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Tuesday, June 9, 2015

"... the likely 2016 presidential candidate made the case that restoring the art of public humiliation could help prevent pregnancies 'out of wedlock.'" Ah, Jeb, you deserve some humiliation, too.

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COMMENTS:
*  ...  WOW.. Rather then shaming unwed mothers why not go after those who lie us into unnecessary wars costing our nation trillions of dollars and hundreds of thousands of lives? Profiles in LACK OF CHARACTER..
*  ... what might help lower the number is real sex education, but conservatives don't want that. What might also help is easy access to contraception, but conservatives are against that. Family planning clinics where education and contraception are readily available might help, but conservatives want them closed...... Conservatives love to complain about the predictable results of their own policies.
*  It is paradoxical that this sort of suggestion proves he himself is without shame.
*  Public shaming? Sounds like 1895 instead of 1995. Oh wait... it's Florida.
    *  It's not FL, it's BUSH. His kids are not saints, and none in his family is a saint. Just wait. It will all come out a little at a time.  And It all started with great-granddaddy Prescott Bush being buds with Adolf on the 1930s. Pictures and all are on google.
*   And they say Jeb is supposed to be the smart Bush. Like Romney, Jeb’s own mouth seems to be secretly working for the Democratic Party.
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Jeb Bush In 1995: Unwed Mothers Should Be Publicly Shamed
By Laura Bassett, June 9, 2015

Public shaming would be an effective way to regulate the “irresponsible behavior” of unwed mothers, misbehaving teenagers and welfare recipients, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush (R) argued in his 1995 book Profiles in Character.

In a chapter called "The Restoration of Shame,” the likely 2016 presidential candidate made the case that restoring the art of public humiliation could help prevent pregnancies “out of wedlock.”
One of the reasons more young women are giving birth out of wedlock and more young men are walking away from their paternal obligations is that there is no longer a stigma attached to this behavior, no reason to feel shame. Many of these young women and young men look around and see their friends engaged in the same irresponsible conduct. Their parents and neighbors have become ineffective at attaching some sense of ridicule to this behavior. There was a time when neighbors and communities would frown on out of wedlock births and when public condemnation was enough of a stimulus for one to be careful.
Bush points to Nathaniel Hawthorne's 1850 novel The Scarlet Letter, in which the main character is forced to wear a large red "A" for "adulterer" on her clothes to punish her for having an extramarital affair that produced a child, as an early model for his worldview. "Infamous shotgun weddings and Nathaniel Hawthorne's Scarlet Letter are reminders that public condemnation of irresponsible sexual behavior has strong historical roots,” Bush wrote.

As governor of Florida in 2001, Bush had the opportunity to test his theory on public shaming. He declined to veto a very controversial bill that required single mothers who did not know the identity of the father to publish their sexual histories in a newspaper before they could legally put their babies up for adoption. He later signed a repeal of the so-called "Scarlet Letter" law in 2003 after it was successfully challenged in court.

Bush's ideas about public shaming extended beyond unwed parents. He said American schools and the welfare system could use a healthy dose of shame as well. “For many, it is more shameful to work than to take public assistance -- that is how backward shame has become!” he wrote, adding that the juvenile criminal justice system also "seems to be lacking in humiliation."
In the context of present-day society we need to make kids feel shame before their friends rather than their family. The Miami Herald columnist Robert Steinback has a good idea. He suggests dressing these juveniles in frilly pink jumpsuits and making them sweep the streets of their own neighborhoods! Would these kids be so cavalier then?
It's worth pointing out that the kind of public shaming Bush described has come under fire recently in response to the growing trend of parents humiliating their children on social media to punish them. A 13-year-old girl committed suicide last month after her father posted a video of himself cutting off her long hair on YouTube because she had disobeyed him.

YouTube and social media, of course, did not exist when Bush wrote his book in 1995. But the former governor makes clear that "society needs to relearn the art of public and private disapproval and how to make those to engage in some undesirable behavior feel some sense of shame."

Bush did not respond to a request for comment.
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