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More Parenting,
Less Crime
By Ben
Boychuk and Matthew Robinson
CNS Commentary
10 May,
2000
Is government-run day care the next great weapon in the
fight against crime? You might think that if you read a deceptive
new report embraced by Hillary Clinton at the White House last
week.
Without "quality educational child care," the report
says, at-risk kids are more likely to grow up to be violent
offenders. The report is a compilation of studies about children in
and out of government-funded day care programs in North Carolina and
Chicago. It was issued by Fight Crime: Invest In Kids, described as
"a 700-member bipartisan coalition of police chiefs, sheriffs and
crime victims."
If you've ever wanted to be at the birth of
one of those liberal clich'es that purports to explain a complex
issue of life in the width of a bumper sticker, this is
it.
Every part of "quality educational child care" is meant
to sound nice, harmless, comforting. It is also meant to subtly
demonize the critic, drive media coverage, mobilize legions of
activists, and create a sense of crisis on Capitol Hill. In the
forked tongue of Beltway speak, "quality education child care" means
a taxpayer-funded array of government programs, bureaucracies,
agencies and panels to fix social problems.
Harvard
pediatrician T. Berry Brazelton, one of the report's authors, says:
"The most powerful weapons in our anti-crime arsenal are the
investments in children and youth that get them off to the right
start...."
The most powerful? Really? And just what's on the
investment wish list? Preschool care, the prevention of child abuse
and neglect, good schools and after-school programs, and
school-to-work and job training programs.
Notice, however,
there is no mention of the two-parent homes in that litany of
"investments." In fact, Fight Crime's coalition of police, social
scientists, and child-welfare activists take it for granted that the
two-parent home is no longer a viable goal worth striving for.
"Wishful thinking won't save lives. Good educational child care
will."
Can day care really reverse decades-old social
pathologies? Not likely. According to new data from National Center
for Health Statistics, one of three births are out of wedlock.
Despite the economic prosperity of the last decade and the increased
social spending that's part of the Great Society legacy,
illegitimacy is still our nation's most far-reaching
problem.
We know that boys with both parents in the home are
half as likely to be incarcerated, regardless of the parents' race,
income or education level. According to Cynthia Harper and Sara S.
McLanahan, each year a boy spends without a father in the home
increases the odds of his future incarceration by five percent. That
means a boy born to an unwed mother is 2.5 times more likely to end
up behind bars, as opposed to 1.5 times for a boy whose parents
split up when he was a teenager.
Most every problem -- from
teen sex and drugs to violence and gangs - is traceable to the
disintegration of the family.
The authors of the Fight Crime
study claim their solution isn't "about ideology or philosophy." Yet
these advocates of the therapeutic state are just cloaking more
programs, committees, and spending under the semblance of crime
fighting.
In fact, it really is about ideology -- an ideology
dressed up in numbers and cloaked in science, being pushed by the
same people who believe the people shouldn't be trusted with their
own money and own decisions. They want more government control over
retirement, medicine, education - so why not trust the government
stepping in for mom and dad?
Mrs. Clinton has put government
day-care at the top of her U.S. Senate campaign agenda. She's been
joined by Washington Democrats who to spend another $1 billion on
Head Start -- for a total of nearly $6 billion. They also promise
that another $2 billion in Childcare and Development Block Grants to
further subsidize child care will do what 35 years and $3 trillion
in welfare hasn't.
Washington do-gooders keep pressing for
government intervention earlier and earlier into the life of
children. Yet since the push for universal kindergarten, preschool,
or Head Start, not a shred of evidence has turned up to prove that
the cold, concrete walls of government care can replace the loving
arms and warm attention of a devoted mother and father.
Since
the 1960s we've learned that the Great Society was an extended war
on the role of the father in bringing up children. Let's not make
the 2000s and the sanctimonious phrase "quality education day care"
a synonym for a war against mom.
Ben Boychuk is Director
of Publications for the Claremont Institute. Matthew
Robinson is the 1999 Phillips Foundation Journalism Fellow and an
adjunct fellow of the Claremont Institute.
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