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Culture Clips—June
1 , 2004
Compiled by Sylvia Finlayson
Associate Editor, Meridian Magazine
Ignoring
the Trends to Our Peril
The breakdown
in marriage over the last 50 years carries a cost: America
has evolved from being a culture of belonging to being a culture
of rejection, and its children are paying the price.
National survey
data repeatedly show that the most positive outcomes are in those
families where the parents have always belonged to each other and
to their children: the intact married family. These families are
less likely to live in poverty, depend on welfare and grapple with
addictions to drugs and alcohol, among other problems.
Mind you, no
responsible researcher would stipulate that all children who come
from married families have no problems or that those from single-parent
homes are guaranteed to fail; we're talking about trends here. After
all, rejection and indifference do the damage, and that can happen
in the intact family, too.
Still, if, in
a well-intentioned effort to spare the feelings of those around
us, we ignore these trends, we do so at our peril. The data show
that when fathers and mothers belong to each other in marriage,
their children thrive -- and the more they belong to each other,
the better off their children are. But when parents are indifferent
or walk away from each or reject each other, their children don't
thrive as much -- and many wilt a lot.
Patrick F. Fagan
The Miami Herald
5/29/04
Read the entire article here:
A Disconcerting
Reality
"We may
have come a long way since women were associated too narrowly with
nurture; but we seem to have reached the opposite pole. Women now
take the lead, by far, in dissolving families for reasons that usually
are less than clear-cut. ...
"Media
sentimentality about 'love,' to which women may be more sensitive,
may indeed have created expectations that few real-life marriages
can meet. ...
"[T]he
part of the society in which the divorce culture is strongest is
also the part that most tends to deny that there's a need to fight
and to blame the country itself for the war instead of the cold-blooded
killers who are attacking it. ... Is the divorce culture compatible
with patriotism? If people, in childhood, experience having a decent
father move to a different apartment, are they as likely to identify
with the larger society when they grow up?"
P. David Hornik
American Spectator
5/24/04
Read
the entire article here:
Again, Why
Are Women in Combat?
The American
women of Abu Ghraib have put to eternal
rest any notion that girls are made of sugar 'n' spice and prompted
a flurry of possible answers to the question: How could women have
done such things?
In searching
for answers myself, I've managed mostly to come up with a question
I've posed before: What the heck were women doing there in the first
place? The last time I asked that question I was referring to Jessica
Lynch. I'll keep asking it, even though I know the answer.
It is political
correctness, scourge of our times. That intellectual burlesque that places greater value on protecting
political sensibilities than on protecting our nation through attention
to political realities.
No single person
can be blamed, most likely, as the lie that makes men and women
equal in all things is a culture-wide deceit. Ehrenreich says she always supported women in the military
because she "knew women could fight, and because the military
is one of the few options around for low-income young people."
Undoubtedly,
some women can fight. And it's true that military service is often
a dead ender's exit. But neither assertion satisfies the only question
necessary to national defense: Does the presence of women advance
or delay the goal of security?
In most combat
situations requiring physical strength and endurance, most women
clearly fall under the "delay" column.
It's easy to
blame the president or the secretary of defense for what happened
at Abu Ghraib, but we're all to blame
for insisting that nothing matters as much as advancing the myth
of gender equality. It's time to grow up and put our PC notions
to rest before our enemies do it for us.
Kathleen Parker
Townhall
5/29/04
Read
the entire article here:
Brainwashed
to Hate America
As with most
British people, my first impressions of America
were formed by television. For my family in the 1960s, this meant
the BBC alone. We had one of those "snobbish" televisions,
not unusual at that time, that could not
get the only other channel, ITV.
. . . what
I - and presumably millions of others - were hearing from …. the
BBC was a particular narrative about America.
This picture
of the United States was
not all wrong, but it was notable for what it missed out. I learnt
very little about the vigour of the freedom
provided for under the American Constitution, the country's encouragement
of large-scale immigration, its rising living standards. I did not
know how well America had
reconstructed Germany,
Japan and the economies
of western Europe after the war.
The BBC did
not preach to me about the Soviet threat with the same ardour
that it preached about racial prejudice. I therefore thought that
America was very violent
and very backward, and I could never quite understand why such a
country was by far the most powerful in the world. If I asked people
why, they would say, "Oh well, it's because it's so rich,"
as if wealth were something that simply descended upon you without
the contribution of human effort. As a result, I understood very
little about America.
Today, we are
presented with a similar narrative - so powerful that I find that
90 per cent of people here believe it, even those who think of themselves
as conservative. The narrative is that America
is bullying and naive about the outside world. It is very keen on
killing people. George W Bush is taken to embody these characteristics,
since he wears cowboy boots and is inarticulate and prays a lot.
(Fine for Muslims to pray, not for Christians.)
Charles Moore
Daily Telegraph
5/29/04
Read
the entire article here:
Borderline
Compassion
"One of
President Bush's most recent 'compassionate' initiatives has indirectly
led to more horrific deaths along the Arizona-Mexico border. Bush's
proposal for a quasi-amnesty for illegal aliens has been interpreted
by poor Mexicans as a welcome mat, increasing the rate of attempted
border crossings and the tragic deaths that go with them. Sixty-one
people have died along the Arizona border since last October, a
threefold increase from the rate of the previous year. ...
"If we
really want to encourage more Mexicans to come here, we should have
the decency to help ensure their safe passage. If we don't ... then
all talk of any sort of amnesty should be dropped, and our seriousness
about enforcing immigration laws should be broadcast so clearly
that it is understood even in the far reaches of Mexico.
...
"Poor Mexicans
don't follow every intricacy of America's
political debate, but they get the message when the president is
proposing to reward illegal entry into the United
States. ... Some illegals
are shocked that they are arrested coming across the border: 'Hey,
where's my amnesty?' "
Rich Lowry
National Review
5/25/04
Read
the entire article here:
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