CA Ventura Star paper: California should abolish parenthood, in the name of equity

Joined
Aug 31, 2007
Messages
117,754
Haha look at the crank, the kook, the weirdo and his ridiculous column.

Laugh at your own risk: what Joe here is proposing are not "his" ideas, but merely the regurgitating of pure Marxist/Leninst claptrap written over 100 years ago regarding the state raising children.

This is our future if the Marxist filth wins its revolution that it is embarked on.



California should abolish parenthood, in the name of equity

https://www.vcstar.com/story/opinio...ld-abolish-parenthood-name-equity/6513756001/

Joe Matthews

If California is ever going to achieve true equity, the state must require parents to give away their children.

Today’s Californians often hold up equity — the goal of a just society completely free from bias — as our greatest value. Gov. Gavin Newsom makes decisions through “an equity lens.” Institutions from dance ensembles to tech companies have publicly pledged themselves to equity.

But their promises are no match for the power of parents.

Fathers and mothers with greater wealth and education are more likely to transfer these advantages to their children, compounding privilege over generations. As a result, children of less advantaged parents face an uphill struggle, social mobility has stalled, and democracy has been corrupted. More Californians are abandoning the dream; a recent Public Policy Institute of California poll found declining belief in the notion that you can get ahead through hard work.

My solution — making raising your own children illegal — is simple, and while we wait for the legislation to pass, we can act now: the rich and poor should trade kids, and homeowners might swap children with their homeless neighbors.

Now, I recognize that some naysayers will dismiss such a policy as ghastly, even totalitarian. But my proposal is quite modest, a fusion of traditional philosophy and today’s most common political obsessions.

In his “Republic,” Plato adopted Socrates’ sage advice — that children “be possessed in common, so that no parent will know his own offspring or any child his parents” — in order to defeat nepotism, and create citizens loyal not to their sons but to society.

Today, a policy of universal orphanhood aligns with powerful social trends that point to less interest in family. Californians are slower to marry, and are having fewer children — our birth rate is at an all-time low.

My proposal also should be politically unifying, fitting hand-in-glove with the most cherished policies of progressives and Trumpians alike.

The left’s introduction of anti-racism and gender identity in schools faces a bitter backlash from parents. Ending parenthood would end the backlash, helping dismantle white supremacy and outdated gender norms. Democrats also would have the opportunity to build a new pillar of the safety net — a child-raising system called “Foster Care for All.”

Over on the right, Republicans are happy to jettison parents’ rights in pursuit of their greatest passions, like violating migrant rights. Once you’ve gone so far as to take immigrant children from their parents and put them in border concentration camps, it’s a short walk to separating all Americans from their progeny.

Universal orphanhood also dovetails nicely with the pro-life campaign to end abortion rights. In fact, a suggestion from Justice Amy Coney Barrett, during a recent case that could overturn Roe, inspired this column. She posited that abortion rights are no longer necessary because all 50 states now have “safe haven” laws allowing women to turn their babies over to authorities after birth. My proposal would merely make mandatory such handovers of babies to the state.

Perhaps such coercion sounds dystopian. But just imagine the solidarity that universal orphanhood would create. Wouldn’t children, raised in one system, find it easier to collaborate on global problems?

Now, I don’t expect universal support for universal orphanhood. A few contrarians, lost in the empty chasm between American extremes, might object to this rational proposal on emotional grounds. They might argue that pursuing your own conception of family is fundamental to freedom.

They also may suggest that people don’t really want to start or finish at the same point in life.

They may even say that what we really desire is what the title orphan of the musical Annie demanded: “I didn’t want to be just another orphan, Mr. Warbucks. I wanted to believe I was special.”

But don’t pay those critics any mind. Because they just can’t see how our relentless pursuit of equity might birth a brave new world.
 
Last edited:
Today’s Californians often hold up equity — the goal of a just society completely free from bias — as our greatest value.

And if that is true, then they are dangerous lunatics, fit to be walled off and separated from.
 
