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April 2020 General Conference - Global Pandemic Edition

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  • Additional information here:

    Are these scholars also wrong?

    https://futureofchildren.princeton.e...ll_journal.pdf

    Whereas most scholars now agree that children raised by two biological parents in a stable marriage do better than children in other family forms across a wide range of outcomes, there is less consensus about why.

    Comment


    • Originally posted by CardiacCoug View Post
      This kind of stuff is pretty offensive to parents of adopted kids and just wrong.

      Every parent of both biological and adopted kids will tell you there isn’t any difference at all in how well you parent them or how you feel about them.

      Who on earth would think that two gay men who adopt kids wouldn’t be fantastic Dads and probably way better than most hetero dads at attending school functions and making sure the kids have their hair combed/styled and cool clothes etc? This idea that anybody is a better parent to “biological” kids is total bullshit!
      I'm pro-LGBT and pro-Proclamation. I think it's great that as a religion we stress the importance of the nuclear family and the necessity of the roles of mother and father and talk about the meaning in life that marriage and family bring and the model of the Proclamation family as an ideal. I also think we could better incorporate the people that don't fit into that model (gay, divorced, never married, unable to have children, etc) without making them feel bad.

      Comment


      • Originally posted by swampfrog View Post
        I think my intent is being misread, so I'll cite data. Tell me if they have it wrong and where data shows that. This is the US Depart of Health and Human Services report to Congress in 2010. There are diagrams showing the relative levels included in the link but not quoted here.

        https://www.acf.hhs.gov/sites/defaul...df_jan2010.pdf

        Section 5.3.1 Differences in the Incidence of Harm Standard Maltreatmen tRelated to Family Structure and Living Arrangement

















        Did the author's of the report get it wrong?
        I suspect these numbers are simply the tip of the iceberg. If that's the case, what would cause cases to be unreported? Are they the same for each of the groups compared? Or are there different dynamics at play that make it easier to report in one group than another, or dynamics that make it more difficult to report?

        Comment


        • Originally posted by swampfrog View Post
          I think my intent is being misread, so I'll cite data. Tell me if they have it wrong and where data shows that. This is the US Depart of Health and Human Services report to Congress in 2010. There are diagrams showing the relative levels included in the link but not quoted here.

          https://www.acf.hhs.gov/sites/defaul...df_jan2010.pdf

          Section 5.3.1 Differences in the Incidence of Harm Standard Maltreatmen tRelated to Family Structure and Living Arrangement

















          Did the author's of the report get it wrong?
          Oh brother.

          Sure there are averages and statistics.

          But you realize there are biological parents who literally throw their kids in the garbage right?

          And then adoptive parents (straight and gay) who raise those non-biological kids in a fantastic way.

          No church should be expressing any preference for “biological” parent-child relationships. That is some un-Christian bullshit.

          Comment


          • Originally posted by Bo Diddley View Post
            I suspect these numbers are simply the tip of the iceberg. If that's the case, what would cause cases to be unreported? Are they the same for each of the groups compared? Or are there different dynamics at play that make it easier to report in one group than another, or dynamics that make it more difficult to report?
            All of those may be possible, but it assumes that the people putting together the report did not control for those variables. Maybe it's not that type of report. Which still leaves me with the group at Princeton (and I've seen other reports of the same) that across multiple categories children of biological parents do better. They suggest that this is the consensus view (most scholars).

            Comment


            • Originally posted by swampfrog View Post
              All of those may be possible, but it assumes that the people putting together the report did not control for those variables. Maybe it's not that type of report. Which still leaves me with the group at Princeton (and I've seen other reports of the same) that across multiple categories children of biological parents do better. They suggest that this is the consensus view (most scholars).
              Right, I'm sure people have controlled, etc. But I never truly trust the numbers until I've done my own deep dive, and they've answered my concerns

              Comment


              • Originally posted by CardiacCoug View Post
                Oh brother.

                Sure there are averages and statistics.

                But you realize there are biological parents who literally throw their kids in the garbage right?

                And then adoptive parents (straight and gay) who raise those non-biological kids in a fantastic way.

