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Tuesday, June 10, 2008
Dennis Prager :: Townhall.com Columnist
When I Was a Boy, America Was a Better Place
by Dennis Prager
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The day the O.J. Simpson verdict was announced, I said to my then-teenage son, "David, please forgive me. I am handing over to you a worse America than my father handed over to me."

Unfortunately, I still feel this way.

With the important exception of racial discrimination -- which was already dying a natural death when I was young -- it is difficult to come up with an important area in which America is significantly better than when I was a boy. But I can think of many in which its quality of life has deteriorated.

When I was a boy, America was a freer society than it is today. If Americans had been told the extent and number of laws that would govern their speech and behavior within one generation, they would have been certain that they were being told about some dictatorship, not the Land of the Free. Today, people at work, to cite but one example, are far less free to speak naturally. Every word, gesture and look, even one's illustrated calendar, is now monitored lest a fellow employee feel offended and bring charges of sexual harassment or creating a "hostile work environment" or being racially, religiously or ethnically insensitive, or insensitive to another's sexual orientation.

Meanwhile, all employers in California are now prohibited by law from firing a man who has decided to cross-dress at work. And needless to say, no fellow worker can say to that man, "Hey, Jack, why not wear the dress at home and men's clothes to work?" An employer interviewing a prospective employee is not free to ask the most natural human questions: Are you married? Do you have a child? How old are you? Soon "How are you?" will be banned lest one discriminate on the basis of health.

When I was boy, what people did at home was not their employer's business. Today, companies and city governments refuse to hire, and may fire, workers no matter how competent or healthy, who smoke in their homes. Sarasota, Fla., the latest city to invade people's private lives, would not hire Winston Churchill, Franklin Roosevelt or John F. Kennedy if they applied for a job.

When I was a 7-year-old boy, I flew alone from New York to my aunt and uncle in Miami and did the same thing coming back to New York. I boarded the plane on my own and got off the plane on my own. No papers for my parents to fill out. No extra fee to pay the airline. I was responsible for myself. Had I run away or been kidnapped, no one would have sued the airline. Today, fear of lawsuits is a dominant fact of American life.

When I was a boy, I ran after girls during recess, played dodgeball, climbed monkey bars and sat on seesaws. Today, more and more schools have no recess; have canceled dodgeball lest someone feel bad about being removed from the game; and call the police in to interrogate, even sometimes arrest, elementary school boys who playfully touch a girl. And monkey bars and seesaws are largely gone, for fear of lawsuits should a child be injured.

When I was boy, I was surrounded by adult men. Today, most American boys (and girls, of course) come into contact with no adult man all day every school day. Their teachers and school principals are all likely to be women. And if, as is often the case, there is no father at home (not solely because of divorce but because "family" courts have allowed many divorced mothers to remove fathers from their children's lives), boys almost never come into contact with the most important group of people in a boy's life -- adult men. The contemporary absence of men in boys' lives is not only unprecedented in American history; it is probably unprecedented in recorded history.

When I was a boy, we had in our lives adults who took pride in being adults. To distinguish them from our peers, we called these adults "Mr.," "Mrs." and "Miss," or by their titles, "Doctor," "Pastor," "Rabbi," "Father." It was good for us, and we liked it. Having adults proud of their adulthood, and not acting like they were still kids, gave us security (as well as something to look forward to in growing up). Today, kids are surrounded by peers twice, three, four times their age.

When I was a boy, the purpose of American history textbooks was to teach American history. Today, the purpose of most American history texts is to make minorities and females feel good about themselves. As a result, American kids today are deprived of the opportunity to feel good about being American (not to mention deprived of historical truth). They are encouraged to feel pride about all identities -- African-American, Hispanic, Asian, female, gay -- other than American.

When I was a teenage boy, getting to kiss a girl, let alone to touch her thigh or her breast (even over her clothes) was the thrill of a lifetime. Most of us could only dream of a day later on in life when oral sex would take place (a term most of us had never heard of). But of course, we were not raised by educators or parents who believed that "teenagers will have sex no matter what." Most of us rarely if ever saw a naked female in photos (the "dirty pictures" we got a chance to look at never showed "everything"), let alone in movies or in real life. We were, in short, allowed to be relatively innocent. And even without sex education and condom placement classes, few of us ever got a girl pregnant.

When I was a boy, "I Love Lucy" showed two separate beds in Lucy and Ricky's bedroom -- and they were a married couple. Today, MTV and most TV saturate viewers' lives with sexual imagery and sexual talk, virtually all of which is loveless and, of course, non-marital.

