More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Marian Wright Edelman

GET UPDATES FROM Marian Wright Edelman

A Parent, Community, and National Audit: It's Time for Adults to Shape up and Close the Hypocrisy Gap

Posted: 10/07/11 07:01 PM ET

I am often asked, what's wrong with our children? Children having children. Children killing themselves or others. Children dropping out of school and roaming streets alone or in gangs. Children addicted to tobacco and alcohol, drinking and drugging themselves to escape reality. Children being locked up in jails with adult criminal mentors, bubbling with rage and crushed by depression.

Adults are what's wrong with children. Parents letting children raise themselves or be raised by television or the internet. Children being shaped by peers instead of parents, grandparents, and kin. Children seeing adults be violent to each other and marketing, glorifying and tolerating violence to them and preaching what we don't practice. Adults telling children to be honest while lying and cheating and to be healthy while selling them junk food that undermines their health.

I believe it is time for adults of every race and income group to break our silence about the pervasive breakdown of moral, family, and community values, to place our children first in our lives, and to struggle to model the behavior we want our children to learn. We don't have a child and youth problem in America; we have a profound adult problem as children do what they see adults doing in our personal, professional, and public lives. What must our children think as they see the craven greed of too many corporate leaders pillaging their corporations and the homes, pensions and life blood of workers, seniors, and stockholders? What must they think as they see too many political leaders repeatedly say one thing and do another? And what dare they believe when they see some religious leaders enjoined by faith to protect them abuse them instead? It's time to close the adult hypocrisy gap.

I urge every parent and adult to conduct a personal audit to examine whether we are contributing to the crisis so many of our children face or to the solutions they urgently need. And if we are not a part of the solution, we are a part of the problem and need to do better. Our children don't need or expect us to be perfect but they do need and expect us to be honest, to admit and correct our mistakes, and to share our struggles about the meanings and responsibilities of faith, parenthood, citizenship, and life. Before we can pull up the moral weeds of violence, materialism, and greed in our society that are strangling our children, we must pull up the moral weeds in our own backyards. So many children are confused about what is right and wrong because so many adults talk right and do wrong in our personal, professional, and public lives.


  • If we are not supporting a child we brought into the world as a father or mother with attention, time, love, discipline, money, and the teaching of values, then we are a part of the problem rather than the solution to the family breakdown today leaving so many children at risk.

  • If we are abusing tobacco, alcohol, cocaine, or other drugs while telling our children not to, then we are a part of the problem rather than the solution in our overly addicted society.

  • If we have guns in our home and rely on them to feel safe and powerful, and don't stand up to those who market guns to our children, or glamorize violence as fun, entertaining, and normal, then we are part of the problem rather than the solution to the escalating war of American against American, family member against family member, that is tearing us apart.

  • If we tell our daughters not to engage in premature and irresponsible sex, and not to have children before they are prepared to parent and support them, and do not tell our sons the same thing, we are a part of the problem rather than the solution to teen pregnancy and out-of-wedlock births so many decry.

  • If we profess to be people of faith but send rather than take our children to religious services, and believe that the gospels, prophets, Koran, or whatever religious beliefs we hold, pertain only to one-day worship but not to Monday through Sunday home, professional, and political life, then we are a part of the problem rather than the solution to the moral famine in our land today.

  • If we tell, snicker, or wink at racial, gender, religious, or ethnic jokes or engage in or acquiesce in any practices intended to diminish rather than enhance other human beings, then we are contributing to the proliferating voices of racial and ethnic division and intolerance staining our land again.

  • If we think being American is about how much we can get rather than about how much we can give and share to help all our children get a healthy, fair, and safe start in life, then we are a part of the problem rather than the solution.

  • If we think it's somebody else's responsibility to teach our children values, respect, good manners, work and health habits, then we are a part of the problem rather than the solution to bullying and incivility rife today.

  • If we or our organizations are spending more money on alcohol and entertainment than on scholarships, books, tutoring, rites of passage, and mentoring programs for youths, then we are a part of the problem rather than the solution to ensuring positive alternatives and hope for children.

  • If we'd rather complain about politicians than walk to the voting booths, school board meetings, political and community meetings to demand support for our children, then we are a part of the problem rather than the solution to voter apathy today.

  • If our children of any color think that being smart and studying hard is acting White rather than acting Black or Brown and don't know about the many great Black and Brown as well as White achievers who overcame every obstacle to succeed, then we are a part of the problem rather than a part of the solution to racial stereotyping.

