The Left on Fatherhood.gov
fatherhood.govThe earlier  post  about Fatherhood.gov is driving the left totally bonkers  and illuminating a lack of reading comprehension among some of its  intellectuals. The American Prospect claims,  "Stoll was angry that Obama's email and website took time out of his  Father's Day, but his evening post on the subject took time as well."  The New Republic writes, "I can see why Stoll was upset that the  government set off his email buzzer, and was further upset by a message  that could easily be interpreted as a federal demand that he leave his  children and look at a website immediately. What I don't understand is  why he proceeded to ignore his children further by composing a column on  Father's Day."
Folks, the post was stamped 9:10 p.m. The children were asleep  when I wrote it. Here's a parenting tip almost as good as the  government's instruction to filter your government-provided water and  mute the government-purchased television commercials: If you have two  three-year-olds in the house, put them to bed well before 9 o'clock at  night if you want to keep your sanity.
I tried to make this point using the comments function of the New  Republic's Web site but it required me to pay money to Larry Grafstein  and Marty Peretz before posting a comment. I have nothing but warm  feelings toward both Larry and Marty, but it seemed rather demanding of  them to ask me to pay them money to defend myself against the accusation  of ignoring my own children on Father's Day for an extended period of  time. All the more so because they would probably take the money I would  pay them for purchasing the right to comment and use it to pay the very  writer who is attacking me.
The New Republic cites my post as an example of "intense partisan  conflict." But the post also criticized the Bush administration  for its fatherhood initiative. How is that partisan, or intensely  partisan?
The American Prospect accuses me of "assuming that every family looks  and acts like his." That's nonsense. I explicitly acknowledged in my  post, "look, maybe there is a role for the government in helping people  be better fathers." But if the government is going to be dispensing  fatherhood advice, it should be giving good advice, not touting water  filters to families who may not need them or telling  dads to have their "little ones" go rummaging around in their  toolboxes. Bad advice discredits the whole project.
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