Tuesday, November 12, 2024
Hawai'i Free Press

Current Articles | Archives

Sunday, April 14, 2013
MSNBC host: Children belong to ‘whole communities’, not their parents
By Video @ 6:20 PM :: 5862 Views :: Education K-12, Family

by Kirsten Andersen LifeSiteNews April 9, 2013

Conservatives are outraged after MSNBC host Melissa Harris-Perry ran a public service announcement telling viewers of the left-leaning network that children “belong to whole communities,” not their parents.  The thirty-second spot was apparently intended to promote increased spending on education, but many conservative observers objected to its collectivist, anti-family flavor.

“We have to break through our kind of private idea that kids belong to their parents, or kids belong to their families, and recognize that kids belong to whole communities,” Harris-Perry said in the ad. “Once we recognize it’s everybody’s responsibility and not just the households, then we start making better investments.”

The ad was recorded ahead of the predicted release of President Barack Obama’s proposed budget, which is expected to contain new tax hikes to fund universal preschool for American four-year-olds.

It also comes as homeschoolers are anxiously watching the case of a homeschooling family from Germany that was granted refuge in the U.S. in 2010 because of persecution by the German government. Germany requires all children to attend state-approved schools, and has in some cases removed children from their homes or even put their parents in jail for refusing to comply.

The Obama administration is now seeking to deport the family, claiming that that “United States law has recognized the broad power of the state to compel school attendance and regulate curriculum and teacher certification,” and the “authority to prohibit or regulate homeschooling.”

“The notion that children belong to a state government rather than their own flesh and blood is the most disturbing statement made in recent political times,” media expert Angie Olszewski told Fox News.

“Melissa Harris-Perry is dead wrong. It’s unfathomable that any true American could make such a pretentious and naively ill statement.  The government can’t properly run their own budgets schools and public systems. Why would anybody think they could rear children?”

Janice Crouse of Concerned Women for America told CNSNews, “The encroachment on parental rights is unrelenting -- from the Obama Administration to college classrooms to news desks across the country.  Everyone, it seems, is hopping on the bandwagon to remove children from parental influence and let teachers, television programs, video games and cultural influences shape the minds and hearts of next generations of Americans.”

Added Crouse, “MSNBC has assumed leadership in just laying the agenda out there and exposing the plan: the left wants to expand government to the point of taking over the raising of the nation's children.”

Harris-Perry posted a response to the controversy Tuesday, calling the firestorm of criticism over the ad “hateful.”  Still, she did not back down from her statements.

“What I thought was an uncontroversial comment on my desire for Americans to see children as everyone’s responsibility has created a bit of a tempest in the right’s teapot,” Harris-Perry wrote.  “Allow me to double down.  One thing is for sure: I have no intention of apologizing for saying that our children, all of our children, are part of more than our households, they are part of our communities and deserve to have the care, attention, resources, respect and opportunities of those communities.”

Harris-Perry then launched into a litany of sources she says helped her form her collectivist views about responsibility for children, including the pro-life movement.

“I’ll even admit that despite being an unwavering advocate for women’s reproductive rights, I have learned this lesson from some of my most sincere, ethically motivated, pro-life colleagues,” she wrote. “Those people who truly believe that the potential life inherent in a fetus is equivalent to the actualized life of an infant have argued that the community has a distinct interest in children no matter what the mother’s and father’s interests or needs.  So while we come down on different sides of the choice issue, we agree that kids are not the property of their parents.”

In an article for RealClearPolitics, conservative writer Rich Lowry offered his take on the left’s objection to family-centered child-rearing and education.   “As the ultimate private institution,” he wrote, “the family is a stubborn obstacle to the great collective effort. Insofar as people invest in their own families, they’re holding out on the state and unacceptably privileging their own kids over the children of others.”

Added Lowry, “The truth is that parents are one of society’s most incorrigible sources of inequality. If you have two of them who stay married and are invested in your upbringing, you’ve hit life’s lottery. You’ll reap untold benefits denied to children who aren’t so lucky.”

“That the family is so essential to the well-being of children has to be a constant source of frustration to the egalitarian statist, a reminder of the limits of his power,” Lowry continued.  “If the left wants to equalize the investments in children that matter most, it should promote intact families and engaged parents, even if it means embracing shockingly old-fashioned private child-rearing.”

  *   *   *   *   *

MSNBC host digs in heels over controversial PSA claiming children belong to ‘whole communities’

by Kirsten Andersen, LifeSiteNews

NEW YORK CITY, April 16, 2013  – MSNBC host Melissa Harris-Perry is digging in her heels in the face of public outrage over her recent PSA telling viewers that children belong to “whole communities,” not just their parents.

“We’ve always had kind of a private notion of children. Your kid is yours, and your responsibility,” she said in the 30-second spot. “We haven’t had a very collective notion of ‘These are our children.’ So part of it is we have to break through our kind of private idea that ‘kids belong to their parents’ or ‘kids belong to their families,’ and recognize that kids belong to whole communities.”

