:dancing-banana:Follow-up to Matthew's comment:--
Since I am one of them, I think I'm qualified to speak on the children of the above couple, both girls, now adult women in their 40's and 50's. The elder holds two Master's degrees, but due to societal conditions of which Vatican II was the catastrophic culmination, never married and works 70 hour weeks to make ends meet. The younger married at 35 and has two children of school age. Both Mom and Dad work, Dad 75+ hours, Mom part-time, 28 hours. Both have high school only, and their combined incomes need help from Grandpa's savings to meet basic living expenses, this despite receiving govt. assistance for the children. The elder "discovered" tradition at age 45 and by God's grace, intends to die a Catholic. The younger daughter ceased going to Mass at age 15 when Dad was advised by a priest(?) that he was causing her to rebel by requiring Mass. This same priest earlier told parents that bringing children to Confession was psychologically harmful as it was based on the presumption that we were "bad." (Apparently, he no longer believed in Original Sin as early as 1971.) My parents go to the novus ordo when it is convenient. My sister and family are without religion of any type.
In all fairness to my parents, they were blindsided by the changes that came in the 1960s and 1970s. By the time they began to suspect their children were in a disordered world, the damage was done. I was grown, on my own, and since I supported myself 550 miles away, nothing could be said or done. My sister was in high school when a brief attempt was made to "clamp down.". The result was total rebellion and giving in under the pressure of "advice" from the Church and public school officials. Multiply this story millions of times and there you have it, the fruit of Vatican II.