Bill O'Reilly channels Dan Quayle circa 1992

It seems Bill O'Reilly is channeling former Vice President Dan Quayle circa 1992:

As Media Matters' Joe Strupp noted yesterday:

Bill O'Reilly decided to criticize Jennifer Aniston for speaking out in support of single mothers as part of her promotion for a new movie about a single mom, “The Switch.”

“Women are realizing it more and more, knowing they don't have to settle with a man just to have that child,” Aniston said recently.

While O'Reilly acknowledges it is likely a comment based on her movie promotion, he also states: “She's throwing out a message to 12-year-olds and 13-year-olds, 'Hey, you don't need a guy, you don't need a dad' ... that's destructive to society.”

Over on Huffington Post, Michael Yaki -- -- a member of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights – strings together the parallels of O'Reilly's comments and those of Quayle's from nearly 20 years ago.

Yaki writes:

Nearly twenty years ago -- 1992, to be exact -- we saw the first iteration of this Neanderthal-speak when Dan Quayle decided to whack a fictional television character, Murphy Brown (played by the indomitable Candice Bergen) for choosing to have a child on her own (though Murphy was supposedly impregnated the, um, old-fashioned way). But while times have changed the rhetoric has not. Compare:

Quayle: Murphy Brown was “mocking the importance of fathers.”

O'Reilly: Aniston was “diminishing the role of the dad” and “throwing a message out to 12-year-olds and 13-year-olds that hey, you don't need a guy, you don't need a dad.” (Uh, Bill, what 12 and 13 year-olds do you know who talk about having children through a sperm bank?)

Quayle: Was speaking in the context of a “poverty of values” that led to the Rodney King riots in Los Angeles.

O'Reilly: Aniston's statement was “destructive to our society.” No reference to any particular example, just a generalized prediction of the demise of American culture due to the influence of a single American actress.

History must not be O'Reilly's strong suit, because he should remember how well Quayle did by picking on a well-liked fictional character viewed by 38 million Americans, versus a well-liked real-life person/actress whose movies have been seen by millions of Americans and whose finale of “Friends” was seen by 59 million Americans. Then-President Bush, fighting for his re-election life with Bill Clinton, would not publicly endorse Quayle's statement. Finally, Quayle had to issue a statement that he had “the greatest respect” for single motherdom. Let's see how many GOP candidates rush to condemn Jen and endorse O'Reilly. Oh, wait, I already hear Limbaugh warming up his vocal cords.

The arrogance of O'Reilly and the wrecking crew at Fox doesn't seem to get the stupidity and insensitivity of this statement. As available as self-chosen single motherhood has been for decades, I don't see American society suffering as a result. This is the same reductionist argument used against same-sex marriage or anything that doesn't comport with some outdated Ozzie and Harriet notion of American life. It didn't fly in 1992, and it has even less traction in 2010.

If O'Reilly and the Fox Gang are so concerned about the American family, why do they serve as the mouthpiece for politicians and candidates who support cuts in health care for children, who back policies that reduce food stamps and aid for pregnant mothers and school lunch programs? Out of concern for the future of our country, perhaps O'Reilly and Fox should stop shilling for a GOP whose legislative agenda would give millions in tax breaks and benefits to the richest Americans paid off the backs of generations yet unborn.