| LOS ANGELES TIMES
August 23, 2000
The Unseemly Politics of Stealing Innocence
By Dennis Prager
On the third day of the Democratic National Convention, five
children who appeared to be between 5 and 11 took the stage.
As this was not during prime media coverage time, only C-SPAN
broadcast it, thus only the delegates present and C-SPAN viewers
were aware of what happened.
Yet I believe that this children's presentation told more about
the Democratic Party and contemporary liberalism than anything
else said or done during the convention.
The children's topic was "When I Grow Up," and in
it an essential aspect of the Democratic Party was defined.
Here
is what they said:
The first child:
" When I grow up, I wonder if people will be more afraid to cry
than they are to die. Will I be able to see a rainbow
in a smog-filled sky? Will there be any trees alive? If not, how will the plants
survive? Will the Internet have a Web site at www.lifetime-air-supply.com?"
The
second child:
" When I grow up, if I got bored and had nothing to do, and me
and my son built a canoe, would water that used to be blue
be so polluted it would give us the flu? Will $1,000 be enough for
a shoe? Will I have to be like you, letting money make
every decision for everything that I do?"
The third child:
" When I grow up, will the existence of dolphins and whales just
be a story I tell, starting with 'Once upon a time,'
ending with 'Where did we fail?' Will adults be the hammer and nail? Will
schools be next door to jails? Will the truth be illegal
to sell?"
The fourth child:
" When I grow up, will anyone be on the news for anything besides
killing? Will those drug dealers still be standing
in front of my building? Will they ever learn how to love or stay afraid
of the feeling? Will TV and music videos still raise
America's children?"
The fifth child:
" When I grow up, will innocent kids still be wrongfully touched?
Will students go home from school in a bullet-proof
bus? What if children don't have anyone to trust? That would hurt me
so much. And I want to be happy when I grow up."
Using children to make political points is objectionable
in itself. These children, especially the younger ones,
should
have been home playing with toys, with other children or with their
parents, not spouting lines they could barely pronounce
placed
in their mouths by political activists.
But by far the worst aspect of this exercise--and the one
that is most revealing of the liberal Democratic
mind-set--is its
assault on children's innocence by instilling their
own fears, cynicism and pessimism in them.
When I saw the film "Titanic," I was amazed to see
that some parents had brought children to a film that not only
featured a topless scene but also depicted in absolute realism
the true story of a thousand people going to horrible deaths
in the ocean depths. Even I, a middle-aged adult, didn't sleep
well that night.
I raised this issue on my radio show, and to my amazement,
most callers disagreed with me and defended parents
who took their
children to see the film. Each one argued essentially
the same thing: This is the way real life is, and
it is our
duty to prepare
our children for real life.
This attitude pervades our culture.
Scaring children and depriving them of their innocence
has become a national project, led usually by those
with what
we identify
as a liberal political and social outlook. Hence
the innocence-depriving classes about sex and sexual
harassment
in increasingly
early grades and the scaring of young children by
drumming into
their young minds threats to their well-being such
as first-hand smoke,
second-hand smoke, strangers, potential molesters,
disappearing rain forests, global warming, guns,
caffeine, drugs and
alcohol.
Thus at last week's convention, a very receptive
audience gave an enthusiastic ovation to what a generation
ago
both Democrats
and Republicans would have regarded as virtual child
abuse--making young children speak about grave threats
to their futures.
To see a child stand before thousands of adults and
speak about the danger to her happiness posed by
the possibility
of being "wrongfully
touched" is unconscionable.
In the film "Life Is Beautiful," a Jewish father
played by Roberto Benigni devotes his life to protecting his
young son's
innocence in a Nazi concentration camp. This father's relentless
struggle to keep his son optimistic in the midst of genocide
is the whole power of the film.
Yet we live in an unprecedentedly safe, healthy and
free society, a society in which every one of those
five children
can expect
to live 90-plus years, and still many Americans feel
it necessary to frighten children, render them pessimistic
and deprive
them of their God-given innocence. And those who
think this way
now have a party to represent them. |