T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
189.1 | Yeah Whatever !!! | POLAR::POLAR::PSIHOSJ | | Wed Aug 16 1995 05:43 | 8 |
|
I think that Katha Politt should have her tubes tide and save
the rest of us men and women from such craziness. I'd be
willing to pay an annual tax of keeping people like her
from reproducing.
I agree with fathers and mothers providing financial and emotional
support to there children, whatever the circumstance be in there
lives, but blaming men is not the answer.
|
189.2 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | nothing's going to bring him back | Wed Aug 16 1995 09:59 | 11 |
| Given the agenda of welfare "reform" in this country for women, I fail
to see how this is any more sickening than the modest proposal of
putting mothers and children in group homes if the mothers are under a
certain age limit, particularly give the fact that the younger the
teen mother, the more likely the father of a child is to be of adult
years.
Now I do believe her idea of compulsory sterilization for men who won't
live up to their responsibilities goes a little far.
meg
|
189.3 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Aug 16 1995 10:26 | 10 |
| I think that the author is engaging in non-so-subtle sarcasm. Like Meg,
I agree with the basic notion that the current trend of punishing unwed
mothers is out of balance - though I do tend to side with the notion of
denying additional benefits for those who have more children while on Welfare.
Many men do need to be convinced to take responsibility for their actions.
Women don't "get themselves pregnant". Many women need also to take
responsibility for their actions.
Steve
|
189.4 | | 43GMC::KEITH | Dr. Deuce | Wed Aug 16 1995 13:15 | 9 |
| RE .2 Meg
Forced sterilization goes a little far?
Does that apply to forced sterilization of women who continue to have
children they cannot support? 'A little far' or look 'at what the crazies
have proposed' (for women)?
Steve
|
189.5 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | nothing's going to bring him back | Wed Aug 16 1995 13:36 | 19 |
| Steve,
While I deplore people having children they can't (or won't) support,
being pro-choice and pro-privacy, I can't countenance mandatory
sterilization for anyone, much as I know of people I would love to see
it happen to. This applies to both men and women.
We share equal responsiblity in not procreating when the time is not
right. For sexually active men this means using condoms and/or
sterilization, and for women also using another method as well as their
partners' for contraception. The alternative is not being sexually
active in a fashion which can result in pregnancies when one can't deal
with the end result, or could spread an unknown STD to one's partner.
It also means discussing in advance and being in agreement with one's
partner on what to do if an unintended pregnancy does occur, and if
agreement isn't reached abstaining from activities which could result
in a pregnancy.
meg
|
189.6 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Wed Aug 16 1995 13:40 | 16 |
|
Actually it has been the other way around. The obligation for men
to support their children is much heavier than that for women.
It's just harder to catch up with the men. Men who won't work
and support their children are "deadbeats", get sent to jail.
Women who won't work and support their children are "victims",
get welfare.
I hope they do make it tough on men. Tough enough that men will
finally get up on their hind legs and say, "Hey, wait just a
*&^% minute here".
Actually it's the taxpayers who are saying, "Hey, waitaminute"--
to _both_ sides.
fred();
|
189.7 | It's only Men who need to be responsible... | SOLVIT::SOULE | Pursuing Synergy... | Wed Aug 16 1995 14:50 | 15 |
| .3> Many men do need to be convinced to take responsibility for their actions.
.3> Women don't "get themselves pregnant". Many women need also to take
.3> responsibility for their actions.
.5> We share equal responsiblity in not procreating when the time is not
.5> right.
.6> I hope they do make it tough on men. Tough enough that men will
.6> finally get up on their hind legs and say, "Hey, wait just a
.6> *&^% minute here".
As far as equal responsibility is concerned (and this being MENNOTES),
only Men really need to be responsible... Only Men impregnate. What you
do is increase "that stuff" which prevents all Men from being rapists
and there's your solution...
|
189.8 | get some therapy. | SALEM::PERRY_W | | Wed Aug 16 1995 15:49 | 11 |
|
re:7
There is some truth to both sides in this debate!
One thing you can't deny, it takes two to make a child
and two to act responsibly.
