Last month, President Joe Biden spoke at the National and State Teacher of the Year Celebration to honor the award recipient – high school teacher Rebekah Peterson. He praised her by stating, “Rebekah put a teacher’s creed into words when she said, ‘There is no such thing as someone else’s child.’ … Our nation’s children are all our children.”
With the declaration above, Biden basically suggests our children belong to the state. It was a message that did not go over well on social media, where users began a relentless attack on him.
Among the numerous biting comments Biden received was one from contributing editor Stephen Miller of The Spectator. He wrote, “Please run on that one,” adding sarcastically, “‘Our nation’s children are all ou[r] children and that’s why your daughter goes by Ralph now and ze/zer/xtey pronouns. Sorry.'”
There is one leader who would wholeheartedly endorse Biden’s declaration – North Korea’s Kim Jung-un. In a sad commentary on the state approach taken by the Hermit Kingdom, its children receive the worst of two worlds. Kim seeks to control their minds ideologically by teaching them socialism and hero-worship of their leadership while doing little to nurture their bodies. This is evidenced by the fact that more than a quarter of all children in the country are stunted due to chronic malnutrition.
Comparing the populations of North and South Korea provides a telling impact of a state like the former – which is committed to communism and mind control of its children – and the latter, which is committed to capitalism and parental control. The different approaches to child raising is reflected in height and weight norms. Those of North Koreans have steadily declined over the past several decades, while those of South Koreans have steadily increased. As a result, today, the average South Korean stands 5 inches taller and approximately 20 pounds heavier than his counterpart to the North. But that is what happens when a state focuses on ensuring the longevity and welfare of its leadership over that of its children.
Amen Jill’s own daughter wrote a book, which they have little to do with her since. The way Joe treats little girls the touchy feely things and what he says to them in front of cameras gives you the creeps and probably Hunter followed in all his Dads quirks they are both creepy.