When pro-family and conservative commentators objected to the anti-family, collectivist tone of the ad, Harris-Perry released a statement calling their criticism “hateful” and said she had “no intention of apologizing” for her remarks.

In a follow-up segment on her show Saturday, she dug in even harder.

“I can see that some people are genuinely upset about what I actually said,” she said, but added, “I stand by that statement.”

Said Harris-Perry, “I believe our children are not our private property, they are not just extensions of ourselves. They are independent, individual beings.”

Harris-Perry claimed the ad was meant to highlight the role of society and government in child rearing.

“This isn’t about me wanting to take your kids, and this isn’t even about whether children are property,” she said. “This is about whether we as a society, expressing our collective will through our public institutions, including our government, have a right to impinge on individual freedoms in order to advance a common good,” she said.  “And that is exactly the fight that we have been having for a couple hundred years.”

Conservative commentators slammed her remarks, comparing her views to those of Karl Marx, the Nazi party, the Soviet Union, and even Chairman Mao Zedong.

“This is Marx, Engels, ‘The Communist Manifesto,’” said radio host Rush Limbaugh. “The nuclear family has always been under attack by communists, by leftists. The nuclear family has always, just like religion, must be destroyed and in its place, the community, collective.”  Added Limbaugh, “Melissa Harris-Perry, what she is saying here is as old as communist genocide.”

Limbaugh wasn’t alone in comparing Harris-Perry’s views to communism.  “The notion of collective responsibility for children,” wrote Newsbusters’ Ken Shepherd, “was a philosophy that undergirded the Cultural Revolution in Communist China under Chairman Mao.”

Political strategist Robert Lee, writing for PolicyMic, said that Harris-Perry’s collectivist views on education bear striking similarities to philosophies adopted by the Nazi party and the Soviet Union during the 20th century.

“Melissa Harris-Perry is demonstrating some of the most evil views about family and society,” Lee wrote Monday, “and there is no quicker route to destroy and dehumanize individuals than through a collectivized education system.”

“This belief system that children start to belong to the community at large is what served as the foundation for many of the most horrific acts the world has known,” Lee added.  “The idea that children can be disassociated from their parents is a dangerous precedent to collectivism, which will result in nothing less than a crumbling society.”

Links

TEXT "follow HawaiiFreePress" to 40404

Register to Vote

2aHawaii

Aloha Pregnancy Care Center

AntiPlanner

Antonio Gramsci Reading List

A Place for Women in Waipio

Ballotpedia Hawaii

Broken Trust

Build More Hawaiian Homes Working Group

Christian Homeschoolers of Hawaii

Cliff Slater's Second Opinion

DVids Hawaii

FIRE

Fix Oahu!

Frontline: The Fixers

Genetic Literacy Project

Grassroot Institute

Habele.org

Hawaii Aquarium Fish Report

Hawaii Aviation Preservation Society

Hawaii Catholic TV

Hawaii Christian Coalition

Hawaii Cigar Association

Hawaii ConCon Info

Hawaii Debt Clock

Hawaii Defense Foundation

Hawaii Family Forum

Hawaii Farmers and Ranchers United

Hawaii Farmer's Daughter

Hawaii Federation of Republican Women

Hawaii History Blog

Hawaii Jihadi Trial

Hawaii Legal News

Hawaii Legal Short-Term Rental Alliance

Hawaii Matters

Hawaii Military History

Hawaii's Partnership for Appropriate & Compassionate Care

Hawaii Public Charter School Network

Hawaii Rifle Association

Hawaii Shippers Council

Hawaii Together

HiFiCo

Hiram Fong Papers

Homeschool Legal Defense Hawaii

Honolulu Navy League

Honolulu Traffic

House Minority Blog

Imua TMT

Inouye-Kwock, NYT 1992

Inside the Nature Conservancy

Inverse Condemnation

July 4 in Hawaii

Land and Power in Hawaii

Lessons in Firearm Education

Lingle Years

Managed Care Matters -- Hawaii

MentalIllnessPolicy.org

Missile Defense Advocacy

MIS Veterans Hawaii

NAMI Hawaii

Natatorium.org

National Parents Org Hawaii

NFIB Hawaii News

NRA-ILA Hawaii

Obookiah

OHA Lies

Opt Out Today

Patients Rights Council Hawaii

Practical Policy Institute of Hawaii

Pritchett Cartoons

Pro-GMO Hawaii

RailRipoff.com

Rental by Owner Awareness Assn

Research Institute for Hawaii USA

Rick Hamada Show

RJ Rummel

School Choice in Hawaii

SenatorFong.com

Talking Tax

Tax Foundation of Hawaii

The Real Hanabusa

Time Out Honolulu

Trustee Akina KWO Columns

Waagey.org

West Maui Taxpayers Association

What Natalie Thinks

Whole Life Hawaii