Not sure what "that stuff" is but maybe you and Katha should get
some therapy.
Bill
|
189.9 | | STRATA::WILBER | Build Castles in the Air | Thu Aug 17 1995 05:06 | 10 |
| I think that article was more to shock than to actually change things.
The author must have been using sarcasm to get a point across.
OK, there's a problem, we need solutions. This article sounds like
the flipside to Newt Gingrich "thinking". (or lack thereof) "If it
costs money, cut it" (bad joke when you think of vasectomies).
Simple solutions = more problems.
j
|
189.10 | Write something about the good men! | SALEM::PERRY_W | | Fri Aug 18 1995 07:15 | 9 |
|
Kasha is just another in a long line of irresponsible feminist writers
who make a living trashing men. Seems like there's no end to this type!
Although I agree with some of the things she says it would be a breath
of fresh air if just one of them would write about the good
responsible men. Would that be asking too much?
Bill
|
189.11 | And the beat goes on.... | GIAMEM::HOVEY | | Fri Aug 25 1995 10:19 | 4 |
|
Step-daughter just told me about her friend, 18 years old, who is
pregnant. The father, (term used lightly) also has 4 other children
with 3 other girls, one set of twins.......
|
189.12 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri Aug 25 1995 11:28 | 9 |
| Roll another news paper and swat us on the nose. I guess women have no
responsibility. Its all mens fault. Bad dog! Baaaaad!
If a women get pregnant, its her body, her call to keep or abort the
child. Isnt that why we all want abortions? So to give a choice?
Economics, choice, womans body. So confused here. Mixed messages, baaad
dog! <insert news paper swatting dog sounds>
|
189.13 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Fri Aug 25 1995 11:42 | 15 |
|
re .11
> Step-daughter just told me about her friend, 18 years old, who is
> pregnant. The father, (term used lightly) also has 4 other children
> with 3 other girls, one set of twins.......
Does this girl happen to be blond?? You'd think she would have caught
a clue about what would happen if she hopped in be with this guy.
I'm not trying to defend the guy, but I think her actions were
_equally_ irresponsible (OMG I've become an ERA supporter).
fred();
|
189.14 | | GRANPA::MWANNEMACHER | NRA member | Fri Aug 25 1995 11:42 | 6 |
|
The guy ought to be snipped. There is ownership of resonsibility on
both side.
|
189.15 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri Aug 25 1995 11:56 | 13 |
| All parties should be terminated.:) Thus saving us all from passing on
to future generations the idiots of today. Support your local AMA!!
Public steriolization!!:)
There is a woman, who had her kids yanked from her because the state
found her unfit to foster children. Soooo, she goes out and has two
more that we, the tax payers, are paying for. So, she has these other
children by two more differnt men. Punsih these men too! Swat their
noses hard with rolled up news papers!!! So much for responsibility...
But, its her body and her call to carry or terminate life as we know
it.
|
189.16 | re-.12 | GIAMEM::HOVEY | | Fri Aug 25 1995 12:02 | 8 |
|
Just sharing a story, that's all....
Fact is these woman are equally at fault but men, guys, boys such as
this do little to add value to their children's lives and
have these women convinced that they will be together forever.
I also think that women "do" carry more of the burden is these
situations...typically the guys just walk.....
|
189.17 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Fri Aug 25 1995 12:44 | 35 |
| re .16
> Fact is these woman are equally at fault but men, guys, boys such as
> this do little to add value to their children's lives and
> have these women convinced that they will be together forever.
The second half of your statement belies the first half of your
statement. And it is very often that the fathers have no choice
in the matter of added value. When it comes to support they are
_his_ kids. When it comes to visitaion/custody, they are _her_
kids. Most states _require_ the mother to reveal the father of
the child so they can go after him for "child support" if she
applies for AFDC. Very often, the mother will conceal this information
because the are afraid that the father _will_ want to be involved
in his child's life.
> I also think that women "do" carry more of the burden is these
> situations...typically the guys just walk.....
No, the _taxpayers_ end up carrying with the burden in most these cases.
