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Liberals
love the sin and hate the sinner
By Star Parker
Coverage by the mainstream media
of the Larry Craig scandal confirms again that liberals
love the sin and hate the sinner. They've got both
the Idaho senator and the conservative values that
he has supported in their crosshairs.
Perhaps it's relevant to take a moment and recall
that the need for biblical guidance comes from the
proclivity to sin. You don't need a map if you're
hardwired to know where you're going.
But, for those on the left, a map isn't necessary
because it doesn't matter where we are going. For
them, a man going astray is proof that having a
destination, and rules for getting there, is hypocrisy.
The problem is not the fallen man but having rules
to begin with.
Typical is Newsweek's Jonathan Alter, who writes
with ironic sanctimony about GOP claims to moral
superiority. Alter can hardly contain his glee at
the prospect that the Craig scandal will undermine
the family-values agenda of conservative Republicans.
He goes on, with great haste, to write its obituary.
"In the long term, though, the end of the family-values
agenda may be a blessing in disguise for the GOP.
It has tied its fortunes too closely to evangelical
Christians ..." But what does Craig's personal
behavior have to do with the validity and relevance
of traditional values?
Might we recall a basic rule of logic that points
to the fallacy of the ad hominem argument? The issue
is the substance and truth of the argument and not
the person making it.
Let's consider the relevance of traditional values
as a practical matter and see where the most damaging
hypocrisy lies. Democratic politicians, who now
are quietly luxuriating in the Craig scandal and
Republican Party woes, will tell us that what they're
about is fairness, income gaps, two Americas and
the poor.
Now suppose that the family values that they are
so anxious to usher out the door are key to addressing
these very issues that Democrats claim to be their
concern. In fact, they are. The Census Bureau has
just released its latest data on poverty in America.
The intimate connection between family structure
and poverty is undeniable. Five percent of homes
headed by married couples are poor. Over 35 percent
of homes, seven times as many, headed by single
mothers are poor.
Data, as reported by Douglas Besharov of the American
Enterprise Institute, show that, in 2005, the average
income for all American families with children under
age 18 was $56,793. For those households headed
by a married couple, the average income was $71,010.
For those households headed by single women, the
average income was $26,705.
The most healthy and prosperous American families
are those in which traditional values are intact.
In an article in the latest issue of Commentary
Magazine, Lawrence Mead, a professor of politics
at New York University and author of seven books
on poverty and welfare reform, surveys thinking
over the last 50 years about the causes of poverty
and concludes: "Although impediments to working
may still affect some people, poverty is overwhelmingly
a result of dysfunctional patterns of life. Families
are poor in America in 2007 typically because unmarried
parents have children and then do not work regularly
to support them. ... It has become difficult to
avoid the conclusion that serious poverty in America
is rooted in the culture of the poor."
It's not news that poverty is disproportionately
high among blacks. At 25 percent, the incidence
of black poverty is double the national average.
Corresponding with this are disproportionately high
black out-of-wedlock births and homes headed by
single women.
When Daniel Moynihan wrote his famous report in
1965 identifying the warning signs of the breakdown
of the black family, black out-of-wedlock births
were a third of what they are today.
Do family values matter? You bet they do. They may
be a matter of principle for conservative Republicans.
But they are a matter of life and death to America's
poor and particularly to America's poor blacks.
Whatever Larry Craig was doing in a men's room in
the Minneapolis airport has little to do with the
relevance of these truths and their importance in
our country today. Democrats and the left may enjoy
exploiting Craig's misfortunes and using this incident
to try and undermine the traditional-values agenda
that he supported for 20 years in the U.S. Senate.
But by so doing, they hurt this country and the
very communities that they claim to want to help.
So, then, where does the most damaging hypocrisy
really lie?
Star Parker is a regular commentator on CNN, MSNBC,
and FOX News as well as author of White Ghetto:
How Middle Class America Reflects Inner City Decay.
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