Tuesday, August 8, 2006

A Mother's Love For and Her Responsibilty to Her Son

Great post here from the Leatherneck M31 here re: a mother's responsibility to her son. I personally believe that too many mothers, albeit with the best of intentions, and too much of society (radical feminists, I am looking in your direction) think that boys and girls are only different in terms of plumbing and should be treated as such. This is nonsense. Mothers should love their sons, but also should be especially careful not to cling too tightly to their sons (beginning around the age of 5) to avoid unhealthy attachments, a form of emotional incest if you will. Make sure they don't break any laws or hurt anyone, but let the boys be boys so they can turn into the kind of men who will make us all proud and who will be able to stand up and man up to the threats we as a country and civilization already and soon shall face. As they say, read the whole thing.

"First, regardless of his age, stop mollycodding your son right now. I mean it. Stop treating him like a louder version of your daughter, your niece, your neighbor's girls, or yourself. He is not a more rambunctious form of girl which you hope will settle down, damnit he is a male, an American male. He, your little boy, will in part be the difference in whether we survive as a culture, as a nation.

Thirty years of feminist indoctrination damn near ruined our country...we're now in a rebuilding program. The barbarians are at the gate.

Get him the hell out of soccer with its fake injuries and little red cards and its European influence. Your kid... YOUR Kid... needs a bloody nose. Best place to get one is the boxing ring or the gridiron. See to it. ...

Stop the damned TV, video games and the junk food... stop the text messaging crap and give him chores to do at home; he should have been doing them anyway. You don't carry a grocery bag, you don't make his rack, you don't pick up after him. He does his own damned laundry and his gets a job outside the home... tomorrow, if not tonight. ...

You tell him you're counting on him and that the family counts on him. It's different coming from you as opposed to his Dad or his coach. Men will do whatever it takes to protect women, home and hearth, the weak. It's you job to tell him this is his legacy, his duty... it is his honor, his country.

Set him apart. Tell him he is different from his soft, weak, gender-confused friends. The last thing he needs is hair products, expensive clothes and an emphasis on some piece of crap, left-wing college where he will waste his time and your money. ...

Put him in positions that prove to him that he can do more, go farther, work harder, be stronger than he ever thought. He would rather disappoint his father than you... use that to your advantage... and his."