A viral Minnesota daycare fraud investigation became a springboard for a much deeper conversation on Trending with Timmerie. Timmerie welcomed journalist Joy Pullman, who laid out what she said federal prosecutors have uncovered so far: a state daycare program funded with federal and state dollars allegedly paid out huge sums to providers who were not enrolling any children, but were billing taxpayers anyway.
Pullman argued this isn’t just a money story, it’s a family story. Even as fraud investigations continue, she said the scandal exposes how much modern culture depends on institutional daycare as a default solution. But the bigger question, she insisted, is whether that default is truly good for children.
Drawing from early childhood research she has followed for years, Pullman claimed that extended time in non-parental care, especially for children in the baby, toddler, and preschool years, can be linked to long-term struggles. Separation from parents in the earliest years can be associated with a number of developmental and cognitive issues, including anxiety and behavioral challenges.
Timmerie acknowledged how sensitive the topic is, especially for parents doing their best in difficult circumstances. But she pushed back on the cultural script that says babies can be placed in care from six weeks on with no adverse effects. She pointed to the child’s stress regulation and early bonding, noting that this season of life can change the entire trajectory of their life.
Pullman shared that being raised in a broken family made motherhood hard, but also healing. Building secure attachment, she said, can become a “second chance” God gives through marriage and children, a path that forms virtue, repairs what was fractured, and teaches self-giving love.
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