When I was boy, people dressed up to go to baseball games, visit the doctor and travel on airplanes. Today, people don't dress up even for church.

When I was a boy, Time and Newsweek were well written and relied little on pictures and illustrations. Today, those magazines often look like adult comic books by comparison. They are filled with large illustrations and photos, and they dumb down the news with features like "Winners and Losers" and "Who's Up and Who's Down." And when I was a boy, it would have been inconceivable for Time to substitute anything, let alone a tree, for the flag planted by the marines on Iwo Jima.

One might argue that these are the same laments that every previous older generation has expressed -- "Ah, when I was young" But in America, that has not been the case. In America, the older generations tended to say the opposite -- "When I was a kid, things were worse."

Can we return to the America of my youth? No. Can we return to the best values of that time? Yes. But not if both houses of Congress, the presidency and the Supreme Court move the country even further leftward. If that happens, many of the above noted changes will simply be accelerated: More laws restricting "offensive" speech will be enacted; litigation will increase and trial lawyers will gain more power; the American military will be less valued; trees will gradually replace the flag as our most venerated symbol; schools will teach even less as they concentrate even more on diversity, sexuality and the environment; teenage sex will be increasingly accepted; American identity will continue to be replaced by ethnic, racial, gender or "world citizen" identity; and the power of the state will expand further as the power of the individual inevitably contracts. It's hard to believe most Americans really want that.

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About The Author
Dennis Prager is a radio show host, contributing columnist for Townhall.com, and author of 4 books including Happiness Is a Serious Problem: A Human Nature Repair Manual.
 
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This article is just how I feel.
Firstly I am only 21, so I do not have first hand experience at the youth you endured, but I have little doubt that it was alot better than todays degenerating schooling system and youth culture.

This and your "liberalism and victimhood" articles are both great, keep it up.


In agreement
My heart aches, along with yours, Dennis, on the great losses of American greatness and life.

Thank You
I have stopped posting because things always deteriorate rapidly and the attention-seekers soon take over, but I do have to thank Mr. Prager for this sad but good article.

One of the few things that we excel at in this day and age is being irreverent, and that is a mighty sad commentary on our times.

I'm Sorry
Lon from PA is wrong. First of all, there is a right to be bigoted, and to express that bigotry. Should you? No. By not expressing it, you are showing good manners. We are so afraid of offending someone, we have to watch every word. I don't like homosexuality; it's immoral, and besides the pieces don't even fit. Yet, if I say it, I can be sued, fired, or even worse, sent to a re-education meeting, not unlike those the South VietNamese went through after the victory of the North. I think it's good manners to compliment a lady, yet I am scared to death to do now. It has always been good manners not to harass a lady; not a civil or criminal offense. Grow up, Lon. Properly reared individuals never did those things you are so proud of, when I was young. The '60's bums brought about the current climate of fear.

Thank You
I have essentially stopped posting because things always deteriorate rapidly on the message boards when the attention-seekers and those who are rude in word and thought soon take over, but I do have to thank Mr. Prager for this sad but excellent article.

One of the few things that we excel at in this day and age is being irreverent, and that is a mighty sad commentary on our times. We mock all that is honorable and revel in that which is disgusting, and we now call this freedom. Instead, it is slavery to perverted indulgence.

A special thanks to all those who continue to serve admirably in uniform and who understand integrity and character. I salute you all.

How Pathetic you are, Dennis
America is a great nation that continues to grow, learn, make mistakes, corrects itself, moves on.

There is NO SYSTEM in the world that doesn't experience growing pains, lessons learned and challenges.

You can choose to meet the challenges head-on or act like a victim to each of those challenges.

How you call yourself an American is beyond any reasonable person.

Sorry
Double post. The first didn't show for several minutes. Now finished.

Lon
As an American closing in on 50, I'm squarely with Prager on this one. I've said to many a person around me for years now that I'm glad I don't have to be a kid growing up in America today - and almost no one I've said this to has offered a dissenting viewpoint. I realize the tendency of every generation to think the generation coming after them is going to hell in a handbasket, but I honestly can't think of any advantages kids today have over my generation when we were that age.

