Anonymous wrote:Yes but what does the word salad of:
"We disrupt the Western-prescribed nuclear family structure requirement by supporting each other as extended families and “villages” that collectively care for one another, especially our children, to the degree that mothers, parents, and children are comfortable."
in the OP actual mean in a practical sense? Is there some policy goal that could work towards this? If so, what is it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is the nuclear family a Western idea?
In many parts of the world nuclear+extended family is the norm.
I don’t know of any part where single parenting is the norm and preferred family type unit. It’s generally looked on as a hardship worldwide.
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Raised by a single mother
I think pretty much in all cultures and societies globally the basic family structure is always the two parents with children. The difference is that more traditional societies also have extended larger families of aunts and uncles and cousins forming an extended support network. This was also much more common in the US till probably the 50s. Actually, it still is among may people. The weakening of the extended family network seems to go hand in hand with rapid industralization and modernization because people become more global and move around much more often. To use as an example, my mother grew up in your standard whitebread American family and through the 1960s she lived in a neighborhood along with her grandparents, several sets of aunts and uncles and cousins and second cousins and their families. Nowadays, everyone is scattered across the country.
I lived in the Middle East for years and was always impressed by the extremely strong extended family network among Middle Easterners (note the emphasis on family, which is not akin to a collection of strangers or complicated partnerships among adults forming a "village" for the children) and I do think many people in the US would benefit from having that kind of extended family network as there's a lot of loneliness in the modern West. But the BLM attack on the nuclear family is clearly meant to try to shift blame away from personal responsibility and to pretend that the high out of wedlock pregnancy rates isn't part of the problem especially for poorer African Americans. While I initially had sympathy for BLM at the onset, it's pretty clear the movement has morphed to blaming all cultural, economic and social problems on everything else to avoid accepting any element of personal responsibility as part of the progress needed.
But why? It does not need to be that way. Women often stay with abusive men because the structure supports it. That is not better or healthier for children. Yet, that is what is expected so that is what is done. There needs to be an acceptance that often people need to divorce.
Also, single people should not feel pressured into getting married and marrying the wrong person because having a child on their own is wrong and the cultural structure of the family is betrayed when a woman/man has a child without a spouse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BLM isn't about disrupting families. It's about creating structures that recognize and support different kinds of families. They're disrupting a system that doesn't support all families equally. Lots of people are not living in a 2 parent, married nuclear family. Families that aren't nuclear families deserve support and recognition.
No one is saying that people can't have 2 parent, married nuclear families if they want them and can make it work.
It literally says “we DISRUPT the western prescribed nuclear family...”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is the nuclear family a Western idea?
In many parts of the world nuclear+extended family is the norm.
I don’t know of any part where single parenting is the norm and preferred family type unit. It’s generally looked on as a hardship worldwide.
-
Raised by a single mother
I think pretty much in all cultures and societies globally the basic family structure is always the two parents with children. The difference is that more traditional societies also have extended larger families of aunts and uncles and cousins forming an extended support network. This was also much more common in the US till probably the 50s. Actually, it still is among may people. The weakening of the extended family network seems to go hand in hand with rapid industralization and modernization because people become more global and move around much more often. To use as an example, my mother grew up in your standard whitebread American family and through the 1960s she lived in a neighborhood along with her grandparents, several sets of aunts and uncles and cousins and second cousins and their families. Nowadays, everyone is scattered across the country.
I lived in the Middle East for years and was always impressed by the extremely strong extended family network among Middle Easterners (note the emphasis on family, which is not akin to a collection of strangers or complicated partnerships among adults forming a "village" for the children) and I do think many people in the US would benefit from having that kind of extended family network as there's a lot of loneliness in the modern West. But the BLM attack on the nuclear family is clearly meant to try to shift blame away from personal responsibility and to pretend that the high out of wedlock pregnancy rates isn't part of the problem especially for poorer African Americans. While I initially had sympathy for BLM at the onset, it's pretty clear the movement has morphed to blaming all cultural, economic and social problems on everything else to avoid accepting any element of personal responsibility as part of the progress needed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is the nuclear family a Western idea?
In many parts of the world nuclear+extended family is the norm.
I don’t know of any part where single parenting is the norm and preferred family type unit. It’s generally looked on as a hardship worldwide.
-
Raised by a single mother
I think pretty much in all cultures and societies globally the basic family structure is always the two parents with children. The difference is that more traditional societies also have extended larger families of aunts and uncles and cousins forming an extended support network. This was also much more common in the US till probably the 50s. Actually, it still is among may people. The weakening of the extended family network seems to go hand in hand with rapid industralization and modernization because people become more global and move around much more often. To use as an example, my mother grew up in your standard whitebread American family and through the 1960s she lived in a neighborhood along with her grandparents, several sets of aunts and uncles and cousins and second cousins and their families. Nowadays, everyone is scattered across the country.
I lived in the Middle East for years and was always impressed by the extremely strong extended family network among Middle Easterners (note the emphasis on family, which is not akin to a collection of strangers or complicated partnerships among adults forming a "village" for the children) and I do think many people in the US would benefit from having that kind of extended family network as there's a lot of loneliness in the modern West. But the BLM attack on the nuclear family is clearly meant to try to shift blame away from personal responsibility and to pretend that the high out of wedlock pregnancy rates isn't part of the problem especially for poorer African Americans. While I initially had sympathy for BLM at the onset, it's pretty clear the movement has morphed to blaming all cultural, economic and social problems on everything else to avoid accepting any element of personal responsibility as part of the progress needed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is the nuclear family a Western idea?
In many parts of the world nuclear+extended family is the norm.
I don’t know of any part where single parenting is the norm and preferred family type unit. It’s generally looked on as a hardship worldwide.
-
Raised by a single mother
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BLM isn't about disrupting families. It's about creating structures that recognize and support different kinds of families. They're disrupting a system that doesn't support all families equally. Lots of people are not living in a 2 parent, married nuclear family. Families that aren't nuclear families deserve support and recognition.
No one is saying that people can't have 2 parent, married nuclear families if they want them and can make it work.
It literally says “we DISRUPT the western prescribed nuclear family...”
It says " we disrupt the western prescribed nuclear family REQUIREMENT."
You need to read more carefully.
Where and how is this required?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BLM isn't about disrupting families. It's about creating structures that recognize and support different kinds of families. They're disrupting a system that doesn't support all families equally. Lots of people are not living in a 2 parent, married nuclear family. Families that aren't nuclear families deserve support and recognition.
No one is saying that people can't have 2 parent, married nuclear families if they want them and can make it work.
It literally says “we DISRUPT the western prescribed nuclear family...”
It says " we disrupt the western prescribed nuclear family REQUIREMENT."
You need to read more carefully.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What does this mean? Why does the nuclear family need to be disrupted?
“We disrupt the Western-prescribed nuclear family structure requirement by supporting each other as extended families and “villages” that collectively care for one another, especially our children, to the degree that mothers, parents, and children are comfortable.”
https://tennesseestar.com/2020/06/29/black-lives-matter-plan-to-disrupt-the-nuclear-family-and-dismantle-cisgender-privilege-gains-support-in-corporate-america/
An excuse for the lack of responsibility.
This: it is a push back against the observation that 70-some-odd percent of black kids are born out of wedlock.
Anonymous wrote:Is the nuclear family a Western idea?