By Dennis Prager
Tuesday, May 07, 2013
The Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) announced
last week that it will discontinue the free school breakfast plan it initiated
last year.
Called "Food for Thought," the plan provides
school breakfasts to about 200,000 students.
It was funded by the LAUSD and the nonprofit Los Angeles
Fund for Public Education, whose goal is to raise the number who participate to
about 450,000 students (out of a total of 645,000 in the entire district).
If you go to the fund's website (lafund.org), you are
greeted with these messages: "Learn to dream" (in English and in
Spanish) and "Imagine your life without limits." These are
essentially meaningless messages. But, as we shall see, the fund's breakfast
program is not only meaningless; it is quite destructive.
The reasons for the announced cancellation were that the
program had drawn rodents and insects into classrooms, and that classroom
learning time was being wasted by students eating for long periods in class.
But the rodents, insects and disruption of class learning
time are nothing in terms of destructiveness compared to the free breakfast
itself.
First, the program was created to solve a problem that
does not exist.
It is inconceivable that there are five, let alone
200,000 or the projected 450,000, homes in Los Angeles that cannot afford
breakfast for their child. A nutritious breakfast can be had for less than a
dollar. For examples, go to WebMD, which lists five "Breakfast Ideas for a
Buck."
Second, it both enables and encourages irresponsible,
disinterested and incompetent parenting. Given how inexpensive breakfast can be
(not to mention the myriad public and private programs that provide food for
poor households), any home that cannot provide its child with breakfast demands
a visit from child protective services. Any parent who cannot give a child
breakfast is not too poor; he or she is too incapable of being, or too
irresponsible to be, a competent parent.
Third, even where decent parents are involved, free
breakfasts at school weaken the parent-child bond. Hundreds of thousands of
parents who are able and happy to provide their child with breakfast have
accepted the offer -- because anything free is too enticing for an increasing
number of Americans. But what they have done is made the proverbial deal with
the devil. They have traded in one of the most fundamental definitions of
parenthood -- providing one's children with food -- for a dollar and for a
little less work as a parent. As a result, these parents become less of a
parent to their children.
And fourth, the free breakfast profoundly weakens young
people's character. When you grow up learning to depend on the state, you will
almost inevitably -- even understandably -- assume that the state will take
care of you. And you will grow up also assuming -- as do Europeans, who give
far less charity than Americans for this very reason -- that the state will
take care of your fellow citizens, including your own children.
These are the ways in which the left has damaged children
and families through free school breakfasts.
But it gets worse. "Canceling" the program does
not mean ending it.
Remember, the program is not being canceled because of
its destructive effects on students and family life. The reasons it is being
canceled are that rodents and insects infest classrooms, and that classroom
learning time is wasted while the children stretch out breakfast eating time.
Therefore, the program is being shifted to the schools'
cafeterias. The public employee unions, which govern the state of California
and the city of Los Angeles, have demanded that the program be shifted from the
classroom to the school cafeterias so as to employ more cafeteria workers.
Virtually everything the left touches is either
immediately or eventually harmed. The free breakfast program is only one,
albeit a particularly dramatic, example.
Why, then, do progressives advocate it? Because it meets
three essential characteristics of the left wing: It strengthens the state; it
has governmental authority replace parental authority; and perhaps most
importantly, it makes progressives feel good about themselves. The overriding
concern of the left is not whether a program does good. It is whether it feels
good.
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