For one thing, the widespread obesity I see in K-12 age children was almost unknown when I was that age; the pudgiest members of my generation in childhood would be almost svelte by today's standards. Instead of playing on monkey bars and doing other things to actually stay active, kids are playing video games and living pretty sessile lives - and it is obvious to see them. For another, almost none of my generation of kids, by the time I was through with high school, had to live in a one-parent home not the result of the death of one of the parents; today, more will than not, and the trend is worsening. And do you think young blacks are better off today than a generation ago, with 70% of them now being born out of wedlock? And childhood innocence? Kids are being sexualized before they even hit kindergarten - and we see the havoc THAT's wreaking.

I find it interesting what you cited as "advances". Women may have more choices now in the workplace, but they have paid a terrible price for that "advance"; many young women today can expect to live out their lives without ever finding a life-long love. And the kind of "advances" that homosexuals are making today are not what I consider positive for a society.

Andrew, I truly feel sorry for you, having to mature in the kind of society my generation has bequeathed to you. Although the fact that you admire Prager tells me there's real hope for you to live a fulfilling life.

Two separate beds for TV couples?
I guess America was better back then. Who can argue with Dennis Prager when he compiles such an overwhelming abundance of evidence?

I
too remember what it was like growing up in the
"good old days," the memories are bittersweet because I remember and then I compare the lives my grandkids will have when they are my age.
I see the restrictions they have, now for their own safety and I remember the freedom I had to plan anywhere I wanted with my friends in my N.E. milltown. We had the best of both worlds town and country, and our neighbors all watched out for everyone elses kids, and there were never any locked doors, unthinkable during the day much less the nights. When we were out of school, we weren't seen til lunch then again at supper, evenings in the summer were catching fireflies. We Americans have become the proverbial frog in the pan of water, now we are simmering, almost aboil. I think we trusted
too much that our AMerica could never be destroyed from within, it was just not American. It began with the destruction of our educational institutions, if generations are
indoctrinated into believing our country is the worst on earth, then why are we surprised when
kids swoon for Obama.

Sad, But True
An excellent description of how liberalism has changed American life.
Social programs and affirmative action have increased dependency and the lack of personal responsibility. The educational system is broken. Disregard for laws caused by blaming society rather the criminal have increased the crime rate.
When I think of the decline in society, education, morals, and freedom I cannot understand how any free thinking person could support liberal policies.

Dennis You Are Right on.
I am in my late 50s and I must agree whole heartedly with this article. Much of what is called discriminataion today is a misnomer created by the left to further push their agenda. To speak out aginst say, homosexuality, because of faith held beliefs, is not discrimination. Sexual preference never defined a person throughout history.
Hate crimes legislation is setting a dangerous precident. Bridget Bardot has been indicted and faces jail time under France's hate crimes laws because she made a public statement regarding her opinion that Islam is ruining France.
A Man in Finland was recently jailed for a similar "Hate crime". Is this where we are headed? Scary! We are unquestionably losing our freedoms.

Freer elsewhere?
I grew up under a military dictatorship in Latin America, and it is sad to affirm that, in many respects, I was freer there as a child than my children are here in the U.S. What is happening to a nation that has always been regarded as the greatest beacon of freedom? Part of the explanation perhaps lies in a disregard and ignorance of history and the world, as well as of the frailty of a good society. Equally important in this regard is a naïveté about the human condition.

Ad hominem attack
Lon in PA simply doesn't get it or is too young to understand the
dumbing down changes in our society that Dennis writes about.
Undoubtedly he is a member of the victimhood generation who believes that passing laws which intrude into our private lives and promote endless regulations is the only way to protect us from things we don't personally like and ensure that we never suffer hurt feelings.

Your ad hominem attack claiming Dennis is just upset that "people like him don't have the freedom to discriminate..." only shows your ignorance of him as a person. I have known Dennis for many years and he is one man who walks his talk. But I'm sure that given your obvious animus towards Dennis it would make no difference in your attitude towards him or the values he espouses. It's one thing to respectfully disagree with someone and another to make personal attacks in the absence of anything intelligent to say.


scooternyc
Don't assume that a society automatically learns from its mistakes, corrects them, and grows beyond them. If this is so, why is the Roman Empire no longer with us? Or the ancient Greek empire? America is no more immune to the laws of the decline of great nations and empires than any that have preceded us. Societies decline when the foundations on which they were built and became great are destroyed - and that is exactly what is happening in America today. Once a society's underpinnings are wrecked, its people become uncertain and paralyzed and doubting - and that society is then usually conquered by another society whose people ARE certain and confident in who and what THEY are.

