The Right Opinion
Kitchen Is Not a Dirty Word
We are rapidly becoming a nation whose distaff leadership is allowing radical feminists to redefine the role of motherhood.
Our moms are being all but ostracized by a raging cadre of radical feminists should they dare to consider cooking for their families to be a major part of their traditional role as wives and mothers.
In modern America, the feminists would take Mom out of the kitchen and put her in the drive-thru lane at the local fast-food chain (ironically, that's verboten also). They have eulogized the nation's First Lady for assuming the role of a food czar who instructs us on what chow is good for us and our children, who should cook it, and what foods should be kept off the national menu.
Mothers are looked at with withering stares should they teach their daughters how to cook, and fathers get the same treatment if they concern themselves with their daughters' future role as wives and mothers.
If mothers would once again start teaching their daughters the time-honored role of family chef, and fathers would make sure that their wives are honored and cherished for making the kitchen one of their principal domains, we'd be a lot better off.
Instead we have a First Lady who sees her role as First Mother not only to instruct us on what we victuals we should eat, but warns us that the menu at the local fast food emporium is the diet from Hell.
She goes so far as to dig up patches of the White House lawn, formerly the site of the so-called Easter egg hunts, and plant the seeds of what she tells us are the staples of a healthy diet -- a diet regimen in the White House kitchens one doubts includes whatever puny edibles grown on the lawn of the Executive mansion.
If she and her fellow radical feminists would devote more time to praising and defending the produce farmers and retailers bring us, and less time playing the role as diet dictators, meals would be family celebrations instead of burdensome chores for the moms who cook them.
Moreover, giving Mom a day off from cooking dinner by a making a family trip to the nearest hamburger joint would be seen as a gift to her rather than one of the mortal sins in an imaginary list of dietary commandments.
Their menu may be fattening, and viewed as one of the Lord's practical jokes on his children by making such fare lip-smacking good, but enjoying it is not a flagrant violation of the dietary Ten Commandments. Slathered with mustard and ketchup it's just plain tasty -- fattening but tasty.
A happy home is one in which moms teach their daughters how to cook tasty meals for their future families and dads teach their sons that one of their roles in family life is drying the dishes and otherwise doing chores around the house to lighten Mom's burdens.
Finally, women should understand and act on the time-honored truth that the fastest route to a man's heart is through his stomach, and not always through the drive-in window at the nearest fast-food restaurant. That's one way we can begin to put the family -- and America -- back together.
Bon Appetit!
©2010 Mike Reagan.

4 Comments
Pamela Heckel
Thursday, December 23, 2010 at 8:40 AM
I actually believe that my husband married me because I am a good cook. I also believe that the poor would be healthier and less hungry if THEY learned how to cook. For the cost of a bag of chips, you can cook a gallon of hearty soup from scratch.
Bob
Thursday, December 23, 2010 at 1:14 PM
In our home, I am the cook. My wife runs a business and since I am retired it only seems proper that I cook the meals. Of course, I do enjoy cooking (learned to do it when I was single for many years) and my wife on the other hand thinks a kitchen is just another room to decorate.Merry Christmas to all.
Clarence De Barrows
Thursday, December 23, 2010 at 2:43 PM
Bob: Interesting and telling comment, but I believe you missed the whole important point of Reagan's article. Oh, and respectfully, your wife is wrong!
sunforester
Thursday, December 23, 2010 at 6:25 PM
Ever since we women have been freed from involuntary pregnancy thanks to the Pill, lots of people are more than willing to tell us what to do with ourselves. We no longer are forced to stay barefoot and pregnant in the kitchen, but that doesn't mean that the kitchen is an unwelcome place.We now have choices, and the pursuit of happiness is a reasonable choice. If some women choose never to step foot in a kitchen again, fine. If some women want to stay home and raise their families, fine. If some women want to work and raise children to get the benefits of both, fine. I will defend to the death all their rights to make for themselves a better, happier life the way they see fit.However, some people just can't leave other people alone to pursue their own happiness. Some people must rag on others who choose to live their lives differently. It no longer seems to matter what personal choices are made - there is always somebody else who would love to snoop into your life and criticize loudly.The so-called radical feminists (who never have been true feminists in my book) who believe the kitchen is a symbol of slavery have it wrong in so many ways. Involuntary pregnancy was our slavery, and that situation no longer exists. Having happy children and a well-cared-for home is a perfectly good path to happiness, if that is what you want.If these radical women are themselves perfectly unhappy and require company to share their unhappiness, I will take a big pass on joining them. I have some corn bread in the oven right now, and it is time to go to the store to get the Christmas ham I will be baking tomorrow.I am perfectly happy in letting the radicals buy their own dinner at some restaurant in town. None of them are welcome at my house if they are going to give me a hard time about my cooking and my happiness. It would be a bad example for the kids.