Double standard is twice as wrong Columnist...
Double standard is twice as wrong
Columnist Steve Smith, resident moralist, has made his decision:
Janet Jackson alone is responsible for disturbing public morality and
making it impossible for parents to teach their children to make
thoughtful, self-respecting moral choices.
Justin Timberlake is a guy, incapable of thinking with his head
when his hormones are in action, doing the guy thing; he doesn’t need
to ask whether ripping off a woman’s clothing sends the wrong message
to the girls and boys watching an athletic event. Would it matter to
him if he had daughters or sons? No, he’s a guy. Is he doing it for
the money, without regard for moral issues? No, he’s a guy.
But Janet Jackson is a woman. She has a duty to show girls that
women don’t have to take their clothes off, or let a man do it, to
get attention. Does she have daughters and sons? We aren’t told, so
it clearly doesn’t matter; all women should think first and only as
caretakers of children. Did she make money for doing it? Double shame
on her; she has enough money.
Do we want to teach girls that it’s always their fault, they must
be sending signals? Do we want to teach boys that they just follow
their nature? That it’s just a guy thing?
Let’s consider the possibility that Timberlake and Jackson both
made choices for which they are morally responsible, performed in a
way we find inappropriate and possibly disturbing to children
watching it. Parental outrage has made itself felt. Those who planned
the event have heard how the public felt about it, both the angry and
the indifferent.
We who are parents are responsible for raising children to make
thoughtful moral decisions, respectful of themselves and others. As
citizens, we are responsible for our own actions and for creating a
society, which protects the vulnerable from the powerful. In talking
over events with our children, we demonstrate our values and explain
them and hope to transmit them, but until we have perfected our
society, we can’t expect it to give our children the role models of
our choice.
Just like their parents, children make mistakes and suffer the
consequences, testing values in their actions. And as we respect and
teach independence and thoughtful consideration of moral choices, we
can expect that our children’s decisions will not always be ours. As
we do our best, they will do theirs, trying to live the moral life.
ANN HEINEY
Newport Beach
Candidate’s political career is marred
As we know, 70th Assembly District candidate Cristi Cristich lied
(sorry, but that is what happened) in a mailer concerning Rep. Chris
Cox. In a Daily Pilot interview on Feb. 11, Cristich “agreed to send
a correction (retraction/apology) to all voters who received the
mailer.” Her campaign stated “a correction letter would be mailed to
70th District voters.”
I’m waiting. It has now been more than a week and I haven’t
received any mailing from Cristich relative to her improper action
concerning the congressman.
Cristich started her “political career” leading the Republicans
for President Bill Clinton. It appears that she should end her career
now.
GEORGE COFFIN
Newport Beach
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