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In Which One Right-Wing Pundit Shows Us How Much She Loves Children

By comparing them to Saddam Hussein (or, excuse me, by comparing Saddam Hussein to them).

Sure, you say, but she’s talking about disturbed children. And, as Jennifer Roback Morse reminds us, disturbed children are a drain on families, and sometimes, the most compassionate thing to do is to make them wards of the state:

Protecting the innocent is the central purpose of all this. It is the purpose of the Iraqi court, currently trying Saddam. It was America’s purpose in removing him from power. It is even the purpose of parents of disturbed children.

These parents, of course, would like to heal their children. But that is not always possible. I have known families who had to give up an adopted child, for the protection of the other children in the family. They felt they had failed, I am sure. But they would be negligent toward their other children if they had acted otherwise. Likewise, allowing Saddam to continue his regime, or letting him go unpunished now, is not compassion toward anyone.

What? You mean that adoption doesn’t always work out perfectly? You mean that it’s totally acceptable for parents to “return” a kid they don’t want, so long as that kid wasn’t built from their own genes? And I thought the right-wing ideal was to kill Saddam. What does that mean for these disturbed children who apparently share so many of his attributes?

Disturbed children deflect responsibility for their actions by a lot of talking. As long as he is allowed to talk, the child thinks the issue is negotiable. Saddam has been disrupting the proceedings of the Iraqi court by running his mouth.

You can’t let these kids chatter. They will suck you into their craziness and excuse-making. Sooner or later, you will slip into some opening they can use to divert attention from what they’ve done.

Don’t go there. When the kids break a rule, my husband and I make a point of saying as little as possible.

Instead of talking, we deliver the consequence. It may take only a single word: “Sit.” We may bodily (and wordlessly) remove them from whatever they were doing. Sometimes, we’ll say, “go get me a dollar.” If they’ve offended another child, we may say, “thank you for volunteering to do Johnny’s chores.” (At which, Johnny breaks into a wide grin.)

Ah, so she has disturbed children of her own. I’ll bet they’re proud to be featured in her column this week!

Disturbed children are masters of manipulation. Saddam manipulated the whole world community. Should we be surprised that a sadistic, genocidal dictator is also a liar? Every time Saddam successfully conned Hans Blix, the world became a sicker place.

Speaking of being conned, don’t go there. Getting away with lies makes the person sicker. “If his lips are moving, he’s lying,” describes children we have known.

When they claim innocence, we don’t accuse them. They might run their mouths with denials. We don’t get into evidence and arguments. Instead, we say simply and truthfully: “I don’t believe you.” When they (inevitably) protest their innocence, we respond, “what do I think?” They say, “you think I did it.” Whatever else we might do to handle the situation, at least the child knows he hasn’t fooled us.

Boy would I love to have her as a parent — “If your lips are moving, I know you’re lying!” Christ.

But the bio is the best:

Jennifer Roback Morse, Ph.D., is the founder and chief visionary of Your Coach for the Culture Wars, a business devoted to supporting organizations that want to preserve their core values and achieve prosperity by taking a stand in the Culture Wars.

Core values, like returning adopted imperfect children as if they were last season’s sweater-vest. Like comparing Saddam Hussein to her own kids. Like winning the culture wars through child psychology. Yay!

Posted in War

12 thoughts on In Which One Right-Wing Pundit Shows Us How Much She Loves Children

  1. I’ve been reading Morse (and groaning) for years, but I have nothing but admiration for her chutzpah in creating a business to coach the right-wingers through the culture wars.

    Does she want to franchise, I wonder? Open a branch on the left? Could we get anyone to pay us?

  2. Sounds to me like she’s confusing disturbed children with gifted children. It ought to be possible to work out a giftedness index based on how many times per week a parent wants to strangle the child.

  3. Dear God. There’s no way in hell my mom and step-dad aren’t reading this psycho blankety blankhole. It explains almost perfectly what happened to me–my mom more or less dumped me on my dad (not that he was complaining; he could barely contain his glee when he found out he was getting me) when I was in high school because I was apparently unmanageable…try telling that to my dad–, and it explains fairly well what is now happening to my oldest sister, who is currently in the process of deciding where she wants to go to college. Even though she has consistently said that she either wants to go to school at the nearby large state university or a small liberal arts private school out of state, my mom and step-dad are convinced that she really wants to go school that I am currently attending and our father works at. Even though she has never shown more than a brief passing interest in my school (we have a great nursing school, and for about 5 minutes there she thought she wanted to be a nurse…then she remembered that nurses have to give shots), she overheard my step-dad saying to my mom something like “Well, I guess we’ll just have to let her go to [Robert’s] university,” as though they were resigned to the inevitable.

    All that to say: Thank you very much, Ms. Morse, for encouraging my mom in her paranoia and my step-dad in his insanely controlling ways. Everything you say here helps destroy parent-child relationships, you dishonest, self-righteous, emotionally abusive sack of shit.

  4. Sounds to me like she’s confusing disturbed children with gifted children.

    Sounds to me like most kids doing what they’re meant to do.

  5. Disturbed children deflect responsibility for their actions by a lot of talking. As long as he is allowed to talk, the child thinks the issue is negotiable.

    Fuck her for calling my kid disturbed.

  6. “…a business devoted to supporting organizations that want to […] achieve prosperity by taking a stand in the Culture Wars.”
    Impressive. She just admits that she teaches organizations how to make a quick buck from this supposed culture war.

  7. Agh, how horrible! I can’t believe she hasn’t been zinged by more people for 1) comparing *disturbed* children to Saddam and 2) for berating *disturbed* kids and their parents.

    It’s not funny at all because, here in Viriginia, when a child with a disability becomes a ward of the state, that child miraculously has access to better recources and care. Unfortunately, lots of parents here are having to make this decision.

  8. OK. She starts off with a bang by reminding readers that she described Saddam Hussein as an “attachment disordered individual” in the previous column.

    I seem to recall that making a diagnosis of a person you haven’t actually examined is unprofessional and unethical.

    Then there’s this nebulous “disturbed children” thing. WTF does that even mean? Is there a definition of it in the DSM-IV? Because sometimes it sounds like she’s describing kids who have been raised with few limits. Does that make them disturbed or simply indulged?

  9. I seem to recall that making a diagnosis of a person you haven’t actually examined is unprofessional and unethical.

    Yes, well. So is pathologizing childhood, but who’s even keeping track at this point?

  10. So Morse wants to teach her children that authority must be obeyed instanly, never questioned, and never negotiated with? Sounds like she’s trying to raise the next generation of facists to me.

    With any luck, her kids will get to pick her nursing home some day, though. She’ll probably be shocked and appalled when they tell her to shut up and be grateful for a spot in the lowest-bidder nursing home. After all she’s done for them too…

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