California should abolish parenthood, in the name of equity

So if one demographic largely shoots themselves in the foot, everyone must shoot themselves in the foot--even those members of that demographic who are trying to do something better. Because mediocrity. You have no right to excel.

Equity is mediocrity.
 
I don't know this Joe Matthews, but this is so absurd that (and maybe it's my normalcy bias kicking in) I have the sneaking suspicion that this phrase:

But my proposal is quite modest...

Was not coincidental.

It's definitely satirical. It's just too self-aware to be anything else ("naysayers will dismiss such a policy as ghastly, even totalitarian" ... "perhaps such coercion sounds dystopian" ... "brave new world").

But the "modest proposal" thing has become enough of a cliché that I wouldn't be surprised to actually see some of the more oblivious & unwitting types unironically self-applying such phrasing to their own enthusiasms.
 
Commies have been preaching this for years. Let them push it – I'm heartened by the parental reaction to CRT in the schools. Insisting that their children live in inner-city foster homes would only drive more people to the right.
 
Want true equity? California should force parents to give away their children (Opinion)

https://www.sfchronicle.com/opinion...-California-should-force-parents-16777540.php

Opinion: Want true equity? California should force parents to give away their children



Joe Mathews
Jan. 16, 2022

If California is ever going to achieve true equity, the state must require parents to give away their children.


Today’s Californians often hold up equity — the idea of a just society completely free from bias — as our greatest value. Gov. Gavin Newsom says he makes decisions through “an equity lens.” Institutions from dance ensembles to tech companies have publicly pledged themselves to equity, along with diversity and inclusion.


But their promises of newly equitable systems are no match for the power of parents.


Fathers and mothers with greater wealth, education or other resources are more likely to transfer these advantages to their children, compounding privilege over generations. As a result, children of less advantaged parents face an uphill struggle, social mobility has stalled and democracy has been corrupted. More Californians are giving up on the dream; a recent Public Policy Institute of California poll found declining belief in the notion that you can get ahead through hard work.


My solution is simple, and while we wait for the legislation to pass, we can act now: The rich should give their children to the poor, and the poor should give their children to the rich. Homeowners might swap children with their homeless neighbors.


Now, I recognize that some naysayers, hopelessly attached to their privilege, will dismiss such a policy as ghastly, even totalitarian. But my proposal is quite modest, a fusion of traditional philosophy and today’s most common political obsessions.

In his “Republic,” Plato adopted Socrates’ sage advice — that children “be possessed in common, so that no parent will know his own offspring or any child his parents” — in order to defeat nepotism, prevent the amassing of great fortunes and create citizens loyal not to their sons but to society. To replace parents, Plato offered now-familiar ideas, from compulsory education to — a millennia before Newsom’s conception-to-college agenda — health regimes for pregnant women and children age 5 and younger.

Today, universal orphanhood aligns with powerful social trends that point to less interest in family. Californians are slower to marry and are having fewer children — our state’s birth rate is at an all-time low.


Surveys also suggest many of us are breaking off ties with family members who don’t share our politics. But my proposal would be unifying, fitting hand-in-glove with the most cherished policies of progressives and Trumpians alike.


The left’s introduction of anti-racism and gender identity in schools faces a bitter backlash from parents. Ending parenthood would end the backlash, helping dismantle white supremacy and outdated gender norms.


My proposal also would give Democrats the opportunity to build a new pillar of the social democracy they seek — a system for raising children, called “Foster Care for All.” Under this system, Democrats could stop pretending that they will enact universal preschool or child care, which they’ve promised — and failed to deliver — for a generation.


Over on the right, you’ll see people posing as parent defenders. But Republicans are happy to jettison fathers and mothers to pursue their greatest passions, like violating migrant rights. Once you’ve gone so far as to separate immigrants from their children and put the kids in border concentration camps, it’s only a short walk to a wholesale separation of all Americans from their progeny.