How Can it Fall so Quickly
It's amazing how our society has deteriorated. Exponentially. In science, the sense are exponential. When we here, the decibel scale is logrithmic. A chance of 3dB is really a doubling in the sound level. Our society is falling apart at just this rate. It is sad and at the same time inevitable. Once we disregarded the values of the human being, through abortion, this marked the downfall of our society. No longer any real responsiblity for our actions, the rest is self-gratification.
It's really sad. I read Dennis's article with intrepedation because is hit this nerve that all is not well and getting much, much worse. I can't bear to see it unfold. I pray to God that he will change the course but, He is smarter than this. We have made our bed and now we have to sleep in it. He gave us FREE WILL and it's our responsibility to use it wisely.
Oh, how I wish there were more strong voices out there that would stand up and say enough is enough.
God bless you, Dennis. Keep up the fight.

Robert
I'm sure you're going to vehemently disagree with me on this point, but for starters, I'm not sure I consider it an "advance" for our society for women to BE Naval aviators or to be in the military in other roles which would put them in combat situations - and I'll bet a lot of the ex-military people who post on this site would agree with me on this. (I'd be interested to hear what you have to say on this if you read this, Curtal Friar, Georgetwin, SSGT, YLG, etc.). Maybe your girls really ARE crackerjack aviators. On the other hand, how do I know that they may not be more like that female pilot a few years ago whose becoming a military pilot was heralded by women's advocates as a hallmark of advancement for women - only to die at the controls of her plane because it turned out that the requirements for her had been watered down from what they were for her male counterparts. I wouldn't expect you to be honest about it if they did indeed fall into that latter category, given that a lot of the ex-military people who post here are convinced you're lying about your OWN credentials.

Really?
"And while Prager may not have been getting teenagers pregnant, teenage pregnancy is currently at comparative low levels historically, so someone was back then too."

What is your "historical" perspective, the last 20 years or so? Take a little longer look. The teen pregnancy rate is appalling. It used to be rare, really not that long ago. Also, factor in all the abortions taking place along with the birth statistics. There is nothing good about a teen mother killing her child instead of having the child. In prior ages when the "family" court and "social workers" were not yet insane, many of these children, even most of them, were adopted by couples.

Also please note that fully 1/3 of our children born today are illegitimate. That is horrible. The intact family, or the lack of it, is the best determiner of the child's current poverty level and future crime involvement. NOTHTING, but NOTHING beats an intact family for the future welfare of the child.

BTW, for interested parties, the black illegitimacy rate is fully 70%. Now wonder why the black community success rate is so poor and why so many black men are in jail or have criminal records. The destruction of the black family can be directly tied to the Great Society programs of LBJ, particulary the welfare rules that refused aid to intact families and would provide teen mothers an apartment and an income, thereby making a husband and father unnecessary. Along with this notice that much of teen motherhood is deliberate.

What might have been
We will never know what might have been had the Greatest Generation not been replaced by the Most Stupid Generation. From the looks of it, unfortunately, the Most Stupid Generation is on the way to be replaced by a generation even more stupid than that.
We need more sane, clearly thinking people like Dennis Prager and Thomas Sowell spread their wisdom to the masses.

We were just talking
about this today. My husband had a paper route when he was a boy. He walked or rode his bike everywhere. He hitch-hiked Safely!

I remember the worst thing we had to worry about when we went trick-or-treating was some older kid stealing our bag of candy...not that some sicko would put razor blades in apples, or rat poison or needles in the candy. AND we didn't have an adult with us either. It was fun, and innocent and will never happen again.

We had fun dating when we'd go to the drive-in. Pizza in the back seat, soda pop and some poor B rated film to watch (or not)...but it was fun.

There were good movies that told a story, not titillated the audience with sex and filthy language.

Sitcoms were funny...not trashy. Just like the comedians. I couldn't imagine Red Skelton or Bob Hope ever saying the F word...and they were funny. Not offensive.

Nobody that wasn't there can appreciate what a real slice of America was like back then.

It is a shame. I, too, am glad I don't have youngsters anymore. In many ways I regret not noticing things had changed so much from my youth when my boys were young.

Sad days. Sadder times to come. Goodbye Freedom...hello Big Brother.


Chainsaw
You are right when you mention the fall of RESPECT. DP pointed out the clothes issue and the title issue. Try to think of a movie that shows respect for this nation, religion, women or traditions. e.g. "Christmas" movies of the past decade show only bumbling men or foolish Santas, never anything to admire about the holiday, family or its true meaning ...disgusting!

