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Wrong
Marriage Debate Again
By Mona Charen
6/28/2011
If
only lower income heterosexuals
were as keen to marry as some homosexuals, the United States would be a
much
stronger country.
Supporters
of gay marriage (most
prominently The New York Times, which reported New York’s legalization
of such
unions last week with about as much hoopla as it did the Japanese
surrender in
1945) are ecstatic.
Actually,
the first sentence of this
column might be misleading. While it might seem, from the intense
activism on
the subject, that gays are impatient to reach the altar, it may not be
true.
Surveys in countries that have legalized gay marriage have found
comparatively
small numbers of homosexuals seeking marriage (between 2 and 5 percent
in
Belgium, and between 2 and 6 percent in Holland). It’s quite possible
that
legalizing same-sex marriage is sought mostly for symbolic reasons --
as a sort
of Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval on homosexuality. (Just by the
way, the
funniest sign at a recent Obama speech was held by a gay-marriage
advocate
irritated by the president’s claim that his views on the subject are
“evolving.” The sign read “Just Evolve Already.”)
Imagine
if even one-twentieth of the
attention we devote to gay marriage were turned to the state of
heterosexual
marriage -- we might begin to see the true emergency.
Writing
in The Weekly Standard, Mitch
Pearlstein, whose book “From Family Collapse to America’s Decline” is
due out
in August, outlines some of the connections between family breakdown
and
economic decay.
The
statistics are familiar. In 1970,
85.2 percent of children under 18 lived in a two-parent family. In
2005, it was
68.3 percent and dropping. Forty percent of births in America are to
unwed
parents. Broken down by ethnic group, the figures are 30 percent among
whites,
50 percent for Hispanics and 70 percent for blacks.
Single
mothers (and occasionally
fathers) find it much more difficult to be the kind of autonomous,
self-supporting individuals that our system of government was designed
for.
Single parents turn to the government for assistance in dozens of ways.
Pearlstein cites economist Benjamin Scafidi, who has offered a rough
calculation of how much family breakdown costs American taxpayers
annually.
Scafidi considered TANF (Temporary Assistance to Needy Families), Food
Stamps,
housing assistance, Medicaid, S-Chip, child welfare services, justice
system
costs, WIC, LIHEAP (Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program), Head
Start,
school breakfast and lunch programs, and foregone tax receipts. The
annual bill
to taxpayers: $112 billion.
But
Scafidi was being conservative,
Pearlstein argues. He didn’t include the Earned Income Tax Credit, the
costs to
schools that accrue from additional discipline problems, the special
education
costs that increase in lock step with chaotic family environments, and
the
added burdens on Medicare and Medicaid that result from more unmarried
older
Americans. Scafidi explains that “high rates of divorce and failure to
marry
mean that many more Americans enter late middle age (and beyond)
without a
spouse to help them manage chronic illnesses, or to help care for them
if they
become disabled.”
The
flight from marriage is
transforming the complexion of American society -- increasing
inequality and
decreasing self-sufficiency. As Kay Hymowitz has written (soon to be
joined by
new books by Charles Murray and the above mentioned Pearlstein),
marriage
patterns are creating a caste system in a country that had
traditionally
enjoyed relative equality. Among the well-educated, marriage rates have
remained very stable over the past several decades. College graduates
are thus
(mostly) rearing their children in orderly, supportive environments in
which
kids are taught to study hard, delay gratification and plan for the
future. But
54 percent of the children of high school dropouts are illegitimate.
Their
parents’ lives are marked by financial stress, conflict and turmoil.
Since
income and education are so
closely linked, the outlines of a permanent caste system become
visible, with
the educated raising children who have the tools to become successful
themselves and the poor and lower middle class continuing to give birth
under
circumstances that virtually condemn their children to poverty.
Much
has been made by Democrats of the
increasing inequality of income distribution in America. That
inequality is
real. But it’s not the result of tax cuts. It’s an artifact of family
structure. And unless we find a way to discourage unwed childbearing
and revive
marriage, the chasm between classes will continue to grow.
Gay
marriage is a distraction. The
country depends on traditional marriage.
Read
it at Townhall
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