Results so far:
| No | 54% | 466 votes | Total: 865 votes | |
| Yes | 46% | 399 votes |
Does Nicole Richie have what it takes to become a mother?...In the clinical sense? Yes. She has the necessary organs to conceive a child. That doesn't mean she automatically qualifies as being a mother. Nor does it mean that she is exempt from accountability of her actions, illegal or otherwise, because she is carrying a child.
What if the question was:
"Does Nicole Richie have what it takes to be an adult?"
I venture to guess that the answers would be a bit different. We don't have to know Nicole Richie personally to see the cookie cutter pattern of yet another spoon-fed Hollywood kid acting out with reckless abandon. I know I don't need to wait around for her to choose to reveal anything, the Police have revealed plenty when stopping her twice for driving under the influence.
Her future is not my concern. It is the present lack of respect for herself and her family that she so nonchalantly shrugs off with a hair flip and a smirk. I grow tired of the P.R. canned apologies that are meant to serve one purpose, and thats to be a band-aid to one's image. Time is money so lets repair the damage as soon as possible.
I have had my fair share of partying when I was younger as well. But I didn't have the endless resources to take it that much further into the realm of the ridiculous as do these young ladies. Of course I wouldn't even think of getting behind the wheel of a car, why? Because my mom disciplined her children, not pacified them with cash as a stand-in for genuine parenting.
Yes, celebrities are human, very wealthy humans. It will be quite easy for Nicole to maintain her current lifestyle by hiring who she needs to to raise her child until she is partied out. Her living is being seen, as much as possible. I am not convinced in the slightest that Nicole Richie is willing to sacrifice anything, especially herself, to accommodate a child. Flaunting the illusion of her relevance in pop culture by being visible in a social scene is one thing. Possessing the traits to be a selfless mother and a nurturing guardian is quite another.
Learn more about this author, John.C.
Click here to send this author comments or questions.
While I find it offensive for anyone who does not know Nicole Richie (or even those who believe they do) to presume to be in a position to judge her, I'll make an exception to my own rule about not evaluating other people for the purpose of this discussion.
There is no reason to assume that Nicole Richie doesn't have "what it takes" to be a mother. First, she is expecting a baby - so obviously she has that much of what it takes.
Yes, she's got quite a history when it comes to bad judgment, but how many "zillions" of other young people have the same kind of history of bad judgment? Plenty. She is, most likely, no different from any number of young people who makes bad choices before they eventually grow up (if they're lucky enough to live to see that growing up).
She's - what - 26 years old? That makes her years older than any number of the other young women in the world who have babies before they're even old enough for their brains to be completely developed (early- to mid-twenties). Nicole Richie has the financial means that many of today's young mothers don't; and if anyone believes that financial stability doesn't help they're deluded.
Ms. Richie has the financial means not only to provide for her baby, but to get help caring for it if she wants or needs that. If it turns out she needs some parenting advice she has the money to buy the best advice and information that money can buy.
Based on her recent interview with Diane Sawyer, it is clear that she has 1) either straightened herself out and decided to do what's healthy or 2) been willing to listen to others who have instructed her on cleaning up her image. If she has decided to straighten up then she'll do what is right. If she's listening to what others tell her she should be doing then she'll most likely be willing to listen when it comes to what she should be doing with a baby as well.
For every young woman who messes up in her youth and never straightens up there are many others who mess up in their youth but straighten up when a baby arrives, and they realize things aren't a big joke any longer.
Based on what I've seen in supermarkets, on television, and any number of other places; the world is full of mothers who could do better at loving their child, respecting their child, nurturing their child, talking to their child, and even providing for their child. In other words, there are probably more mothers than not who would not get an A-Plus in "what it takes". Strangers who presume to have the right to an opinion about Nicole Richie's mothering potential should really be spending their energy asking about whether their own needs some improvement.
As for Nicole Richie, like every other mother-to-be, she has her child and her life ahead of her. What she does as a mother will decide whether she has "what it takes". It is silly for anyone to make guesses about what she'll be as a mother, and it is always wrong to assume there's no chance someone will do quite well as whatever it is they are about to do. Maybe "The World" ought to think about leaving Nicole Richie alone and giving her a chance to be the kind of mother she probably hopes to be.
Learn more about this author, Lisa H Warren.
Click here to send this author comments or questions.