Imagine a Sergeant prior to the D-day landing ginning up the troops. "Men!, some of you may die, but you are fighting for a woman's right to choose! Keep in mind as enemy bullets threaten you that you are supporting affirmative action! You are making the country safe for Gay pride day! Don't forget that your sacrifice will allow for government gun control!
Men your efforts will be honored by Marxists everywhere!!!"

We must pledge our lives, fortunes and sacred honor again.

Actually Sir Michael it's worse
The rate for the 2000 census was actually 44%. The good news though, NCHS stats show that since 1980 illegimacy rates for black women aged 15-44 have dropped 25%

Huh.
Not much to disagree with in D. Prager's remembrance. Jeez, wait'll he's in his 70s, it will seem even worse.

I did find his opening sentence amusing though. Yes sir, let one black person get away with something and Dennis feels it is the last straw to the life he prefers for himself and everyone else to have.

That's OK. To varying degrees virtually all humans have that feeling, don't we?

Thoughts
I will break my own rule and post one more time today. It has been heartening to read the posts of Andrew, Juseff, qcalknet, Standshisground, Tea Party, BAMAddox, Mac, voysest, Skipperjay, Doc, Sir Michael, LoveUS, Mrs. Paddy, and FOWG; but it is disheartening to share in the common understanding that we all have regarding the loss of innocence and decency. Innocence was once the first line of defense for young children. They learned values before they learned of perversions. Now, they are deliberately exposed to the opposite, and from infancy on they are exposed to the basest of human compulsions on all fronts; and they are soon taught to mock any concept of morality save for the one admonition that self-restraint and discipline are to be ridiculed.

We have lost much. And as it has been pointed out already, civilizations before us have collapsed from within. No doubt the prideful in those days were just as conceited as those who today are full of themselves. “Professing to be wise, they became fools…”

There Are Exceptions To The PC Rule
There are exceptions to the PC speech code. They are: liberal politicians, liberal minorities, liberal actors/entertainers, liberal religious leaders, liberal athletes, liberal women, liberal members of the media, and the list goes on. Do you see a denominator here?

The only people subject to the PC crowd are conservatives and especially conservative white males. Don't believe me? Change Bill Clinton's party affiliation and the charges of sexual harrassment would have dogged him out of the presidency. Why no outcry from NOW about Bill?

It is also okay for people to use racially charged language when it is directed at conservative minorities. And this is coming from the very people that want to cry racism with every word spoken by a conservative.

Pledges, honor,??
As I stated a few days ago. Time to consider changing your national anthem to"
The land of the freeks and the home of the depraved"
As a kid, many a night I had to stand outside shivering in the chilly wind, looking out for the ever lurking gestapo, while my folks and some trusted neighbors were hungrely listening to the BBC for a shred of good news. Today if I was still living in Belgium I would loose sleep worrying if my children might be listening to the BBC!
We were as elated as the Iraqies were,when liberated by the American GI's from the tirant hitler, they from sadam husein the butcher.Fortunately our liberation happened on a democratic watch, unfortunately for the Iraqies they were freed by American GI's on a Republican watch, who were prompty backstabbed by the democratic liberal leftist cabaal that goaded the liberators of Iraq into some blunders and setup the American underbelly and bottom feeders for one of the greetest disasters in your history: The election and rise of another:"husein" obama. Yes I have seen similar ranting speeches, yes I have seen the same mad gleem in the eyes, and yes they have the the same agendas. ed

Yeah, we get it.
Oh, I get it. Prager wants the fifties back.

the conservative view of freedom never ceases to amaze me.



Robert--the military "expert"?
Are you the same Robert who trolls these boards, constantly claiming immense military expertise, and a family heritage with multitudes of military veterans?

If so, I'd be happy to repost your technologically illiterate claims regarding the KC-45 pro-Airbus decision and supposed better alternatives with used planes, and my replies.

Just wondering.

New Obama Parody
my blog. Elvira...er....Obama. Enjoy. Find your smile.

Ain't this the truth!
Being born a girl in the very early 60's I can really understand this article. What happened to little league tryouts where if you didn't make the team you tried harder next time.
What happened to being PROUD to stand and sing the National Anthem.(off key or not)
I'm sick of the political correctness destroying our country. Life's not fair and equal get tough and compete...
I used to be able to go see the newest Disney film without fear of sexual insinuations every third line.
Playing outside was a mainstay not a scheduled outing with parents watching every second...imagination, cops and robbers,cowboys and Indians, exploring like Daniel Boone was thrilling...I wish my daughter had that world like I did...
I homeschool to curb the infliction of moral corruption/indoctrination that's all over schools. We have no TV... we read.. we relish how this country was born and we watch the old shows on VHS and DVD like Schoolhouse rock and the muppet show and OLD Disney live action. It's sad it's come to this but at least I'm guiding the next generation to fix the problem.

