Marriage in
the 50 States
They've finally set a date. Senate leaders have announced that
members will vote the week of July 12 whether to amend the
Constitution to define marriage as the union of one man and one
woman.
It's a big step, but members shouldn't get cold feet. An
overview of the social-science data on marriage shows they
shouldn't hesitate to say "I do" to defending marriage.
Remember the flap over Vice President Dan Quayle's criticism of
TV's "Murphy Brown"? Unwed births had reached a new high in the
early '90s, and the vice president lamented the nonchalant way the
show's producers treated single motherhood. Social science research
has since vindicated his argument: Decisions about sex, marriage
and childbearing aren't merely personal. They have profound
social consequences, particularly for children.
Today's sitcoms have moved on to themes of same-sex coupling and
parenting, à la "Friends" and "Will and Grace." But the
lesson we learned in the '90s about sex, marriage and the welfare
of children still applies.
That lesson -- that marriage is more than a personal affair for
individual fulfillment -- may have been summed up best a decade ago
by Barbara Dafoe Whitehead. Her April 1993 Atlantic Monthly feature
article, "Dan Quayle Was Right," explained how Americans' views on
family had shifted from valuing social stability to valuing
personal choice:
"Increasingly, political principles of individual rights and
choice shape our understanding of family commitment and
solidarity," she wrote. "… the family loses its central
importance as an institution in the civil society, accomplishing
certain social goals such as raising children and caring for its
members, and becomes a means to achieving greater individual
happiness -- a lifestyle choice."
Social science indicates that the intact family -- defined as a man
and a woman who marry and raise their children together -- best
ensures the current and future welfare of children and society.
Adolescents in intact families are healthier, are less likely to be
depressed, are less likely to repeat a grade, and have fewer
developmental problems. By contrast, children in other family
forms, as a group, are more likely to experience poverty, abuse,
behavioral and emotional problems, lower academic achievement and
drug use.
A free society requires a critical mass of individuals living in
stable households independent of the state. The most secure
household, the available research shows, is the intact family. No
other family form has been able to provide the same level of social
security. In all other common arrangements, the risk of negative
individual outcomes and family disintegration is much greater,
increasing the risk of dependence on state services. This explains
government's interest in marriage. Among the many types of social
relationships, marriage has always had a special place in all legal
traditions because it is the foundation of the intact family.
By the mid '90s, a serious public policy debate about reinforcing
and restoring marriage emerged on the basis of the social-science
data. Policy decisions -- such as welfare reform -- were grounded
in such data. We have seen some of the fruit of those efforts in
declining rates of teen sex and childbearing.
But the debate over same-sex marriage hasn't been adequately framed
in social-welfare terms, which we know from experience we shouldn't
overlook. The interest of children and general social stability are
largely neglected. Back is the discredited Murphy Brown rationale:
Personal fulfillment and individual rights trump all other
considerations.
The current proposal to overhaul marriage is not anchored in sound
research. We know relatively little about the long-term effects of
homosexual relationships on partners and even less about the
children raised in such households. This absence of data should
give us pause before reconfiguring the basic institution of
society.
Advocates of same-sex marriage want us to institutionalize a social
experiment, i.e., same-sex coupling and parenting, by elevating it
in law to the status of the oldest of institutions: marriage. To do
so, though, would be a mistake.
Yes, Americans have become more tolerant of other types of
experimentation --extramarital sex, cohabitation, single parenting.
But they don't equate them with marriage. None of these experiments
has been regarded in law as the equivalent of the intact family.
Yet this is precisely what we're being asked to do with same-sex
marriage.
The public campaign for legal recognition of same-sex unions may try to tug at America's heartstrings. But as every dad tells his daughter, you don't accept a marriage proposal on feelings alone. In this case, we should listen to what the data tell us -- and turn down the same-sex marriage offer.
Distributed nationally on the Knight-Ridder Tribune wire