise the Stakes in Ukraine’s Crisis”, which will help make sense out of the fever-pitched reporting on TV.

Kforce Government Solutions, Inc. (KGS) offers a free analysis of open source information that provides excellent background to events around the world (thanks JK for that link a while back).  Their report is called Nightwatch and the report for 2/19 offers some excellent information to help make sense of the Ukrainian protests.

To hear President Obama’s mundane commentary on the Ukraine, check out Politico’s, “President Obama: Russia disputes not ‘some Cold War chessboard'” (*yawn*).  Don’t expect any clear geopolitical explanations from this story – same old, same old and who knows next week he may have a different foreign policy take on the Ukraine.  Afterall, his foreign policy guru is on record as saying,  “I actually did vote for the $87 billion, before I voted against it.”  Yep, they’ve got to remain flexible…

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Through a smudged looking glass

If you want a glimpse of the surreal, read what foreigners think about America  in Watching America, a website that presents unique foreign perspectives.  Prepare yourself to be perplexed by the views presented.  If you click on their heading “Foreign News Sources”, they do offer a nifty listing on many foreign news sources and whether the site is in English, so that’s one small positive thing  I can say about this site,  which claims:

“It is not our pur­pose to find favor­able or unfa­vor­able con­tent, but to reflect as accu­rately as pos­si­ble how oth­ers per­ceive the rich­est and most pow­er­ful coun­try in the world. We have no polit­i­cal agenda.”

You can laugh at that huge detour from the truth, I did 🙂

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Someone else says Saturday

Thomas Sowell offers a column he dubs ,“Random Thoughts”, where he offers up  short paragraphs on wide-ranging topics.  I suspect that unlike most people’s random thoughts, his really probe matters of great import and offer keen insights into current happenings.  Here are a few gold nuggets from his latest musings:

“Anyone who wants to read one book that will help explain the international crises of our time should read “The Gathering Storm” by Winston Churchill. It is not about the Middle East or even about today. It is about the fatuous and irresponsible foreign policies of the 1930s that led to the most catastrophic war in human history. But you can recognize the same fecklessness today.”

and

“It is fascinating to see academics full of indignation over the “exploitation” of low-wage workers by multinational corporations in Third World countries, when it is common on their own academic campuses to have young men get paid nothing at all for risking their health, and sometimes their lives, playing football that brings in millions of dollars to the college and often gets coaches paid higher salaries than the president of the college or university.”

and

“Once, when I was teaching at an institution that bent over backward for foreign students, I was asked in class one day: “What is your policy toward foreign students?” My reply was: “To me, all students are the same. I treat them all the same and hold them all to the same standards.” The next semester there was an organized boycott of my classes by foreign students. When people get used to preferential treatment, equal treatment seems like discrimination.”

Moving on,  I purchased a 20 page little pamphlet,  “How To Analyze Information: A Step-by-Step Guide To Life’s Most Vital Skill”, by Herbert E. Meyer on Amazon.com this morning.  His advice, although seeming like common sense, laid down the simple steps to take to find the hidden needles, in the fields upon fields of haystacks in our information-filled, high-tech world.  The punditry and political classes in America  should heed his advice  What a pleasant surprise this short read turned out to be and I highlighted something in just about every paragraph. For only $1.99, well, I certainly got my money’s worth this time, so here’s his recipe (psst, he uses several food analogies):

first

“Until you know “where you are” you cannot make good use of the available information. That’s because you cannot know what specific information you’ll need next, or what the information you’ll be looking at when you get it will mean. So take the time to figure out “where you are” – literally or metaphorically — before moving on to the next step.” (Meyer, Herbert E. (2010-10-10). How to Analyze Information: A Step-by-Step Guide to Life’s Most Vital Skill (Kindle Locations 67-70). Storm King Press. Kindle Edition)

then

“The key to seeing information clearly is to make certain there isn’t a prism between you and whatever you are looking at. You may not know whether the population of San Francisco is 500,000 or one million – it’s about 740,000 – but you ought to know it’s a big city. You shouldn’t think your best friend is a saint if he’s a crook, and you don’t need to be an expert in world economics  who can reel off India’s current economic growth rate – it’s about 9 percent – to know that the image of India as a hopelessly backward sub-continent is long since outdated. And if you’re dealing with political issues, never let yourself be blinded by ideology.” (Meyer, Herbert E. (2010-10-10). How to Analyze Information: A Step-by-Step Guide to Life’s Most Vital Skill (Kindle Locations 97-99). Storm King Press. Kindle Edition)

finally

“My seventh-grade history teacher in New York, Mrs. Naomi Jacobs, never let a day go by without hammering into our heads a sentence that is so insightful it ought to be painted onto the walls of every classroom and office in the world: “The question is more important than the answer.” She was right; it is. If you don’t ask the right question, you cannot possibly get the right answer.” (Meyer, Herbert E. (2010-10-10). How to Analyze Information: A Step-by-Step Guide to Life’s Most Vital Skill (Kindle Locations 107-110). Storm King Press. Kindle Edition)

Not to quit there, he states, “By studying the information you’ve collected until you have determined the facts and seen the patterns it contains, you have turned raw material into a finished product. You have turned information into knowledge.” (Meyer, Herbert E. (2010-10-10). How to Analyze Information: A Step-by-Step Guide to Life’s Most Vital Skill (Kindle Locations 228-230). Storm King Press. Kindle Edition.).  Mr. Meyer offers sage advice as to why our official intelligence full course meal often falls short:

“Judgment is the sum total of who we are – the combined product of our character, our personality, our instincts and our knowledge. Because judgment involves more than knowledge, it isn’t the same thing as education. You cannot learn judgment by taking a course, or by reading a book. This is why some of the most highly educated people in the world have terrible judgment, and why some people who dropped out of school at the age of sixteen have superb judgment.”
(
Meyer, Herbert E. (2010-10-10). How to Analyze Information: A Step-by-Step Guide to Life’s Most Vital Skill (Kindle Locations 232-236). Storm King Press. Kindle Edition.)

