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New York Times posts op-ed from leftist Heather Kaye who’s happy China raised her kids

Each and every day, the masks slips off more and more from the left, and the communist media like the New York Times, as they continue to toss their love to communist China. The New York Times even had the nerve to post an op-ed by some leftist named Heather Kaye who lived with two young daughters in Shanghai. This Heather Kaye clown wrote the op-ed praising China for “raising her kids”. This is where we are as a country in 2023. The enemy is China, and the Democrats are in full cohorts with them.

In China, it’s called government co-parenting, and this leftist just can’t get enough of it. Hey Heather! Why not move to China and take your kids forever. You love the communist regime so much and think America is so bad, why are you still here?

“In China, government co-parenting begins in the womb,” she explained. “Chinese citizens have faced limits on how many children they were allowed under birth control policies that have since been relaxed.”

Though Kaye’s family, as foreigners, was exempt from those rules, Kaye said she found her kids would be molded by an ever-watchful government after they were enrolled in local schools.

“The girls’ Chinese kindergarten lectured us on everything, including how many hours our daughters should sleep, what they should eat and their optimal weight,” she wrote.

American mother Heather Kaye said she misses her Chinese government “co-parent” after moving back to the United State after living in China for 16 years.
American mother Heather Kaye said she misses her Chinese government “co-parent” after moving back to the United State after living in China for 16 years.
REUTERS/Aly Song
While it sometimes felt as though her children “were on loan” for evenings and weekends, Kaye insisted she saw “benefits” in the situation.

“Constantly served up moral, history and culture lessons on pulling together for the sake of the Chinese nation, our girls came home discussing self-discipline, integrity and respect for elders,” she wrote.

“With school instilling a solid work ethic and a total drive for academic excellence, my husband and I didn’t need to push the girls to complete homework; the shame of letting their teachers and classmates down was enough to light their fires.”