                No church should be expressing any preference for “biological” parent-child relationships. That is some un-Christian bullshit.
                Are there adoptive/step parents who do the same or similar? At what rates do they occur? (I expect a lot less since at least in the US perspective adoptive parents are heavily screened).

                I don't have a lot of (or any) skin in this game. I follow quite a few evolutionary academics and this has come up multiple times. I've tried to follow their sources.

                Sourced from here citing research.

                First, research clearly demonstrates that family structure matters for children, and the family structure that helps children the most is a family headed by two biological parents in a low-conflict marriage. – Kristin Anderson Moore, Susan M. Jekielek and Carol Emig, “Marriage from a Child’s Perspective: How Does Family Structure Affect Children, and What Can We Do about It?”, Child Trends Research Brief, June 2002
                The fact that both adults have a biological connection to the child would increase the likelihood that the parents would identify with the child and be willing to sacrifice for that child and it would reduce the likelihood that either parent would abuse the child. – Sara McLanahan, Growing up with a Single Parent: What Hurts, What Helps
                Most scholars now agree that children raised by two biological parents in a stable marriage do better than children in other family forms across a wide range of outcomes.” –Brookings Institute
                How should a society, community, church etc. express this? Ignore it? If this data is true, that the best possible outcome for the maximum number of children is to be raised in a stable marriage by two biological parents, shouldn't society be organized in a way such that these relationships maximize? How is that done? Is preference the wrong word, how about recognizing and ideal instead?

                Can that simultaneously be done while also recognizing that those children in obviously distressing circumstances be moved to adopted families that are a vast improvement?
                Last edited by swampfrog; 04-10-2020, 08:24 AM.

                Comment


                • remember, as jesus said, "if a decision is not more likely than not to lead to a median outcome, it is not my plan"
                  Te Occidere Possunt Sed Te Edere Non Possunt Nefas Est.

                  Comment


                  • The goal would obviously be to move as many children as possible from higher risk to lower risk family environments (from bad to good). Assuming that is managed, what attempt is made to progress good, better, best? From what I can tell, the evolutionary theory that selection molds all reproductive species to activities that preserve their particular genetic spelling is pretty solid at this point (as shown by studies of child outcomes). In what ways (if any) should communities leverage such tendencies? Is there harm in acknowledging this nature?

                    I appreciate the feedback as I try to work through some of these thoughts. I have been seeing these types of studies for a while and trying to understand what impact they have in historical communities. Further wondering how this information should or could be incorporated into societal institutions such as religions.

                    Holding up any model as an ideal for human behavior immediately has unavoidable judgmental repercussions. Doesn't matter what the domain is that the ideal is placed. That can be tricky to navigate. Removal of all ideals doesn't seem tenable either because humans need goals.

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by old_gregg View Post
                      remember, as jesus said, "if a decision is not more likely than not to lead to a median outcome, it is not my plan"
                      That is my second favorite Jesus quote of all time.
                      As I lead this army, make room for mistakes and depression
                      --Kendrick Lamar

                      Comment


                      • It seems funny to me to play the averages when discussing family settings. And I think you have to be careful about it so as to not exclude people and have them determine that since, say, they're divorced and won't ever be a family with both biological parents then they are less than another family and can't hope to achieve what a married couple with all bio kids can achieve. Or if there's a single parent that is single due to having an abusive spouse, for example, that their kids are now screwed because they'll never have that nuclear family with both bio parents at home.

                        With that in mind - the proclamation does OK to essentially say that kids benefit most from having both bio parents in a home free from abuses and neglect. But I think there's got to be some built in exceptions that revolve more around what are the expectations as far as rearing those kids. Regardless of being a nuclear family with both bio parents, a blended family from divorced parents, a single parent who got that way a variety of ways, an adoptive parent, or even a gay parent/couple. How we treat each other, how we treat children, how we act in the role of a parent really isn't respective of what our family looks like.

