Christian Concern has published details of its upcoming “One Man, One Woman” conference, to be held on 23 May. The event was announced earlier this month in a press release issued by Don Feder of the World Congress of Families; here’s the line-up:
Remembering the Nature of Marriage
Peter Duckworth (Barrister – Family Specialist)Observing the State of Marriage
Sir Paul Coleridge (High Court Judge, Family Division)
Allan C. Carlson (Founder, World Congress of Families)Making the Case for Marriage
Phillip Blond (Director, ResPublica)
Cristina Odone (Journalist and Media Commentator)
Ben Harris-Quinney (Chairman, The Bow Group)
Duckworth has spoken at a previous Christian Concern event, while Coleridge announced a new “Marriage Foundation” in January. Harris-Quinney recently issued a statement against gay marriage, and he is the author of piece warning the Conservative Party that it must “decide between the pulpit and the progressive agenda”. Blond, meanwhile, is famous as David Cameron’s “Red Tory Philosophy King”; ResPublica’s view of gay marriage has been articulated by John Milbank, who is a ResPublica Fellow (and, perhaps somewhat awkwardly, a 9/11 Truther who reportedly recently screamed at Oliver Kamm that he was “going to to be dealt with”). Odone’s argument against gay marriage appeared in a Telegraph column last month.
But what of the American guest star in the show, Allan Carlson? I’ll again quote journalist Kathryn Joyce:
Carlson, the Lutheran head of the Illinois-based Howard Center for Family, Religion, and Society, is a compelling conservative historian who uses secular arguments to advance religious right ideas. A chief example of this is “The Natural Family Manifesto,” a guiding document of the WCF community, co-written by Carlson and Paul Mero, head of the Mormon think tank the Sutherland Institute. The ecumenical call to arms extols a conservative lifestyle where fathers lead and women honor their highest domestic calling by becoming “prolific mothers” of “full quivers of children.”
In service of that goal, Carlson, who has helped craft policy for ultra-right Senator Sam Brownback and Representative Lee Terry of Nebraska, hopes to involve the state in a pro-family welfare system, where tax laws encourage large families, and the government encourages a family-and-faith-centered legal system, which repeals “witch-hunting” child abuse laws that restrict parental discipline as well as no-fault divorce; imposes penalties for unmarried cohabitation; and reconfigures Social Security to provide support on a family, rather than individual basis, so that women are recognized not for their work as independent employees but for their roles as spouses and mothers.
Doris Buss and Didi Herman, law professors and co-authors of Globalizing Family Values: The Christian Right in International Politics, write that the Manifesto’s secular, social science rationales are part of the “‘intellectualization’ of the Christian Right”.
The conference website also carries the notice that
Our London event will be followed by a full World Congress in Madrid from Friday 25th – Sunday 27th May 2012 – for more information please visit the website.
Attendees in Madrid will be able to enjoy talks on subjects such as “The Cultural Roots of Demographic Winter”; “The Threat from Transnational Progressivism”; “Authentic Women and Rediscovering Homemaking”; and “Solutions to Homosexual Behavior”.
The Madrid line-up lists around 100 speakers: familiar faces include Alan Sears (of the Alliance Defense Fund); Ted Baehr (of “Movieguide“); Richard Cohen (who has addressed the Polish parliament on the need to keep homosexuality criminalised); Natalya Yakunina (wife of Vladimir Yakunin, an Orthodox activist who runs Russia’s railways and who is close to Vladimir Putin); Steve Mosher (of Paul Marx’s Population Research Institute) ; and Peter LaBarbera (of Americans For Truth About Homosexuality; LaBarbera is known for his particularly ugly and obsessive rhetoric on the subject, and for his links with Scott Lively).
Along with Ben Harris-Quinney, the British end in Madrid will be represented by: Gordon Macdonald (of CARE and Care Not Killing); Paul Coleman (a Christian Concern legal advisor); Robert Colquhoun (of “40 Days for Life”, which has brought US-style anti-abortion protests to the UK); Ade Omooba (a pastor, who organised a protest against the Sexual Orientations Regulations in 2007); and Christian filmmaker Norman Stone (not to be confused with the historian).
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That Carlson supports the ‘quiverfull’ movement is interesting, but not that important. (I don’t see that fad lasting more than a generation, and would be very curious to know how many women raised in ‘quiverfull’ households chose to join it themselves.)
What is important, though, is the fact that he supports a government ‘which repeals “witch-hunting” child abuse laws that restrict parental discipline.’ That is the cry of the ‘Bible-based baby beaters,’ those people who use the Bible as a justification for serious, dangerous physical chastisement of children.
I’d like to suggest that Our Host do a piece on the relationship of ‘pro-family’ organizations to such techniques of ‘child-raising.’ Certainly Focus on the Family is in the pro-Bbbb camp, with Dobson himself — whose profession is ‘child psychologist’ not minister — supporting such ‘religiously motivated child abuse’ in his books, but he is relatively moderate compared to the true monsters such as the Pearls (“To Train Up a Child” and other works) whose teachings have led to several deaths of children, or Ted Tripp or the Ezzos.
I would like to know if any ‘pro-family’ group has spoken out against such disciplining. And note tht I am not eferring to minor forms of corpora; punishment like spankings. I oppose them, but concede it is discussable.
I am referring to the deliberate use of regular — even daily or more frequent — whippings, with either a wooden stick or the Pearls’ recommended lengths of plastic tubing, over minor ‘infractions’ with the deliberate sttempt to break the child’s will and make him or her a suitably subservient child in a husband-centered Christian household. I am talking about an attitude best shown by the following episode:
When a mother wrote that she had ““picked up her little enforcer (whip), which was lying on the table, and swatted the child’s hand,” because the child — 11 months old — had refused to eat a spinach-squash mush, Michael Pearl replied “I must encourage those of you with small children, train up your children now. Don’t want until they are one year old to start training. Rebellion and self-will should be broken in the six-month-old when it first appears. Take this young mother’s example and think of ways you can train your child. (smiley face)”
This anecdote is one of several that are discussed in several articles on the practise. (If you google ‘Bible-based Baby Beating” you will find several articles including one of mine. But the better and newer ones are those by ‘dogemperor’ (Alex Bird) whose work was the basis of my own piece and who — unlike me — actually experienced this type of discipline. Start with the pieces on “The Pearls ARE Swine” from “God’s Own Party” or any of her work on Talk to Action.
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