But, yes the woman does mostly end up caring for the child. Given
that ( probably unfair but ) fact of life, you'd think they would be
more careful what hay they roll in. But what the *&^% they will be
given food, shelter, all kinds of government freebies, not have to
live with those ogers mom and especially dad, and be sent to school
if they want if if they just pop out a couple of kids. So what the
*&^@, why be careful.
And, yes, guys are going to start being more careful too. It is a
Federal felony to not pay child support these days. But, as I have
said before, if men ever do start thinking with their heads instead
of their sex organs, women are going to be in deep do-do, and maybe
this law will bring us one step closer to that day.
fred();
|
189.19 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Fri Aug 25 1995 14:14 | 51 |
| Bizarro. Y'all are responding as though this "Katha Pollitt" is
suggesting these things out of the blue. Granted, the context is a
little tough to establish, but read between the lines a little. In
particular, this is a huge hint that her transcriber skipped a big part
of the story, the laying of the groundwork:
> [warm-up deleted but will type it up for
> you later if you're really interested]
So what is Pollitt really talking about? It looks to me like she wants
to amend some welfare reform bill currently under consideration. I
think this because of the references she makes to how women are being
treated, which they aren't, but would be under some current
proposals in the House. Here are some of those references:
> If he is unable to pay, the government will, in which
> case the father will be given a workfare (no wage)
> job and a dorm residence comparable to those provided
> homeless women and children --
See that? No such dorm residences are currently provided, so she seems
to be talking about some other proposal, the "warm-up" you didn't get
to read.
Here's another:
> Absentee dads, not overburdened single moms, will
> be legally liable for the crimes and misdemeanors of their
> minor children,
Again, it is in current proposals, not current law, that single
mothers would be solely liable for their minor children's crimes.
And a third hint that Pollitt is talking about current legislation, not
making up an out-of-the-blue attack on men:
> Men wishing to avoid the tax can undergo a vasectomy at state expense,
> with sperm to be frozen at personal expense (Republican version) or by
> government subsidy (Democratic version).
So what is going on here is that Pollitt is responding to the one-sided
approach taken by current welfare reform bills, that seek to make the
welfare mother problem something to be solved solely at the expense of
the women involved- Pollitt points out that if punishment is the name
of the game, bring the errant men in for their fair share of misery
too. Even up the penalties- don't let sperm-spreaders off from paying
for their mistakes.
Now, can we start the discussion over?
DougO
|
189.20 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri Aug 25 1995 14:26 | 4 |
| ???? What doug? I dont have my decoder ring on today. Can you explain
in more primitave english for us neaderthal types?
|
189.21 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Fri Aug 25 1995 14:28 | 10 |
| re .19
Start the discussion over based on some supposedly unseeen "warm up"??
Using your logic, having extra kids on welfare would not only not
be paid for at taxpayer expense, it would be a _felony_. Failure
of these women to go to work and support "their" kids would be
a _felony_. Just as failure to pay "child support" is now a felony.
fred();
|
189.22 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Fri Aug 25 1995 17:11 | 16 |
| >supposedly unseeen "warm up"?
My quote was from the basenote. Do you believe the original sender
when she said she left material out?
> Using your logic, having extra kids on welfare would not only not
> be paid for at taxpayer expense, it would be a _felony_.
I said nothing of the kind. I said that Pollitt is objecting to bills
that would make such actions felonies if committed by women, but not if
by men. She is merely campaigning for equally harsh treatment. I
don't think she is actually in support of the bills at all; and her
best tactic against them is sarcastic suggestion that the penalties
apply to men, as well as to the women currently targeted.
DougO
|
189.23 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Fri Aug 25 1995 18:14 | 20 |
|
re .22
> I said nothing of the kind. I said that Pollitt is objecting to bills
> that would make such actions felonies if committed by women, but not if
> by men. She is merely campaigning for equally harsh treatment. I
No DougO, it's _already_ a felony if committed by men (failure to
support your children). The harshness is _already_ on the men's
side. What Pollitt is spewing is just more of the "it's all the
fault of men, men are bad, men should be punished for just breathing",
"how dare they expect women to get off welfare and go to work
to support "his" kids", and "how dare anyone suggest that a woman
can't behave in any manner that she'd like, then expect taxpayers to
pay for the consequence".
