Posted on 04/30/2016 10:44:02 AM PDT by Daniel Clark
Mister Rogers: American icon or hate criminal?
by Daniel Clark
"Boys are boys from the beginning, and girls are girls right from the start." This bit of political heresy was brought to you by PBS. Or at least, it used to be.
Fred Rogers sang those lyrics frequently on Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, which aired from 1968 all the way until 2001, yet nobody ever seemed to find anything wrong with it. What small-minded bigots we all must have been. In this new, enlightened age of ours, you can't just go around saying that one's sex is an immutable fact of life. That would be "transphobic," if such a word existed.
Because the prefix "trans" means "across," the word "transphobic" must mean the irrational fear of crossing something, not opposition to the idea that any kind of person can become any other kind of person just by saying so. Then again, the enforcement of the definition of words is itself somethingist-or-other, for the very reason that it denies the possibility of a thing to become some other, completely different kind of thing. Being something you're not is now a civil right, after all.
Had Bill Clinton given his grand jury testimony a quarter-century later, he could have said, "it depends what the definition of the word 'is' identifies as," and everybody would have nodded along. The fluidity (to use a suddenly popular term) of the word "is" is nowadays taken for granted. Anybody who contends that it refers to a factual state of being is now considered to be the equivalent of a racist.
Mister Rogers' musical reign of terror did not stop at telling the children that they have no say in deciding whether to be boys or girls, however. He even had the gall to assert that "girls grow up to be mommies, and boys grow up to be daddies," as if he had a right to pigeonhole children into oppressive gender roles that, in Victorian times, might have been referred to as "norms." His expectation that girls were more likely than not to remain female and have children reflects the kind of bigotry that one might expect from someone who was himself the product of a society based on the outmoded theory of predetermined gender assignment.
What's most offensive about Mister Rogers' Neighborhood by today's standards is not simply its failure to acknowledge "gender fluidity"; its the broader philosophical proposition that reality and make-believe must remain segregated. When someone would knock on Mister Rogers' door, we knew it wasn't King Friday, because characters from the Neighborhood of Make-Believe could not cross over into Mister Rogers' Neighborhood. Mister Rogers, however, was free to invade the Neighborhood of Make-Believe with impunity. He never actually traveled there, mind you. He only watched the toy trolley disappear behind the wall and imagined himself to have been on board. The message to his impressionable viewers was that make-believe is okay, just as long as youre aware that you're only pretending. Well, wheres the justice in that?
The right to one's own reality is rooted in the 1992 Planned Parenthood v. Casey decision, in which the Supreme Court ruled, "At the heart of liberty is the right to define one's own concept of existence, of meaning, of the universe, and of the mystery of human life." The establishment of this as a legal precedent implies an additional right to have one's definitions of these things validated by others. If you dont want to be a parent, then you may decide that the unborn child you already have is really just a McNugget, and the law must agree with you. Likewise, if you're a man, but you feel more comfortable defining yourself as a woman, then the law must let you go into ladies' rest rooms.
There's no telling how many millions of Americans grew up being deprived of these fundamental liberty rights by Mister Rogers and his oppressive narratives. He even used to sing to children that "you can never go down the drain." For all he knew, there may have been children who would have found it liberating to go down the drain. If they wanted to define things in such a way as to make this possible, who was he to tell them no?
If Mister Rogers were alive today, perhaps he'd be put on trial for depriving children of their right to define the universe, and in particular for his hate crimes against gender fluidity. What could he possibly have to say in his defense? That he was merely telling the truth?
-- Daniel Clark is a writer from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He is the author and editor of a web publication called The Shinbone: The Frontier of the Free Press, where he also publishes a seasonal sports digest as The College Football Czar.
Oh jeez no this $hit again, it is never going to stop is it.
Yep. Mr. Rogers would be behind bars. Or at least his show would be cancelled and he’d have to go to sensitivity training. A scarlet “H” for homophobe tattooed on his head.
It as Clinton who made political corruption fashionable, and initiated the moral downfall of the USA.
Imagine what the world would be like today if Reagan had chosen a conservative for his VP.
This is what a bandwagon looks like...
Reagan needed GHWB in 1980; he didn't need him in 1984, and could have picked a successor like Jack Kemp or even the young Newt Gingrich. That he didn't simply proves the truth of Ecclesiastes 2:18-21, that you can produce great things, and then leave them to one who will destroy what you have done.
It was OK even on the liberal left to be a believing Presbyterian in those days. No more.
The guy was on PBS.
Who's to say that if he were alive today, he wouldn't follow the current liberal line?
Maybe Daniel Tiger's voice was so high-pitched for a reason.
The Bushes fooled a lot of people over the years and there are still people here who think G.W. is a conservative.
Well Said!
Networks will be required to photoshop in a third bathroom on the Mr Rogers set if they are going to run reruns.
Funny you should post those pictures of Eddie Murphy and his infamous skit of ‘Mr Robinson’s Neighborhood’, Murphy (who has remarkably cleaned up his act from his obscene days on (for example) his ‘Delirious’ Tour, told how Fred Rogers contacted him personally after his SNL skit and complimented him on his skills and ability, but asked him if he would please not do that skit again, that he would never want any children to possibly confuse Eddie’s character ‘Mr. Robinson’ with ‘Mr Rogers’, and Eddie Murphy almost choked up saying “it was Mr. ROGERS for Godssakes, calling ME!! How could I say no?!?”
Not only did he keep his promise to never do that skit again, he moved into a whole new genre of more family friendly films (the new ‘Dr. Doolittle’ for one), and I think that speaks well of him.
Delirious still cracks me up as much today as it did back then, but he wouldn’t have gotten away with most of that stuff today.
Dr. Savage said it years ago that Political Correctness would be the nations undoing.
Fred Rogers was an ordained Presbyterian minister. Yep, a Reverend.
No...the guy was a Presbyterian minister, for goodness’ sake. I don’t think he’d have gone with this transgender bullcrap. I really think I’ll see him someday in Heaven.
Because he is long since passed away, we’ll never know. Speculation really isn’t necessary.
Fred Rogers was waaaay ahead of the curve. Trolley was a trans.
I loved him. When people are truly transgender, it becomes evident in their early years. They use the bathroom of their gender comfort and no one is the wiser. This is a bunch of crap that Target (who is most likely having financial issues and attempting to gain attention) and politician (grasping at straws) are poorly attempting to make an issue of.
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