Author Topic: Destroying The Traditional Family Is Leftist By PHYLLIS SCHLAFLY  (Read 326 times)

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http://news.investors.com/ibd-editorials-on-the-right/081914-713895-marx-and-engels-despised-traditional-family-as-essential-to-capitalism.htm?p=full

Destroying The Traditional Family Is Leftist

By PHYLLIS SCHLAFLY
 Posted 06:37 PM ET

Political junkies will remember how former Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels was being groomed to run for president in 2012 before he made his foolish statement that the next president should "call a truce on the so-called social issues."

Americans do not want a leader who is unable or unwilling to articulate and lead on important social issues.

Four years after Daniels' misstep, many fail to learn that lesson. The New York Times has proclaimed the "libertarian moment" has arrived, by which it seems to mean libertarian ideas about marriage and the family.

We hear people say the libertarian view is to "get the government out of marriage." But where did that slogan come from? There is simply no basis for that notion in the works of classic libertarian writers.

As a Harvard graduate student, I was present for what could be considered the beginning of libertarian thought in America. It was the first American speech by Friedrich Hayek following the worldwide success of "The Road to Serfdom," which had been read by millions of Americans through its publication in the Reader's Digest.

The thesis of Hayek's great book is that government efforts to redistribute the benefits and burdens of economic activity inevitably involve a loss of individual freedoms, which could lead to a totalitarian state, as happened in Germany and Russia.

Now, 70 years later, Hayek's basic idea is part of most Republican stump speeches and forms the basis for Republicans' adamant opposition to ObamaCare.

But nothing in Hayek's works or those of his fellow Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises questioned the value or necessity of civil marriage in a free society. There is nothing to suggest that regulation of marriage was inconsistent with individual freedom.

Mises' American disciple, the radical libertarian Murray Rothbard, proposed selling off lighthouses to private owners; the structures would then be supported by voluntary contributions from passing ships. Rothbard wanted to privatize nearly everything, but he never suggested privatizing marriage.

Another influential libertarian was Russian-born Ayn Rand, whose novels depict a titanic struggle between the creative geniuses who need maximum freedom to produce vs. the "looters" and "second handers" who try to regulate them and share their wealth. Ayn Rand attacked Christianity and other conventional beliefs, but never questioned the value and necessity of civil marriage defined by law.

If nothing in Hayek, Mises, Rothbard or Rand supports the abolition, redefinition or privatization of marriage, where did those ideas come from? The answer is that they came from writers on the left — most significantly from the Communist Manifesto written by Karl Marx and published in 1848.

To be sure, Marx did not originate the notion of undermining the family, which had been introduced by the utopian socialists Charles Fourier and Robert Owen, but he eagerly endorsed and propagated it. After Marx's death, Friedrich Engels wrote a book elaborating on Marx's anti-family ideas.

A major part of the Communist Manifesto is its unrelenting attack on the "bourgeois family," which Marx believed was responsible for the inequality he despised. If communism was to succeed, he wrote, the bourgeois family had to be done away with.

The bourgeois family is the Marxist term for what modern liberals call the "Ozzie and Harriet" or "nuclear" family. It means a husband and wife who are legally married, using the husband's name, with the husband as provider and authority figure, and the wife as nurturing homemaker, and both parents raising and educating their own children in the household.

Marx hated the bourgeois family, not only because it provided the means of transmission and accumulation of private property, but also because the family controlled the formation and education of children.

Marx wanted to break the family so that children could be raised and educated communally, free from patriarchal ties and religious beliefs.

With all that history, it's incredible that we're now seeing the worst of Marxist ideas, the deconstruction of the family, presented in the name of libertarianism and even conservatism.

Besides marriage, Marx's ideas on education have influenced too many education reformers on the right, including, unfortunately, the Bush family's obsession with remaking public education. George H.W. Bush wanted to be the "education president"; George W. Bush wanted to "leave no child behind"; and now Jeb Bush wants to impose Common Core.

As conservatives seek new leadership for 2016 and beyond, let's insist on candidates who recognize that marriage and the nuclear family are the essential foundation of a free and prosperous society.


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Re: Destroying The Traditional Family Is Leftist By PHYLLIS SCHLAFLY
« Reply #1 on: August 19, 2014, 11:02:45 pm »
Quote
As conservatives seek new leadership for 2016 and beyond, let's insist on candidates who recognize that marriage and the nuclear family are the essential foundation of a free and prosperous society.
If the American people don't recognize that fact, and it is clearly illustrated by the declining rate of marriage, the stubbornly high rate of divorce, the wholescale acceptance of homosexuality, and anecdotally by my difficulties in dating... then what good is it?
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