But for those who don't believer that there really are people out there
that thinks like Pollitt does, you do make an excellent example, again.
fred();
|
189.24 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Fri Aug 25 1995 18:57 | 37 |
| You missed this, Fred.
>> supposedly unseeen "warm up"?
>
> My quote was from the basenote. Do you believe the original sender
> when she said she left material out?
What do you mean, "supposedly"? The transcriber admitted the
ommission. What was left out of Pollitt's article, if not what
I conjectured?
> it's _already_ a felony if committed by men
You miss the point. Pollitt isn't talking about the existing system.
She's talking about pending legislation, she was going over specific
points in the proposed bills and supplying penalties for men
corresponding to those proposed for women. This is a legitimate
approach to indicate the flaws of the proposed legislation.
> men are bad, men should be punished for just breathing
And locked up in dormitories, right? Like women should be?
THAT'S IN THE BILL SHE IS FIGHTING.
> But for those who don't believer that there really are people out
> there that thinks like Pollitt does, you do make an excellent example,
> again.
Don't kid yourself for a moment that you understand how Pollitt thinks.
But yeah- some of us know how to read between the lines when something
is admittedly (well, you haven't admitted it yet, but the transcriber
admitted it) missing, some of us know how the fight against female
welfare recipients is waged, some of us know when someone is fighting
for equal treatment, not for a bill that addresses only the female half
of the problem. Too bad you aren't similarly gifted, Fred.
DougO
|
189.25 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Aug 28 1995 11:03 | 20 |
| re .24
> You miss the point. Pollitt isn't talking about the existing system.
> She's talking about pending legislation, she was going over specific
> points in the proposed bills and supplying penalties for men
> corresponding to those proposed for women. This is a legitimate
> approach to indicate the flaws of the proposed legislation.
Pollitt's "corresponding penalties" for making women take responsibility
for their own actions is to have men sterilized? And you agree?
Can't say I'm surprised.
> Don't kid yourself for a moment that you understand how Pollitt thinks.
And you do? Even granted your "omissions", Pollitt is still out on
the fringe trying to equate severe financial penalties and forced
sterilization to making women get off welfare. The scary part is
that she seems to have a lot of company out there.
fred();
|
189.26 | another guess about what isn't there | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Mon Aug 28 1995 13:18 | 30 |
| .24> What was left out of Pollitt's article, if not what I conjectured?
Doug, I read the base note about the way you did, except that I don't believe
that Pollitt was responding to pending legislation. The only parallel I can see
to her forced vasectomies would be forced seterilization. I have seen this in
occasional campaign speeches, but not in any legislation I know of.
It seems pointless to me to debate information which has not been posted here.
If you want to discuss what was left out by the base note, go find it in
_Nation_ or _UTNE Reader_ and type it in. Then maybe we can discuss it.
Just for the record, I would agree with the principle of equality: any
legislation which included forced sterilization should also include forced
vasectomies. I don't believe that either is likely to become law.
> And locked up in dormitories, right? Like women should be?
> THAT'S IN THE BILL SHE IS FIGHTING.
I have seen several proposals that unwed minor mothers should be required to
live with their parents, or if that is impossible, then they should be assigned
to group homes. I might support the same for the fathers, but since they are
already liable for prison for statutory rape, that seems a bit redundant.
> You miss the point. Pollitt isn't talking about the existing system.
> She's talking about pending legislation, she was going over specific
Doug, I think you miss Fred's point. When we consider Pollit's claims of
inequality we should consider both current and pending legislation and court
decisions which affect men.
|
189.27 | Don't reward undesirable behavior! | NETCAD::GENOVA | | Mon Aug 28 1995 13:54 | 52 |
|
As far as welfare goes. Everybody may "need" help sometime. So if we
have a 2 year maximum lifetime cap for welfare. And when you are on
welfare, you are either an employee of the state, or a ward of the
state, either way, by accepting "our" money, you have to fullfill
certain requirements, like, ah, well, how do I say this, WORK, just
like the rest of us poor slobs. You have to work, or you don't get
any help. What a concept.