  • If we are not voting and holding political leaders accountable for investing relative pennies in quality early Head Start and pounds in the military budget, and for cutting effective child and family nutrition programs while protecting government welfare for rich farmers and corporate executives, then we are a part of the problem rather than the solution to the growing gap between rich and poor.

  • If we think corrupt and unaccountable Black and Brown leaders who neglect our children and communities are better than corrupt and unaccountable White leaders who neglect our children and communities or vice versa, then we are a part of the problem rather than the solution to voter cynicism and apathy.

  • And if we think we have ours and don't owe any time or money or effort to help those left behind, then we are a part of the problem rather than the solution to the fraying social fabric that threatens all Americans and the very dream that is America.

 

Follow Marian Wright Edelman on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ChildDefender

 
 
  • Comments
  • 28
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »  (2 total)
11:49 PM on 10/10/2011
@Mrian Wright Adelman: Parents have been squeezed out of the loop. Even the PTA now pays mere lip service to the parents even though they are the most important part of the education equation. If they really care for the education of their children and they definitely do, they need to get back in the loop by starting a parents' listserve to keep themselves abreast of education issues. Through this listserve parents can also share innovative ideas they come across. And there are many such ideas around which never reach the school system or the school administrators. For instance, students learn better if they are given integrated knowledge not the fragmented kind schools are now doling out.
Also keep in mind that much of what goes in schools is controlled by the businesses who sell lesson plans and lab kits etc to schools. They certainly do not want parents to get even a whiff of what they are selling to schools in the name of education. See: http://www.iibbt.com/whatails.htm.
Lately more businesses of this nature have mushroomed.

Regarding integrative education which shortens learning with better retention see: www.centerforintegrativelearning.org. Science also becomes more learn-able when integrated see: http://news.medill.northwestern.edu/chicago/news.aspx?id=149281. If parents knew about this kind of educational programs, they will be a force behind bringing meaningful changes in the educational system.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dede Eagleburger
well behaved women rarely make History...
10:29 AM on 10/11/2011
Maybe it's like that where you live. Not everywhere.
01:16 AM on 10/10/2011
It's always easy to point out what's wrong, and what should be done....but never really having an answer that will work in todays society.
12:17 PM on 10/09/2011
Excellent. Too many parents hold children to one standard and themselves and other adults to another (lower) one. I've heard parents bark orders at their children, then reprimand the children for not using "please" and "thank you".
10:47 AM on 10/11/2011
While I'm not making excuses for adults being rude to children, there is a time and a place for making a request of your child, and a time and a place for telling them what needs to be done (which may sound like barking to bystanders).
04:46 PM on 10/08/2011
Ms. Edelman,

The last time I read your article about children being our greatest asset, I awarded you a "Pulitzer," to the extent that a plain Jane citizen could. I like this article every bit as much. I think you are brilliant and I have never read someone who seems to have the same beliefs that I have. Perhaps, one day, I might get the chance to meet you.

Absolutely great article that I believe is right on target!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Eric Mann
Do you want to be on the opposite side of Progress
03:32 PM on 10/08/2011
Just a few caveats I would add:
If we are not teaching our children about safe sex, we are contributing to the teenage pregnancy problem.

If we are not teaching our children that being good for goodness' sake, regardless of their religious beliefs, we are contributing to the problem. (this is in response to the obviously religious slant these some of these suggestions have)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fusero
08:31 PM on 10/08/2011
Amen, brother. Thanks for these salient points. Fanned.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dorothy Moody
Secular Humanist, Independent, Goofball
03:45 AM on 10/09/2011
Thank you, Eric. Those were the points that bothered me as well. One does not need to have faith in a deity to have morals.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PeaceVoyager
02:14 PM on 10/08/2011
~ clapping
I am a father to 2 girls (one teenage) and cannot add a single thing to your list,

I have a simple motto that they know off by heart ( I just give them the ''look'' for them to speak it )
'' We do the things we have to do before we do the things that we want to do ''

Respect for others before expecting it from them
Giving onto others before thinking about what they may receive
Work hard and the fruits of labor will come
A hour of study before an hour of play\tv
Skin color means nothing ( we are all equal )

I also have another saying that I don't have to use to often ;
'' I brought you into this world and I can take you out ''.
11:38 PM on 10/09/2011
I just stood up and whistled! I am a father of two boys, one 21 yrs and the other 21 months, and your sayings are applicable to both at any age. Well said!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nix28
Embracing honesty and its ugly step-sister, truth.
01:33 PM on 10/08/2011
This was profound and much needed! Thank you and I will definitely be sharing!
photo
ssnt
Asknotwhatyorcountrycando4uaskwhtucando4yorcountry
01:10 PM on 10/08/2011
The fact that there are only 12 comments here hours after the article was posted says it all.
11:38 PM on 10/09/2011
Exactly!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
inmyhumbleopinion
Vote third party.
12:22 PM on 10/08/2011
Words to live by.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LHoney
REINSTATE GLASS STEAGALL!!!
10:08 AM on 10/08/2011
"If you bungle raising your children, I don't think whatever else you do matters very much. "

Jackie Kennedy
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
09:09 AM on 10/08/2011
Marian Wright Edelman wrote a book titled "The Measure of Our Success", that is very similar to this article but this time she writing it to adults instead, and it needs to be said.

