One aspect of the talk I find disturbing is the repeated insistence that any deviation from this "role" is somehow a failing. (If the women who "know" are the ones who are devoted entirely to pumping out kids, dusting, watering the plants, baking cookings, and scrubbing toilets, then doesn't that therefore mean that anyone who *doesn't* do these things is "not in the know," or "stupid", or "a failure"?)
Could you quote the portions of the talk that make mention of these judgments? President Hinkley, in a pamphlet he authored some 20 years ago, said that the man is to be "home centered", not career centered, and President McKay, speaking to both males and females, said that "no success can compensate for failure in the home". How then, given that, according to Church teaching, both parents should be home and not world centered, would you define male failure in the home as compared to female failure?
This part of the talk is also disturbing:
Quote:
They allow less media in their homes, less distraction, less activity that draws their children away from their home.
This seems to be saying that TBM mothers should smother their children and prevent them from fully experiencing the world: no TV (unless it is KBYU or the like); no movies (except Church-sanctioned ones); no visiting friends (unless they are LDS); etc. It is a disquieting, hive-like mentality that Sis. Beck seems to be encouraging women to cultivate.
Could you show us the inferential process of thought that allowed you to come to this conclusion based upon the statement provided?
I"d let my kids watch
The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad or
North by Northwest, anytime. At a certain age, I'd let them watch
Dracula Has Risen From the Grave and
Night of the Living Dead.
I wouldn't let them watch
Porky's, Sex in the City,
Eyes Wide Shut, any Tarantino film, the vast majority of recent (last 10 to 16 years) horror films (especially the nihilstic, gratuitous "splatter" films) (or, probably ninety percent of what Hollywood produces today). I strictly monitored what my step sons could listen to. They could have Heavy Metal and hard rock, but with strict limitations, which applied to Rap and other genres as well.
No harm in that.
The face of sin today often wears the mask of tolerance.
- Thomas S. Monson