As for children out of wedlock. If our society didn't "reward" this by
giving welfare, you'd have less kids born out of wedlock. If the 16
year old girl didn't get an apartment and food stamps, and her family
didn't/wouldn't/couldn't help her, what would happen, she would
struggle, and the other little girls in the neighborhood would say,
yuk, look at her, she can't go to the movies, go to the mall, go out to
a dance, she has to take care of the baby, and she has no high school
diploma, no skills, yuk, I don't think I want to do that.
I didn't fool around when I was a teenager, one reason was that my
parents told me if you can't support a family/wife, you'd better not
have/get one. If you reward behaviors that are not desirable, you'll
get more of the undesirable behavior.
Todays kids don't think about the consequences, one reason is that the
liberal state steps in and pretends to rescue them with welfare.
Giving something to someone hardly ever helps them, hard work,
struggle, and accomplishment are what builds and shapes character.
Senator Biden said a couple of years ago, something to the effect that
one thing wrong with this society is the lack of STIGMA. Stigma is
good, it keeps people in line with the values and norms of society.
Just look at all the crap talk shows, I slept with my (fill in the
blank), I stole $$ from my company, I snorted cocaine before playing
every football game (Lawrence Taylor), please buy my book,etc.
No Shame, no Stigma.
Sometimes I wish I could sit home and collect a paycheck, but even if I
could and wanted too, it's a big trap, it saps your strength, your
desires, and your life.
People need to earn what they get in life.
A couple of starts would be "FREE" higher education, no student loans,
pell grants, etc, if you get a C or better, you go to college for
free. Better to educate someone than to incarcerate them, and it only
costs about 10K to go to a state college with room and board, the cost
of a prison cell is 35K and rising.
|
189.28 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Aug 28 1995 15:48 | 11 |
| re .27
Or, as I have said many times--If you have a right to force me to pay
the consequences of your behavior, then I have a right to say something
about your behavior.
My kids have asked me, "So what's the difference in you doing something
and us doing something"? My response was, "If I break it I have to fix
it. If you break it I have to fix it".
fred();
|
189.29 | | TALLIS::SCHULER | Greg, DTN 227-4165 | Tue Aug 29 1995 16:47 | 56 |
| RE: .27
> If the 16 year old girl didn't get an apartment and food stamps, and her
> family didn't/wouldn't/couldn't help her, what would happen, she would
> struggle, and the other little girls in the neighborhood would say,
> yuk, look at her, she can't go to the movies, go to the mall, go out to
> a dance, she has to take care of the baby, and she has no high school
> diploma, no skills, yuk, I don't think I want to do that.
"Wow, she lives in her own rat-infested apartment in that
dangerous crime ridden public housing project and gets to
drag around a screaming infant with her day and night and
can't hang with the gals cause she's got to care for the
baby and has to wait in endless lines and talk to countless
bureaucrats to get dozens of dollars a week and she had to
drop out of school and has no skills..... Yeah! I want to
be just like her!"
While I'm certain we would see a drop in the number of teenagers
having babies if we were to implement a draconian plan prohibiting
the distribution of welfare benefits to illegitimate children and
their mothers, I think looking at the problem in terms of the pseudo-
dialog above is simplistic and short-sighted. I *don't* think
young girls decide to get pregnant simply because they think going
on welfare is a better choice than getting a good education and a high
paying job. Quite often they don't have such a choice. Even if a
young girl from the projects stays away from boys and concentrates
on school, her chances of escaping a life of poverty are remote.
Likewise, I don't think boys see a future of endless court battles
over custody and visitation rights and child support payments and
decide to abstain. The don't say; "yuck, look at him, he has to
sleep in his car and can't see his kids and has no money to go to
the movies or to the football game...I don't think I want to have
sex with that hot babe..."
These kids aren't looking into the future and making sound decisions
based upon where they want to be in 5 or 10 or 20 years. They don't
*see* a future for themselves and so they live for the moment. And
if you take away the minimal government support that allows them
to eat and live in poverty, they'll just become that much more dejected
and hopeless....and dangerous.
