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Dr. Sandra Scarr, one of the country's most influential researchers on child care, has described a vision of the "new century's ideal children." Historically, most American children have enjoyed the caring presence of a stay-home mother. New Century Children, however, "will need shared care," contends Scarr.
The meaning of Scarr's term "shared care" can be deduced from the fact that she is a board member of KinderCare, the nation's largest day-care provider. "Since the 1970s," observes Brian C. Robertson in his new book Day Care Deception, "Scarr has published over two hundred articles and four books related to day care ... and her impact on how others approach research in these fields is inestimable.... Her 1984 book Mother Care/Other Care set out to debunk the notion that the bond between mother and child is of unique importance and that disrupting that bond will cause a child grave harm."
In her 1984 book, Scarr contends "that a baby has no particular need for its biological mother" and that "mothers are simply culturally conditioned to believe that their nurturing is vital for their child." Scarr views the newborn infant as something less than human: "[T]heir brains are Jell-O and their memories akin to those of decorticate [skinless] rodents," she asserted in a 1987 interview with the New York Times.
Like most people who lust to restructure society, Scarr doesn't shy away from the prospect of forcing people to conform to her ideological blueprint. And like Brezhnev-era Soviet commissars, Scarr eagerly denounces opposition to the Brave New World she envisions as a form of illness. Since "being isolated at home with one adult and no peers" is socially harmful, it "should not be permitted," she contends. As the drive to create the rootless, socialized New Century Children continues, "Multiple attachments to others will become the ideal. Shyness and exclusive maternal attachment will be seen as dysfunctional. New treatments will be developed for children with exclusive maternal attachments (EMA syndrome) and those with low sociability scores."
Indeed, the entire day-care apparatus could be viewed as a means of "treating" American children excessively attached to home and family, and insufficiently devoted to collective life. A 1997 taxpayer-funded study by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) found that "the more time children spent in day care, the less affection they showed for their mothers--and the less their mothers showed for them--when they were studied at ...
Source: HighBeam Research, New Century Children.(The Last Word)