                        And the more accepting we can be of the various kinds of families while espousing an ideal of how we treat each other and treat children will, I think, make the greatest difference. Single parents need to know that they can be "acceptable" before God and church leaders. As do blended families due to remarriage. If you're telling them the ideal is both bio families in the home - and they already know they'll never have that - then you've got some of them believing or feeling like they'll never belong from the beginning. So I think you have to be careful with that.

                        I have no idea how they want to word that. I just think if you cut people out by espousing an ideal that so many can't reach (look around your ward - how many are single parents? How many have divorced? How many have remarried?), then you're setting them up to feel less than.

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by Eddie View Post
                          It seems funny to me to play the averages when discussing family settings. And I think you have to be careful about it so as to not exclude people and have them determine that since, say, they're divorced and won't ever be a family with both biological parents then they are less than another family and can't hope to achieve what a married couple with all bio kids can achieve. Or if there's a single parent that is single due to having an abusive spouse, for example, that their kids are now screwed because they'll never have that nuclear family with both bio parents at home.

                          With that in mind - the proclamation does OK to essentially say that kids benefit most from having both bio parents in a home free from abuses and neglect. But I think there's got to be some built in exceptions that revolve more around what are the expectations as far as rearing those kids. Regardless of being a nuclear family with both bio parents, a blended family from divorced parents, a single parent who got that way a variety of ways, an adoptive parent, or even a gay parent/couple. How we treat each other, how we treat children, how we act in the role of a parent really isn't respective of what our family looks like.

                          And the more accepting we can be of the various kinds of families while espousing an ideal of how we treat each other and treat children will, I think, make the greatest difference. Single parents need to know that they can be "acceptable" before God and church leaders. As do blended families due to remarriage. If you're telling them the ideal is both bio families in the home - and they already know they'll never have that - then you've got some of them believing or feeling like they'll never belong from the beginning. So I think you have to be careful with that.

                          I have no idea how they want to word that. I just think if you cut people out by espousing an ideal that so many can't reach (look around your ward - how many are single parents? How many have divorced? How many have remarried?), then you're setting them up to feel less than.
                          Love it. We need to do more in this respect.

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by Eddie View Post
                            It seems funny to me to play the averages when discussing family settings. And I think you have to be careful about it so as to not exclude people and have them determine that since, say, they're divorced and won't ever be a family with both biological parents then they are less than another family and can't hope to achieve what a married couple with all bio kids can achieve. Or if there's a single parent that is single due to having an abusive spouse, for example, that their kids are now screwed because they'll never have that nuclear family with both bio parents at home.

                            With that in mind - the proclamation does OK to essentially say that kids benefit most from having both bio parents in a home free from abuses and neglect. But I think there's got to be some built in exceptions that revolve more around what are the expectations as far as rearing those kids. Regardless of being a nuclear family with both bio parents, a blended family from divorced parents, a single parent who got that way a variety of ways, an adoptive parent, or even a gay parent/couple. How we treat each other, how we treat children, how we act in the role of a parent really isn't respective of what our family looks like.

                            And the more accepting we can be of the various kinds of families while espousing an ideal of how we treat each other and treat children will, I think, make the greatest difference. Single parents need to know that they can be "acceptable" before God and church leaders. As do blended families due to remarriage. If you're telling them the ideal is both bio families in the home - and they already know they'll never have that - then you've got some of them believing or feeling like they'll never belong from the beginning. So I think you have to be careful with that.
                            I'll probably come back to this in the future, but this is still navigation in the same territory. I need to do some more reading and thinking. But this is the essential problem. Raising any kind of ideal--"...kids benefit most from having both bio parents in a home free from abuses and neglect" immediately creates a standard that other family structures cannot meet. That is not the same thing as saying they don't have value. It does however create a value hierarchy that at least insinuates less good--on average.

                            Human nature results in dysfunctional family environments. A stable family is better than an a dysfunctional one regardless of structure. That makes alternative structures required, needed, and valued. Yet, they still aren't the ideal. It's one of the problems with striving for perfection, it often comes in conflict with great--"the best is the enemy of the good" (attributed to Voltaire).