He ends by talking about a fascinating dinnertime conversation with Dr. Jonas Salk, the developer of the polio vaccine, where they discussed Darwin.  To find out the brilliant insights Dr. Salk offered after a few moments of thought, you’ll need to read the book, trust me, that insight alone is worth way more than $1.99 (once again, it’s available here).

A week late, but here’s a link to a Politico story, “Why Does America Send So Many Stupid, Unqualified Hacks Overseas?”, written by James Bruno, a career Foreign Service officer,  about the embarrassing testimony from some new ambassador appointees that President Obama selected – political cronyism, *sigh*.  Alas, Mr. Bruno, none of these latest less than stellar appointees will likely provide nearly as many gaffes as the current Secretary of State, the Vice President, or even this President.

These latest clowns join this three-ring circus late in the performance and much of the world has already learned to bypass America as much as possible.  Even our allies openly diss us:  “Merkel, Hollande to discuss European communication network avoiding US”.   It must be noted that President Hollande just visited America and President Obama hailed France as our oldest ally (official posting of their respective remarks from the White House).  So far, President Obama has presided over some the of the most damaging national security leaks, failures, and a complete muddling of foreign policy.  Let’s see if President Obama accepts Hollande’s invitation to attend the 70 year  D-Day anniversary commemoration, June 6, 2014, as befitting the President of the United States of America.  His track record for showing  due respect for WWII allies is dismal, so I wonder if he will make the effort to attend.

This post started with Winston Churchill and it will end there too, remember President Obama’s return of the Churchill bust and the ensuing Obama administration protestations that the bust hadn’t been returned to the British ambassador, whilst the British stated the bust was now  residing in their ambassador’s residence?   Maybe, President Obama will even take the time to read up on the Churchill’s WWII contributions  (The Churchill Centre site) and when it comes to speeches, sorry,  Mr. President, Winston Churchill  far, far surpasses you (another great Churchill site, The Churchill Society here):

But if we fail, then the whole world, including the United States, including all that we have known and cared for, will sink into the abyss of a new Dark Age made more sinister, and perhaps more protracted, by the lights of pervert science. let us therefore brace ourselves to our duties and so bear ourselves that, if the British Empire and its Commonwealth last for a thousand years, men will say, 

‘This was their Finest Hour’

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The Russians, the lone wolf brothers and the Wolves of Islam pack

The Gates of Vienna blog diligently chronicles the ongoing acts of terrorism perpetrated by adherents of the religion of Peace.  The post today, “The Big Lie”, highlights how the Obama administration dug a little deeper with its head-in-the-sand defensive posture, outdoing the Bush administration’s delusional, cheery insistence that Islam mean peace.  For the Obama administration, Al Qaeda is on the run and every act of Islamic-inspired terrorism immediately gets relegated to the lone wolf folder, where later facts emerging, which concretely link the lone wolf back to the his jihadi  wolf pack, get hushed up.  Al Qaeda is on the run, they’re running circles around the  experts  inept dupes in this White House.

Flashback to the Boston bombing terrorists, those handsome Chechen brothers, Dzhokhar and Tamerlan Tsarnaev, who according to Daniel Benjamin’s  rubber stamp on the final analysis states:

“More interesting is the Tsarnaevs’ apparent lack of connection with any broader terrorist network. Tamerlan’s six-month sojourn in Dagestan, the center of Islamist extremism in the Russian Caucasus, seems not to have led to any durable ties but rather, as journalistic accounts suggest, a station on his road to violence. Like Nidal Hasan, the Fort Hood shooter who killed 13 and wounded more than 30 in 2009 — and whose attack was the other major post-9/11 domestic incident — the brothers’ chief connection with the wider jihadi world seems to have been their consumption of online materials, especially those of Yemeni cleric Anwar al-Awlaki.”

Yes, just two more lone wolves, whom the Russians took the extraordinary step of breaking protocol to warn the FBI multiple times of the older brothers’ connection to Dagestani terrorists (good  piece by Hot Air on this connection here).  The Daniel Benjamin piece, sure just a hapless journalist’s viewpoint right?  Well, not quite, because Mr. Benjamin was appointed by Secretary of State Clinton to serve as the Coordinator for Counterterrorism at the State Department from 2009-1012.

Wolves are pack animals, and ironically the wolf is also the proud national symbol of the radical Islamists  in Chechnya (page 2-3 in The Wolves of Islam: Russia and the Faces of Chechen Terror by Paul Murphy).  Murphy steps back from the knee-jerk American viewpoint that the Russians are the cause of the entire problem in Chechnya and he looks at the self-proclaimed  Wolves of Islam –  brutal, ruthless and barbaric.

Note: Thanks to JK for mentioning Shamil Basayev, and the historical Tamerlane in regards to the Tsarnaev brothers last month, which  jogged  my memory about Murphy’s book.  I found the book for $1 at a Big Lots book sale a couple of years ago.  Off topic, but here’s my tangent anyways – it’s amazing how books on history, war, terrorism, current affairs, etc.  get relegated to the discount piles in America and Fifty Shades of Grey topped bestseller charts.  The online book site, Thriftbooks, offers a wide selection of older non-fiction, where booksellers list their books, to include condition,whether the book has a dust jacket, and if it’s an ex-library book.

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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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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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