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142 lines
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142 lines
7.4 KiB
Plaintext
The following is a letter written by Dr. James Dobson, Ph.D., concerning
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Dan Quayle's infamous "Murphy Brown" speech. Dr. Dobson is the founder of
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Focus on The Family, a Christian group which attempts to help Americans
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discover the significance of a strong family in our society. Read the
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letter, and then see if Quayle's speech was so funny.
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June 1992
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Dear Friends,
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...Historically, we in North America have been indifferent to our
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government's family policies. But that has changed radically since 1980.
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Here in the United States, where the Presidential election is still nearly
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five months away, the family and its moral upderpinnings are consistently
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in the headlines. All of the candidates for the White House have been
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addressing this concern in one way or another these past few weeks.
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However, none of their pronouncements created much of a splash. None, that
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is, until Vice President Dan Quayle's speech on May 20 in which he
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criticized the Murphy Brown television show for glamorizing unwed
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motherhood. That's when the media went into its familiar feeding frenzy.
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And what a feast it was.
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David Letterman and a host of standup comedians tried to make Quayle
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look like the world's biggest fool. Johnny Carson thanked the V.P.
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mockingly for making his last week on the Tonight Show so easy. Barbara
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Reynolds, columnist for USA Today, wrote with surprising venom: "Murphy
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Brown or Dan Quayle? Which one is the most wretched excuse for a role
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model in this country?" Ellen Snortland snorted in the L.A. Times,
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"Traditionally family values is a right-wing euphemism for `a white
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family where Daddy's the boss.'... Our country's government is not
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pro-motherhood or even pro-parenthood. It's anit-choice, pro-married
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and in favor of 'traditional motherhood' because the guys in government
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want the old fairy-tale days back."
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CNN's Bernard Shaw, NBC's Andrea Mitchell and ABC's Peter Jennings
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each took swipes at the Vice President. The New York Daily News carried
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the headline "QUAYLE TO MURPHY BROWN: YOU TRAMP!" In Philadelphia it
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was, "MURPHY HAS A BABY...QUAYLE HAS A COW." Matt Groening, the creator
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of Fox's "The Simpsons," said, "You don't have to make up jokes about
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Dan Quayle anymore. The real thing is too funny."
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Well just how funny was the real thing? Casual observers may not know
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that the Vice President's comment about Murphy Brown represented a single
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sentence in a seven-page speech that went largely unreported. Perhaps it
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would be enlightening to read the context in which the remark was made. I
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invite you to evaluate the following excerpts, which Hollywood and the
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media considered to be the most stupid speech in recent memory. Judge
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for yourself:
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________________________________________________________________________
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...right now, the failure of our families is hurting America deeply.
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When families fall, society falls. The anarchy and lack of structure in
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our families inner cities are testament to how quickly civilization falls
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apart when the family foundation cracks. Children need love and
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discipline. The need mothers and fathers. A welfare check is not a
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husband. The state is not a father. It is from parents that children
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come to understand values and themselves as men and women, mothers and
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fathers.
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And for those concerned about children growing up in poverty, we
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should know this: marriage is probably the best anti-poverty program of
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all. Among families headed by married couples today, there is a poverty
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rate of 5.7 percent. But 33.4 percent of families headed by a single
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mother are in poverty today.
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Nature abhors a vacuum. Where there are no mature, responsible
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men around to teach boys how to become good men, gangs serve in their
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place. In fact, gangs have become a surrogate family for much of a
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generation of inner-city boys. I recently visited with some former
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gang members in Albuquerque, New Mexico. In a private meeting, they
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told me why the had joined gangs. These teenage boys said that gangs
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gave them a sense of security. The made them feel wanted, and useful.
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They got support from their friends. And they said, "It was like having
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a family." "Like family" --unfortunately, that says it all.
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The system perpetuates itself as these young men father children
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whom they have no intention of caring for, by women whose welfare checks
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support them. Teenage girls, mired in the same hopelessness, lack
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sufficient motive to say no to this trap.
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Answers to our problems won't be easy.
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We can start by dismantling a welfare system that encourages
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dependency and subsidizes broken families. We can attach conditions
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-- such as school attendance, or work--to welfare. We can limit the
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time a recipient gets benefits. We can stop penalizing marriage for
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welfare mothers. We can enforce child support payment.
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Ultimately, however, marriage is a moral issue that requires cultural
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concensus, and the use of social sanctions. Bearing babies irresponsibly
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is simply, wrong. Failure to support children one has fathered is wrong.
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We must be unequivocal about this.
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It doesn't help matters when prime time TV has Murphy Brown -- a
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character who supposedly epitomizes today's intelligent, highly paid,
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professional woman -- mocking the importance of a father, by bearing a
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child alone, and calling just another "lifestyle choice."
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I know it is not fashionable to talk about moral values, but we need
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to do it. Even though our cultural leaders in Hollywood, network TV
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and national newspapers routinely jeer at them, I think that most of us in
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this room know that some things are good, and other things are wrong. Now
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it's time to make the discussion public.
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It's time to talk again about family, hard work, integrity, and
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personal responsibility. We cannot be embarrassed out of our belief that
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two parents, married to each other, are better in most cases for children
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than one. That honest work is better than hand-outs --or crime. That we
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are our brothers' keepers. That it's worth making an effort, even when
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rewards aren't immediate.
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So I think the time has come to renew our public commitment to
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Judeo-Christian values -- in our churches and synagogues, our civic
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organizations and our schools. We are, as our children recite each
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morning "one nation under God." That's a useful framework for
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acknowledging a duty and an authority higher than our own pleasures and
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for personal ambitions.
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_________________________________________________________________________
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Well that's the substance of Dan Quayle's infamous speech of May 20.
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Pretty hilarious stuff, huh? With such funny things coming out of
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Washington, comedians need not make up any more jokes about the Vice
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President. Carson, Letterman and Arsenio had their monologues prepared
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for them. But in the midst of the frivolity, did you notice who didn't
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laugh?
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Virtually every poll taken during the firestorm revealed that the
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majority of the people agreed with Mr. Quayle. Isn't that interesting?
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Hollywood and the press fired every big gun in their mighty arsenal from
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ridicule to sarcasm yet the public came out solidly against them! The
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Rocky Mountain News recorded over 14,000 calls for Quayle and only 5,000
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against. ... On TV station KCBS in Los Angeles 62 percent agreed Murphy
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Brown set a bad example. What this public response indicates is just how
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dramatically out of touch the entertainment industry and the media elite
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are with the American people.
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...
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Sincerely,
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James C. Dobson, Ph.D.
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President |