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Alan Keyes on Families & Children
American Independent nominee for President; 2004 Republican challenger for IL Senate
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Culture of selfish hedonism replaces marriage partnership
When you allow the family to break down, when you have government regulations that drive the father from the home, you have established the conditions for the upbringing of children to be nonproductive, to be violent. And when you add to that the
promotion of a culture of promiscuity, a culture of selfish hedonism, that leads people not to understand that that marriage partnership is the most important foundation of any real economic life, then you have especially destroyed the Black community.
Source: 2007 GOP Presidential Forum at Morgan State University
Sep 27, 2007
2-parent households rear kids with better health & education
[We should] do what is necessary to support married couples, to encourage marriage, to encourage the rearing of children in the context of a two-parent household. Not because one is disparaging one-parent households,
but because the statistics show that people are more likely to sustain their education, to be in better health, both mentally and physically, if they are raised in that environment. I think it’s vitally important.
Source: 2007 GOP Presidential Forum at Morgan State University
Sep 27, 2007
Respect God-given institution of the natural family
The simple fact of the matter is, if we don’t take action at the federal level, then our government will have defaulted in its respect for one of our most precious unalienable rights, which is the right to respect
God’s God-given institution of the natural family. Abandon God, with respect to the family, and we have no claim to rights.
Source: 2007 GOP Values Voter Presidential Debate
Sep 17, 2007
The God-ordained family preceded the government
We have to restore the understanding of what marriage is. I heard tonight a shocking statement, that somehow the state can withdraw its respect for and support for the natural family, as ordained by God.
I would like to remind you that the family preceded the government. Before we had a government, we had a God-ordained family that supported and represented the natural rights of our humanity,
& the government is obliged to respect those natural rights, not to destroy them.
So, I think it will important to restore that understanding which supports our reasonable belief that the family ordained by
God, and tied in its mission to procreation that represents our bond to our posterity, must be respected under law and understood by the American people in terms of that respect.
Source: 2007 GOP Values Voter Presidential Debate
Sep 17, 2007
We have suffered because of our abandonment of His name
We have suffered in this country, in the failing schools, in the broken marriages, in the rising tide of crime and violence; we have suffered, since they withdrew our right to reverence God, all the consequences that must follow from our abandonment of
His name. We know that the Founders put this right first for a reason: because it is, above all, the foundation from which comes our ability to stand for and understand and defend all the other rights we claim.
Source: Rally in Blairsville, Georgia
Oct 21, 2003
Don’t lower crime age as a result of adult moral failure
Q: What should be the minimum death penalty age for young felons convicted of deadly crime?
A: [I do not think] we ought to be lowering the age at which we judge people to be adults. I believe that the tendency in that direction now, to want to treat
our children as if they are adults, is a confession of our own failure, our own failure as a society to maintain the structures of family life, to maintain the basis of moral education. As a result, yes, we have children now in whom there exists a
howling moral void and those children engage in some acts that are heinous and shocking to us. But at the same time, I think we need to respect the difference that exists between children and adults. We need to insist from adults on moral
accountability and moral responsibility. We need to help our children develop that ability to be mature adults. But I don’t think that we should take out our failure of moral education on younger and younger children. I think that this is a great error.
Source: GOP Debate in Manchester NH
Jan 26, 2000
Save kids’ souls-they don’t need free speech
Q: In free-speech terms, do people have the right under the First Amendment [to view anything on the Internet, or] should they be kept from that right on these computers? A: I don’t think it’s a free speech issue. It’s an issue of public decency.
Anyplace you let our children into ought to be subject to standards of public decency that make it clear that they are not going to be polluted with garbage. Don’t use the First Amendment as some excuse to destroy our children’s lives and souls.
It doesn’t have to be -- it’d be easy as pie to put a few computers off in a room you don’t let children in and let adults have access to them? You can solve the problems if you want to. The libraries right now are egregiously ignoring their
responsibility to our kids, trying to claim free speech rights. I’ve got to tell you something. My kids don’t have the right to free speech. And they don’t need to have it until they grow older.
Source: GOP Debate in Michigan
Jan 10, 2000
Kids need love from a two-parent marriage
Q. What’s the number one challenge facing children today?
A. Children need love. Those who by nature and the customs of a healthy society are most obliged to give this love are the child’s parents. The well-being of children is therefore primarily
dependent on the health of the marriage-based, two-parent family. The most pressing “issue” for children is, then, will we as a people sustain, defend, and honor marriage, and its consequences, including the very life of the child, born or unborn.
Source: National Association of Children’s Hospitals survey
Jan 8, 2000
Health insurance is family responsibility, not government’s
Q. Even if Medicaid and the State Children’s Health Insurance Program enroll all “eligible” children, there would still be millions of uninsured children. How do you propose insuring each and every child in America?
A. It is not the office of
government directly to insure children or anyone else for health costs. Tax and fiscal policies that promote opportunity and responsibility will restore to families the capacity to do what they can do with maximal discretion and love.care for their
own flesh and blood, and those they have adopted in love. It is a common duty of all members of society to attend to the needs of children neglected by inadequate family care, but this duty falls first to the extended family and the local community,
including most of all the churches, and then to localities and states. Institution of a national governmental program is a confession of failure in charity and self-government.
Source: National Association of Children’s Hospitals survey
Jan 8, 2000
Radical gay agenda is destroying the family
It’s about time we all faced up to the truth. If we accept the radical homosexual agenda, be it in the military or in marriage or in other areas of our lives, we are utterly destroying the concept of family. We must oppose it in the military. We must
oppose it in marriage. We must oppose it if the fundamental institution of our civilization is to survive. Those unwilling to face that fact and playing games with this issue are doing so irresponsibly at the price of America’s moral foundations.
Source: (X-ref Civil Rights) Republican Debate in Durham, NH
Jan 6, 2000
Shape our children’s consciences in the fear of God
Q: How would you interrupt this culture of violence? A: The first thing we have to do is restore this country’s allegiance to its basic moral principles. We express great shock and outrage that we are bloodying the hallways of our schools with the blood
of our children. What about the blood of our children killed in the womb on the basis of a doctrine that completely rejects the basic
principles on which this nation was founded? If our rights come from God, then we ought to shape our children’s consciences in the fear of God. And I think that what we’re seeing in our
schools is the direct result of our failure to respect that heritage and to pass it on.
Source: Des Moines Iowa GOP Debate
Dec 13, 1999
Disintegration of the family causes social ills
We must end government programs like the family-destroying welfare system and sex-education courses that encourage promiscuity. These programs actually hasten the moral breakdown. Our first priority should be restoring the moral and material support
for the marriage-based two-parent family. The disintegration of the family is the major contributing factor in poverty, crime, violence, the decline in educational performance, and a host of other expensive social problems.
Source: (Cross-ref from Welfare Reform) www.keyes2000.org/issues/wel
Jun 14, 1999
Page last updated: Dec 07, 2008