I'm not saying the answer is to throw money at people. I'm not sure
what the answer is. I agree 100% that the system is broken and needs
to be fixed, but exactly how I don't know. I do know that if we try
to fix the problem based upon projections of our own motivations, we're
unlikely to succeed.
I like your idea regarding education. I think that would be a huge
step in the right direction. We also need to do something about the
fact that there aren't enough high paying jobs. How are we going to
provide all the newly educated poor with a chance to earn a decent
living?
|
189.30 | A SIMPLE ANSWER -= PERHAPS | STOWOA::RONDINA | | Tue Aug 29 1995 17:52 | 12 |
| I have read this string of notes. And so many people presenting one\
point or another. Most of us just shrugging our shoulders in despair,
frustration or helplessness. All search for the answer. I am reminded
of a quote by a famous leader, when asked how he governed his people.
He said: "I teach them correct principles and they govern themselves."
As simplistic as this answer may seem, perhaps it contains the answer
we seek. As a father, I am trying to teach my children the principles
that will allow them to enjoy a happy productive and fulfilling life.
Sure we make mistakes, but not idiotic ones, at least.
|
189.31 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Aug 29 1995 18:14 | 6 |
| There have been proposals, at least at the state level, to sterilize
(permanently or temporarily with Norplant) women on welfare. There was
one state (Delaware?) that attempted to put such a proposal into
action.
Steve
|
189.32 | Work for Money | NETCAD::GENOVA | | Wed Aug 30 1995 11:39 | 91 |
|
Hi Greg,
>I *don't* think young girls decide to get pregnant simply because they
>think going on welfare is a better choice than getting a good education
>and a high paying job.
I think many of them do decide to do this, because it is easy.
And because they don't feel loved, some want the unconditional
love that a baby will give, because they (the mother) didn't
get or feel she got that love in the home. And they see lack of
hope and opportunity, whether real or imagined.
>Likewise, I don't think boys see a future of endless court battles
>over custody and visitation rights and child support payments and
>decide to abstain. The don't say; "yuck, look at him, he has to
>sleep in his car and can't see his kids and has no money to go to
>the movies or to the football game...I don't think I want to have
>sex with that hot babe..."
If there friends had to do the above, they would say "yuck, look at
him, he has to sleep in his car and can't see his kids and has no
money to go to the movies or to the football game...I don't think
I want to have sex with that hot babe..."
Especially if they had been raised up correctly, to be personally and
morally/ethically responsible for there procreation. They certainly
would in my opinion be more responsible.
One of the biggest problems you have in the inner city is lack of role
models, lack of the father in the home. I don't really know how people
can abandon there own flesh and blood, whether it's the lack of severe
consequences, whether that be stigma, fines, imprisonment, etc.
But I have two kids from my first marriage, I pay child support and
see them during the week and every other weekend. I do what I am
supposed to do, per the Courts and my own sense of responsiblity.
I didn't get proved a bad Daddy in court and my ex didn't get proved
a good mother, but why is it that the kids were automatically awarded
to her, and I was automatically ordered to pay the $$.
The pendulum will swing the other way, it is making dads that just
don't have enough to get by, into criminal, deadbeat dads, the father
has no say where the money goes, his only recourse is to let the mother
fall down, and then when social services steps in try to get the kids,
or get a small fortune and prove her a bad mother, which most mothers
are not, but that still doesn't abate the fact that in 99% of the cases
she gets custody and he pays. And that is a fact. That's probably why
lot's of men stay in bad marriages and wait till the kids are 18.
But as for kids out of wedlock, the mother can still get higher
eductation for free, if I had my way, but she won't be rewarded
for having a baby or babies without a solid foundation to stand
on. Yes I do believe if people had to suffer when they mess up,
that other people wouldn't follow the same path.
Kennedy keeps says, welfare reform but not on the backs of children,
it's not on there backs, it's on their parent's back. Someone has
to be responsible for their actions, I was, why should others get
special treatment/help for actions that are not commendable.
Not that getting pregnant under 18 is an aggregious crime, but it
still shouldn't be supported/condoned by the state.