I wish all politicians would read the "If the Child Is Safe" chapter of that book, because if they had responded to it as they should have back when this book was published, we would not have so many problems today. Our country would be so much better off, and so would most children. I'm looking at my copy now and rereading what I marked many years ago: "Welfare queens can't hold a candle to corporate kings in raiding the public purse". And, of course, we all know now the words "welfare queens" was coined as a political ploy which has been thoroughly debunked, but corporate kings is very much true--especially after those bailouts.

Politicians talk a lot about how precious children are and how they don't want to burden them with future debt, but then don't invest--and, in fact, cut--money that could help children have better lives now and in the future. As the Holy Bible tells us, where we put our treasure (money) is where our hearts (priorities) are, and neither is with the children of our country.
12:20 AM on 10/08/2011
Look in your own house Ms. Edelman, your son, Jonah, exposed his moral compass with his actions in Illinois.
Your words: "If we'd rather complain about politicians than walk to the voting booths, school board meetings, political and community meetings to demand support for our children, then we are a part of the problem rather than the solution to voter apathy today."

Jonah's words, "We hired 11 lobbyists, including four of the absolute best insiders, and seven of the best minority lobbyists – preventing the unions from hiring them.
Speaker Madigan had changed allegiance … we had clear political capability to potentially jam this proposal down (the unions’) throats"

THAT'S WHY PEOPLE DON'T VOTE ---> YOUR FAMILY'S ACTIONS.

Good job raising that boy.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
09:08 AM on 10/08/2011
Her son is an adult and responsible for his own words. He was probably taught differently, but children don't always follow the values of their parents. He demonstrated how dishonest he can be, but that doesn't mean his mother taught him to be that way or approves of what he did. I wish she would come out and specifically say she disagrees with his tactics, but he is her son and she probably doesn't want to embarrass him. I hope she doesn't agree with what he did, but I haven't seen anything she's written addressing it so we don't know if she does or not.
Pauline Jaing
Artist, worker, mother
11:09 PM on 10/07/2011
I placed my child absolutely first in my life, BUT NO ONE ELSE DID!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dede Eagleburger
well behaved women rarely make History...
10:31 AM on 10/11/2011
Could you be a bit more clear?
Chironomid
To read is human; to comprehend divine
09:47 PM on 10/07/2011
I drink, smoke weed, and am not above bending the rules to get what I want.

I do train every day, eat right, and weigh less than I did when I was 15. I vote every election, and do trash pickups and free drainage engineering for my neighborhood.

What to do with a person like me, huh?
06:42 PM on 10/08/2011
Are you an adult? Ok then understand the limitations we place on adults are different from those we place 15 year olds. You have to be responsible for teaching the next generation the most likely path to success. Every child doing whatever they want is not a solution to our problems. They need guidance because they may not accurately calcualte the long term consequences of their actions. For example a weed habit makes most people lazy as hell. While enjoying your high and contemplating the deeper things in the universe your life slips by without your notice because you assume you are heading towards some higher plain where everything will work itself out or are apart of some sacred pact to expose the flaws in our social structure. The truth is that young person need to be out doing stuff and too most chronic young smokers don't. It's not to say the smoking caused it but it amplified their inner apathy which is the most debilitating problem young people have today. They simply stop caring about the things they need to care about in order to become high functioning adults.

So no there is nothing wrong with you but their might be something wrong with teaching kids they are likely to accomplish what you did doing what you are doing.
Chironomid
To read is human; to comprehend divine
09:56 PM on 10/08/2011
Thanks for the well-stated advice; I was mostly just playing.

I'll be 49 in a couple weeks. I never let kids see me misbehave; I won't even drink a single beer in the presence of minors for the very reasons you mention. Peace..
11:47 PM on 10/09/2011
You can try the self help guru that can do an Indian sweat lodge--oops, forgot he is on trial.
09:43 PM on 10/07/2011
Amen! Your wisdom shines through your words.