The Personalist Project
http://www.thepersonalistproject.org/home/comments/should_we_redistribute_the_children
Accessed on September 25, 2023 - 12:56:52
When I was seven, my parents, my little sister, and I joined a cult which later made headlines for all kinds of bizzare and criminal conduct.
We only lasted two days. There were red flags, but my parents, brand-new Christians, mistook some of them for radical, early-Church-style discipleship. (Also, the classic signs of cults were not so well publicized then as they are now.)
Still, there was one thing they couldn’t swallow: the part about sending my little sister and me away to be “educated” in another city. So after two days, we were done.
You can read the whole story of our family’s conversion in my mother’s hilarious chapter of this book.
Getting ahold of the children as early as possible is a favorite tactic of cults, as well as other totalitarian systems. Persuade the parents to delegate their authority, early communists reasoned, and there’s no longer an excuse for the institution of marriage to interfere with your plans. The collective IS the family. No more pesky “mediating institutions.”
This kind of thinking has always been notoriously unpopular in America.
When Hillary Clinton announced back in 1996 that it took a village to raise a child, it didn’t go over well. As someone pointed out at the time, within the traditional African culture where the proverb originated, the village was the tribe—that is to say, the (extended) family.
More recently—just last year—Melissa Harris-Perry of MSNBC raised a small ruckus by opining that the children belong to “the collective.”
Last week, there was another minor brouhaha when one Common Core advocate was heard to utter, “the children belong to all of us” (though he really just seemed to mean that academic standards should be national because children tend to move from state to state).
More barefacedly, the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child urged the Catholic Church to jettison some core teachings, including (ironically enough) protection of the unborn—“for the sake of the children.” The Committee seemed to take an oddly parental interest in those children.
Other cases showing an unseemly eagerness to remove certain minors from their homes have gotten press here and there, but no great outcry has arisen. A tiny segment of the population gets incensed; but most people don’t hear about it at all. At least, that’s my impression. We’re getting used to the idea that children don’t necessarily “belong” to their biological parents.
Why is that? I can think of three reasons:
Friendly, smiling people, hard workers, doting on their kids, and chatting amiably about their court dates, their anger management, their restraining orders, their tangled family trees, their days when the kids get to see their daddies.
Read the whole thing here.
For lots of people, the court, not the biological bond, is what determines the fate of the children already, anyway. That’s the default authority.
You have a biological bond with this child? So what? So does every deadbeat dad.
And even if some adults have closer biological links than others—well, is an adoptive mother any less loving, just because biology's not involved? Shouldn’t an abusive or absentee “father” really be called a sperm donor? Doesn’t parenthood have more to do with accepted responsibility and loving care than with the vagaries of genetics? How did we come to attach such importance to blood, anyway?
These kinds of questions leave well-meaning people vulnerable to the mainstreaming of the "redistribution" of children. Some of the best answers I've found are in Rabbi Gilles Bernheim, whose First Things article I've written about here and here.
If you want to know what's so special about nature, sexual complementarity, and the child's place in the chain of generations, you'll want to read the whole article.
My parents’ natural instincts and supernatural openness to grace prevented me from growing up in a cult instead of a family. But we seem to be doing everything we can to discourage both natural affection and supernatural faith. The "Children of God" were out to appropriate our money and our familial loyalty and overrule our sexual taboos. Those goals are not all that different from those of some politicians I could mention.
The problem isn't a new one.
The only question is whether our powers of resistence are up to snuff.