How do you think we got into this mess, The republicans told FDR that
welfare would kill the family and cause all sorts of problems, and it
has. We should admit failure and fix the problem once and for all.
Carrots and Sticks work best, especially when applied equally
regardless of age/sex/income/or race.
How do we explain how many immigrant populations, Jamacian, Chinese,
Vietnamese, and many others, Make it in America, despite our racism,
and socio-economic inequalities. America is still the land of
Opportunity, even if things aren't equal, that's the real world,
life isn't fair, and the sooner you/we get over that fact and find
the opportunities that are out there, the sooner people will get
ahead.
I just can't stand excuses, I can find an excuse for any thing.
I overslept, I forgot, I didn't have a ride, My father beat me,
My mother beat me, I didn't have a father, etc. Excuses simply
keep you down, thinking like Bart Simpson (Underachiever and Proud
of it).
Individual Responsibility is the key, Take care of yourself and help
in your community. If everyone did that all these problems would
go away.
/art
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189.33 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Wed Aug 30 1995 13:22 | 33 |
|
re .29
> I *don't* think
> young girls decide to get pregnant simply because they think going
> on welfare is a better choice than getting a good education and a high
> paying job. Quite often they don't have such a choice.
Kids just don't have the maturity to make those kinds of decisions.
That's why we have parents. I doubt that many really do get
pregnant simply to get on welfare or to get their own place. However,
the imagined benefits of being out from under parents control and
on their own has a strong attraction at that age. IMHO the problem
is the "nobody has a right to force their morality on me" attitude.
My generation often chooses to ignore our moral teachings, but at
least we have a basis to start. I don't think a lot of kids even
know what morality is. For them, they have to right to hump anyone
and everyone they feel like, and if they mess up and get pregnant or
AIDS then so what, the State (aka taxpayers) will take care of them.
"Whatever feels good"--remember that?
Illegitimacy is not a Judao/Christian invention. It has been a society
issue since the the dawn of civilization. Illegitimacy is a burden
on the tribe. The tribe is bigger now, but we're finally starting
to feel the pinch.
You might think that forcing people to take responsibility for their
own actions is draconian, but I think it is draconian to confiscate
more and more of my pay, my family's standard of living, and my
children's future to support some irresponsible behavior over which
I have no say or control.
fred();
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189.34 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | nothing's going to bring him back | Fri Sep 01 1995 11:46 | 12 |
| So what do you do with the little stud-muffins that knock up multiple
girls in an area? There is one little creep in my neighborhood who was
responsible for siring at least three babies last year. He is under 17
and pays minimal to no support for any of his offspring. While I can't
say much for the three girls (ages 13-15) who he did this to and their
chances of making much more out of their lives than pretty consistant
poverty, this kid is still out there in the dating scene. BTW all
three babies were born within two months of each other, and last I knew
there was another pregnant teen in the neighborhood that he had also
been "dating."
meg
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189.35 | Jail Bait | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Fri Sep 01 1995 12:23 | 19 |
|
re .34
> So what do you do with the little stud-muffins that knock up multiple
> girls in an area?
The old-fashioned way works pretty good. I think it was Ann Landers
who suggested the quarter method of birth control.
> While I can't
> say much for the three girls (ages 13-15) who he did this to and their
> chances of making much more out of their lives than pretty consistant
> poverty, this kid is still out there in the dating scene.
If these girls are age 13-15, however, he can, and should be, charged
with statutory rape, but then what should the girls be charged with
for having sex with an under-aged boy?
fred();
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189.36 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | nothing's going to bring him back | Fri Sep 01 1995 12:53 | 16 |
| 16 is the age of consent in this state, with an adjustment made for the
ages of the people involved. Generally if the kids are less than 5
years apart in age, there isn't a crime, and enforcement of statutory
rape laws is only invoked for high-profile cases (AKA Reynolds in
Illinois) where the one person is an "adult" in years. In this state
it then becomes sexual assault on a child by a person in a position of
trust.
