Does Mitt Romney threaten your values? Is his life an
affront to everything you hold sacred?
Apparently, Romney’s life defies the American
counterculture. He is a threat to everything Nicole Rodgers holds dear.
You probably haven’t heard of Nicole Rodgers, editor a gender-bending
feminist website called Role/Reboot. If so, you aren’t missing anything.
Nevertheless, I am grateful to the friend who drew my
attention to her article, because it states, starkly, what so many other people
believe but refuse to say.
While Democratic politicos and pundits are happy to pay lip
service to Mitt Romney’s sterling personal character and exemplary private
life, behind the scenes many of them are surely thinking what Nicole Rodgers is
thinking, namely that Romney’s life represents a counterrevolutionary, even a reactionary
force in American cultural politics.
Rodgers got herself totally lathered up because Romney dared
to suggest, at the last presidential debate, that there would be less gun
violence if there were fewer illegitimate births.
In truth, the point is not even controversial. Everyone but
Nicole Rodgers knows that children who are brought up in families that look
like the Romney family do much, much better in life than children who are
brought up in any other family configuration.
This does not mean that we do not admire and respect the
single mothers who shoulder the job of bringing up children in homes without
fathers, but a mountain of sociological data demonstrates that illegitimacy contributes
mightily to the crime rate and the poverty rate.
When she explains her thinking about traditional marriage,
Rodgers drips contempt:
There
is something telling about Romney’s advice to “get married to someone” that’s worth exploring. He
didn’t say to marry your beloved, your partner, your boyfriend or girlfriend,
or your lover, because the who is
unimportant. Marriage is a palliative to all social ills: Want to reduce crime?
Marry someone! Stuck in poverty? Marry someone!
For
him, it’s the institution of marriage that is king, not the relationship.
Suckering someone, anyone,
into signing that old marriage license is, in itself, a victory. But he’s not
alone in his simple-mindedness.
Actually, Romney’s not alone. None of the studies that
measure the consequences of a stable family life distinguish between the
different kinds of emotional attachment in marriage.
To my knowledge, no one, even certified Romney haters, has
ever suggested that his is anything but a loving marriage.
Rodgers goes on to say that, somehow or other, marriage is
not what it used to be. She suggests that the Romney family is no longer a
reality, but is an “ideal.”
Apparently, she doesn’t know what the word “ideal” means.
The Romney family is more or less the norm in most parts of the world and was
the norm in America until the counterculture undermined it.
The new way of marriage is, at best, a social experiment. It
will not be judged in terms of personal fulfillment but in the arena of
international competition.
Other nations practice more traditional forms of marriage.
The future will tell whether their cultures are more productive, more stable
and more competitive than ours.
As of now, the crime and poverty rates among children who
live in single-mother households far exceed those of children who are brought
up by their married parents.
Rodgers uses the classical leftist rhetorical ploy. She
suggests that a great wave of history is washing over us, dragging traditional marriage
out to sea, leaving in its wake new
forms of marriage and new family units.
In her words:
The
important question for those of us in the reality-based community is how to
meet people where they are. Just think about your own extended family: Do they
all resemble Romney’s ideal of what a family should be? Do your friends? My
guess is probably not. There is nothing inherently damaging or intrinsically
problematic about family structures that deviate from some nuclear family
ideal. Presidents Obama and Clinton were both raised in single-mother
households, after all.
Rodgers is right to see that the counterculture has severely
damaged the institution of marriage. When feminism arrived in the American
consciousness it produced a massive number of divorces.
Surely, some children turn out just fine, but the Obama and
Clinton examples are anecdotal, and thus, of little consequence. In this case
reality lies in the statistical correlation.
To buttress her argument Rodgers trots out some research
suggesting that only recently have people come to believe that marriage
should be therapeutic.
Unfortunately, this asks marriage to do something that it
was not designed to do, and thus, the requirement has made marriage more
difficult.
Traditional marriage is an arrangement between
families whose purpose is to produce children who will symbolize the union of
the families. Belonging to both families, children embody the oneness and solidarity
of a community formed of different families.
Since Rodgers suggests that the institution of marriage was
changed irrevocably once it became about self-fulfillment, it is worth looking
at history.
The most important change in the history of marriage
occurred in the seventeenth century when the Anglosphere started granting women
a free choice of husbands. Thus, they introduced personal freedom for women
into the marital equation.
At the emphasis was on free will and a free choice, not on
making marriage an expression of love.
Everyone knows that most women exercise considerable
intelligence in choosing a husband. Love is a factor in the decision, but it is
certainly not the only factor.
Let us be clear here. Even if you consider marriage to be
the ultimate expression of love—it isn’t—the truth remains, that giving women a
free choice was designed to grant them more responsibility for their choice of
husband. It was an effort to solidify the institution, produce a more stable
home life and make adultery less attractive.
Now, Rodgers is seriously threatened by Mitt Romney’s stable
home and family life.
After all, if your life and/or the lives of your friends and
neighbors is anarchic and dramatic, then a life manifesting good order, discipline, a loving family and harmonious relationships would clearly be a
threat.
Surprisingly, Rodgers does not suggest that American should
try to emulate Mitt Romney. She joins the chorus of those who would demonize
him.
One thing I can guarantee you, when significant voices in the
culture rise up to attack Mitt Romney’s family values they are encouraging
people to have disordered and chaotic lives. They will be telling people that
they need not live in harmony with their fellow humans, but with the Zeitgeist.
Why is this so threatening?
If a stable family life is an option, then one might choose
to have it or not to have it. If you don’t have it, the reason is your own free choice. If the choice is free, then blaming it on the Zeitgeist
is an evasion of responsibility.
If there’s one thing people like Nicole Rodgers hate more
than they hate Mitt Romney, it’s their own freedom.
4 comments:
I'm not sure it's her freedom that she's afraid of; I see her fear of the contrast between her and the Romneys in which they look so much better, so her choice was (oh, the horror) wrong/less adaptive/lacking is some way, or in various ways...that others can see. Much like having to admit you were suckered by Bernie Madoff.
A good, clean, kill.
Well done.
The premise for the Left's ideology is an exchange of liberty for submission with benefits. It is an unnatural extension of childhood to preserve the benefits of that period in human development. It presents an unnecessary and artificial obstacle to the proper growth of human beings.
It's interesting to note how they accepted the natural order before they rejected its inconvenient truths. They can't seem to identify a reasonable compromise between that underlying and overriding order and the whims of their ego.
The evidence of the counterculture's failure can be observed in the progression of evolutionary dysfunction.
Headshot :) Excellent analysis
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