61 years plus a couple days old
and I agree with Prager.

66 years
Now I'm even more depressed than when I woke up!

They say that
Conservatives long for a world that never was, and Liberals long for one that can never be.
Having grown up in the fifties, I can agree with Prager on some points, but just appointing conservative judges isn't going to bring back a 'Leave it to Beaver' world.
IMO out of control immigration (legal and illegal) has changed the racial mix dramatically in this country, and it's doubtful to me that our newer citizens would even want a world like Prager describes.

I always notice
that Mike, Robert,Scooter, et. al. take an article like this and look for any reason to trash it. Prager does not desire, nor does he overlook past injustices. The evidence he does offer, in desiring days gone by,(innocence, honor, patriotism) are swept away or ignored by the nay sayers.
Perhaps Robert's mom viewed herself as a baby factory. If so, I'm sorry to hear that. If that's what Robert viewed her as, his dad needed to thrash him in his room and make him apologize. A mother is not a baby factory. Also, Robert's inane claim that Prager could not have flown alone because there was a law is like claiming there were no abortions before Roe because there was a law. Robert, if you want to call someone a liar, just say so, don't rely on pathetic attempts to be logical.
Scooter's post is silly and mean spirited. Assuming that America is becoming greater by the day is foolish. Where is the evidence that will answer the statistics and examples offered by the author and sympathetic posters? Simple minded ad homenim attacks only underscore the tenability of the author's thesis.
If Mike can read the author and reduce it to "wanting the 50's back" he gets an "F" for summarization skills.
Do, conservatives want blacks in the back of the bus and women barefoot and pregnant? Not really. Do we want women "liberated" to act and dress like hookers and cry wolf if a man looks at them? Certainly not. And we don't want elementary school girls putting condoms on pencils and bananas and calling it "health ed." And we don't want people getting PhD's in "Qu##r Theory" and teaching in Universities. And we don't want Boy Scouts being bullied into having gay leaders in the tent.
Lastly, June and Ward Cleaver were great parents and Wally and The Beaver were good guys, and The Carol Burnett Show makes "Sex in the City" look like the Hell it really represents.

IMHO..what changed
Feminists,LGBT,lawyers,and so called civil and enviormental right extremists are what is killing America.
Now, being a stay at home mom is like being a leper.
Home Economics is no longer a option in schools. Music classes in the lower grades virtually gone. arts and crafts are "green" not Crayolas and white glue or the yummy paste. Recess..3 times a day are no more and we wonder why kids are suddenly needing ADD/ADHD medications..
Yup, bigger government giving in, people not standing up as our rights are being chipped away piece by piece..
Compromising morals so everyone feels good doesn't work..
Traditions,morality are what's needed and public figures to remind the Country what they really are.
Yesterdays flower-children are todays blooming idiots..

Oh well
I am approaching 50 and have no children but it seems to me that instead of bashing liberals for all of our ills, why not try blaming each other, Time and Newsweek dummy down because most people read at 3 grade level. Kids watch and do video games because parents let them. When I was growing up we had 1 Tv and 3 channels is it our governments fault that we have more options now, is it the govt fault that parents let their kids watch the crap that is on TV, I think not perhaps we should take a look in the mirror and that just might show who is to blame.

Honest conversation on race

Time for an honest conversation on race

Why not Dennis?

Politico-After the election, the next president, be it John McCain or Barack Obama, should seize the moment to call on the nation to have an honest, painful and constructive conversation about race. That will be the moment for town halls and working groups, for understanding and instruction. It would be quite wonderful if enlightened members of Congress became public practitioners of and agents for racial luminosity.

Unlike the Archie Bunker days of my youth, most of the people of our nation will respond affirmatively to a call for a higher and nobler sensitivity. After all, there is no plant in our national garden that requires more diligent watering and vigilant weeding than cross-racial rationality. Sadly and unfortunately, our nation would, in the present atmosphere of the presidential campaign, handle that dialogue deplorably.

read more


http://controlcongress.com/uncategorized/time-for-an-honest -conversation-on-race

Oh Well
Liberal policies bearing their fruit....what did you expect?