                            My problem with efforts to minimize the biological framing is that I accept the evolutionary model as valid and true. If it's valid, all creatures in the animal kingdom universally (as far as I understand) prefer their own offspring to those of others. That preference is not a conscious one, it's instinctual, built by selection pressures over millions of years. One (if the The) theme of Dawkin's book, "The Selfish Gene" is essentially that a gene benefits over generations from favoring individuals who are likely to bear its copies. That can be leveraged in a family structure, and it's going to occur whether we like it or not and it cannot be suppressed. Do we structure societies/communities/cultures around that or not? That's the question I'm essentially trying it answer. How much emphasis should a culture impose on, or even acknowledge that truth? To co-opt the common phrase from business management, how much do we lean into that?

                            Originally posted by Eddie View Post
                            I have no idea how they want to word that. I just think if you cut people out by espousing an ideal that so many can't reach (look around your ward - how many are single parents? How many have divorced? How many have remarried?), then you're setting them up to feel less than.
                            Let's take this out of the context of relationships. Athletics. Intelligence. Personality traits. School class size. Humans are confronted with ideals that are not achievable by some set of the population in a variety of different contexts for a variety of reasons. This leaves individuals or groups feeling left out or less than the ideal. That's a problem. Is the solution to the throw out the ideal? Or is family settings so different than all of those that the same reasoning doesn't apply? Where are they similar? Where are they different?

                            I still don't know what to do with this data, incidence rate per 1,000. Note this is the estimated incidence rate. Table c-10 from the previously linked congressional report.

                            FAMILY STRUCTURE/LIVING ARRANGEMENT = MARRIED PARENTS, BOTH BIOLOGICAL

                            ALL MALTREATED 15.760
                            ALL ABUSED 4.322
                            PHYSICALLY ABUSED 2.488
                            SEXUALLY ABUSED 0.685
                            EMOTIONALLY ABUSED 1.800
                            ALL NEGLECTED 12.844
                            PHYSICALLY NEGLECTED 6.472
                            EMOTIONALLY NEGLECTED 6.736
                            EDUCATIONALLY NEGLECTED 1.927
                            SEVERITY, FATAL 0.021
                            SEVERITY, SERIOUS 2.760
                            SEVERITY, MODERATE 5.961
                            SEVERITY, INFERRED 0.879
                            SEVERITY, ENDANGERED 6.140

                            FAMILY STRUCTURE/LIVING ARRANGEMENT = OTHER MARRIED PARENTS

                            ALL MALTREATED 51.459
                            ALL ABUSED 25.299
                            PHYSICALLY ABUSED 15.374
                            SEXUALLY ABUSED 5.547
                            EMOTIONALLY ABUSED 8.605
                            ALL NEGLECTED 33.964
                            PHYSICALLY NEGLECTED 15.068
                            EMOTIONALLY NEGLECTED 21.559
                            EDUCATIONALLY NEGLECTED 3.567
                            SEVERITY, FATAL 0.056
                            SEVERITY, SERIOUS 9.477
                            SEVERITY, MODERATE 17.042
                            SEVERITY, INFERRED 5.282
                            SEVERITY, ENDANGERED 19.602

                            There isn't a single category of abuse where married biological parents have higher rates than other married parents. So while biological parents do indeed mistreat their children, sometimes horribly, the rate of occurrence for every other family structure is worse, including fatalities. The most powerful policy making organization in the country asks for and receives this data. They want to know about all the maltreatment of children in the country, divided up multiple ways, family structure being one of them.

                            Just taking one data point, that's roughly 5 times more likely to be abused (physical, sexual, emotional). Honest question, what does one do with that?

                            Comment


                            • Bump.
                              "Friendship is the grand fundamental principle of Mormonism" - Joseph Smith Jr.

                              Comment


                              • I hope we don’t have to do a special fast for the pandemic again.


                                Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
                                "Discipleship is not a spectator sport. We cannot expect to experience the blessing of faith by standing inactive on the sidelines any more than we can experience the benefits of health by sitting on a sofa watching sporting events on television and giving advice to the athletes. And yet for some, “spectator discipleship” is a preferred if not primary way of worshipping." -Pres. Uchtdorf

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