Then there’s the pro-lifers. The idea of universal orphanhood dovetails nicely with the conservative campaign to end Roe v. Wade and all abortion rights. In fact, a suggestion from Justice Amy Coney Barrett, in a recent Supreme Court hearing on a case that could overturn Roe, inspired me to write this column. She posited that abortion rights are no longer necessary because all 50 states now have “safe haven” laws that allow women to turn their babies over to a fire or police department after birth.


My proposal would merely make mandatory such handovers of babies to the state.


Perhaps such coercion sounds dystopian. But just imagine the solidarity that universal orphanhood would create. Wouldn’t children, raised in one system, find it easier to collaborate on climate change and other global problems?


Now, I don’t expect universal support for universal orphanhood. A few contrarians, lost in the empty chasm between American extremes, might object to this rational proposal on emotional grounds. They might argue that pursuing your own conception of family is fundamental to freedom. Or that our differences and biases, for all the damage they can do, also give human life much of its meaning.


They also may suggest that people don’t really want to start or finish at the same point in life. They may even say that what we really desire is what the title orphan of the musical “Annie” insisted upon: “I didn’t want to be just another orphan, Mr. Warbucks. I wanted to believe I was special.”


But you shouldn’t pay those critics any mind. Because they just can’t see how our relentless pursuit of equity might birth a brave new world.


Joe Mathews writes the Connecting California column for Zócalo Public Square.



https://www.sfchronicle.com/opinion...-California-should-force-parents-16777540.php
 
It's definitely satirical. It's just too self-aware to be anything else ("naysayers will dismiss such a policy as ghastly, even totalitarian" ... "perhaps such coercion sounds dystopian" ... "brave new world").

But the "modest proposal" thing has become enough of a cliché that I wouldn't be surprised to actually see some of the more oblivious & unwitting types unironically self-applying such phrasing to their own enthusiasms.

I thought the same thing - that it was satire. However, USA Today has also picked it up as an opinion piece - and they don't tend to do that with satire. It also appears under "Opinion" on Bakersfield.Com. I wouldn't think that a site like EasyParenting.Com would run with it - but it did.

And yeah, the "Modest Proposal" thang ought to be a dead giveaway.

Maybe it's just a ploy to get right-wing websites to lose their gourds over it so they look ridiculous (you know, like when Snopes fact-checks the Babylon Bee) ... because it's absolutely done that.
 
Last edited:
Nothing surprises me anymore from any of the elites news media publications. Even if they say it was satirical they maybe checking to gauge support and resistance. The start of easing people into a acceptance over the course of the next few decades like they have done with all their other perversions. I bet the author and his ilk are Pedophiles that want greater access to kids for their own perversions.

The average people really have no clue how alien the belief system of the elite class is from them.
 
It could have started as satire and been completely missed by most at the MSM. Let's face it, most MSM staff are a bunch of wannabe Ron Burgundies that can't wipe their own asses. The problem today is that trying to be satirical usually fails, because a leftist will outdo your satire by the end of the day.

There's a leftist YouTube channel called Real Progressives. Even moreso than this article, it's almost impossible to tell if it's satire or not. They even have a segment called MMT Mondays.
https://youtube.com/c/RealProgressives
 
It's almost as if they make money when people click on things.

ROTFLMAO ... Yes, and it's right-wingers that are providing the clicks. Do a web search on the title of the article and you'll find a few reposts of the article without comment and a pile of discussions by conservatives wringing their hands over what the leftists are planning for their children. Maybe I haven't gone deep enough into the search results yet, but I yet to find any "Attaboy" discussions by any leftists. Maybe I just need to dive deeper into Reddit and see what they have.

I can't help but wonder how much money Joe Matthews, or his employer, made off of this. He's trolled dozens of conservative websites without ever getting an account on any of them.
 
Last edited:
It's almost as if they make money when people click on things.

You would love to have people believe that there is nothing to see here, just some Clown writing Clown World articles for Clown World clickbait, to be passed around by other Clowns.

iu
 
You would love to have people believe that there is nothing to see here, just some Clown writing Clown World articles for Clown World clickbait, to be passed around by other Clowns.

iu

It's passed around by clowns, yes.

In that scenario, you are the clown.
 
Back
Top