I have some creative ideas about what to do with this boy who is
continuing to have unprotected sex, but they don't fit in with my
pro-choice position. I personally think a job-core situation with any
stipend sent to his kids might not be a bad idea. He certainly isn't
living up to the manly standards of setting a good example for his
children, and it is unlikely that he will without serious intervention.
meg
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189.37 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Fri Sep 01 1995 13:27 | 6 |
| re .36
yeah, but....nobody has a right to force their moral values on anybody
else (right?). And so far, nobody's said anything about forceable rape.
fred();
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189.38 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | nothing's going to bring him back | Fri Sep 01 1995 16:16 | 12 |
| Fred,
I think at minimum this "man" should be required to take time with each
of his children, and also to have some sort of job so he can contribute
however little to their upbringing. As it is you and I are paying and
will continue to pay for his inability to understand cause and effect
when it comes to sex, and his de-facto abandonment of his children.
But I consider lack of emotional, physical, and spiritual support by a
parent to be child abuse.
meg
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189.39 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Fri Sep 01 1995 16:52 | 16 |
|
re .38
And what about these "women"? Should they be required to get a job
and help contribute however little to the support of "their" children?
Or maybe we could save a few bucks by giving custody of the kids
to the father (now there's some birth control for you). That would
mean that the children could also grow up knowing their half-siblings.
It would also mean only one adult on welfare and the other three or
four working instead of four on welfare and the father playing
hide and seek.
But, hey, who are we to force our morals on someone else?
fred( 8} );
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189.40 | | 43GMC::KEITH | Dr. Deuce | Fri Sep 01 1995 17:04 | 5 |
| In some cases in those 'bad old days'wasn't the punishment the US
Army...?
Steve
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189.41 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Fri Sep 01 1995 17:15 | 12 |
|
re .40
> In some cases in those 'bad old days'wasn't the punishment the US
> Army...?
In these days of enlightenment, I think we should give the kids to
the father and send the mommies to the military. After all women
_want_ to be int he military these days.....don't they?
fred();
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189.42 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | nothing's going to bring him back | Fri Sep 01 1995 17:55 | 17 |
| And while this little creep is still making more babies, who is going
to be watching the ones he has? It isn't like the three he has for
sure, have taught him a damned thing.
Hell yes, I believe these girls should be in school and also working in
daycare to help other women of older years and out of school make it
in outside jobs. the last time I checked children under the age of 16
can't work more than a few hours a week. However collectively they
could maybe find a way to keep each other supported.
I don't believe someone who fathers at least three children in the same
year is exactly what I would consider a fit parent. However, if we
follow the standard of a century ago, he is better than the evyl women
who must have led him astray and he should have the virtual triplets.
However, I wouldn't let him pawn them off on his mother either.
meg
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189.43 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Fri Sep 01 1995 18:10 | 14 |
|
Well, meg, there _is_ a considerable movement afoot to penilize
"deadbeat" dads. It is a felony to fail to pay child support these
days. However, any attempt to reform welfare for these pour little
victim women will get one called a "Nazi" these days. Go figure.
> And while this little creep is still making more babies, who is going
> to be watching the ones he has? It isn't like the three he has for
> sure, have taught him a damned thing.
The same people who are going to prevent those pour little victim women
from making more babies.
fred();
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189.44 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Fri Sep 01 1995 18:37 | 17 |
|
meg,
If the guy is a creep, then what are the women? What do you call
a woman who would willingly have sex with a guy who has already
fathered three children that he won't/can't provide for? After all,
as I said, nobody's said anything about forcible rape in this situation.
We have one guy engaging in irresponsible sex, and three, maybe four,
women engaging in irresponsible sex. So wherein lies the room for the
most improvement.
So, just what _is_ the difference in a man who won't work and support
the children he "fathers" and a woman who won't work and support
the children she "mothers"?
fred();
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189.45 | Meg kept badgering me to reply here. | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri Sep 01 1995 21:27 | 11 |
| Considering that fathering an out-of-wedlock child is prima facie evidence
of out-of-wedlock sexual intercourse, which remains a crime in many states,
there already are penalties available for offenders, which could be made
worse.
Being required to support your offspring seems perfectly reasonable to me.
Being jailed if you refuse to do so also seems reasonable, much more
reasonable than forced mutilation.
/john
|