At last, I am part of a minority group.
New census figures analyzed by The New York Times reveal that married
couples are a minority in America. As a once and long-married white male, I
never expected to be a minority. There are no protest songs for people in my
group. "We Shall Overcome" is taken and "married man's rights" lacks the
resonance of "out and proud."
Part of the devolution of marriage to minority status is the fault of the
media. Look at who they feature on magazine covers, tabloid TV and awards
shows: the cohabiting without benefit of clergy, same-sex "couples,"
fornicating couples who flaunt their "lifestyles" and dare anyone to tell
them to stop. The STDs that come from these "lifestyles" are not the fault
of those who engage in the sort of behavior that puts them at risk. Rather,
Republicans are to blame for spending too little on "cures" so the
promiscuous can continue practicing their "lifestyles" without fear of
disease. TV commercials for drugs that treat genital herpes now run close to
erectile dysfunction ads without irony.
This decline into minority status for people like me is also partly the
fault of people like me. My generation has been obsessed with making money
and acquiring things in place of investing necessary time on marriage and
children. The message the kids get is that if marriage is mostly about
accumulating wealth and acquiring stuff, they can do that without getting
married.
Family trees are beginning to resemble kudzu and if people are having fewer
children (The United States birth rate is at an all-time low, according to
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and we are barely having
enough children to replace those who die), this has profound implications
for domestic and international policies. For example, Hispanic and Muslim
couples have more children than others in America. And one-third of all new
births in the United States are to unmarried women.
Another reason marriage is now a minority practice is the loss of social
stigma. When I was growing up, "society" approved of certain behavior in
hopes of encouraging more of it and disapproved of other behavior, expecting
to get less of it. While some of that disapproval discriminated against
racial minorities and women, social stigma generally was a good thing. It
kept people like me from engaging in behavior that would not have been
beneficial. I not only cared what my parents thought of me, I also cared
about my reputation. Do many people care about such things today? Not when
celebrities, politicians, lobbyists and boorish sports figures with bad
reputations earn more money than those with good reputations. When was the
last time you saw or read a story about happily married couples in the
mainstream media?
The clergy have not always been helpful to marriage. Many - not all, but
many - regularly ignore biblical instructions about marriage, divorce and
remarriage because their congregations are populated with members who have
divorced and they reason that their money in the collection plate spends
just as well as that of married couples. Some people prefer to hear about
the sins of others - or no sins at all - than about their own. The "fear of
God" long ago was replaced in too many churches with the portrayal of God as
a warm and fuzzy uncle who understands why you do the things you do and
doesn't care all that much as long as you are happy and "fulfilled."
The Times article gives us two other reasons why marriage is suffering.
Andrew A. Beveridge, a demographer at Queens College of the City University
of New York, says of the decline in marriage among those 25 to 34: "It's
partially fueled by women in the work force; they don't necessarily have to
marry to be economically secure. You used to get married to have sex. Now
one of the major reasons to get married is to have children and the
attractiveness of having children has declined for many people because of
the cost."
Life is all about me, the defining characteristic of this generation.
We've come a long way from "Love and marriage go together like a horse and
carriage" to Kanye West's "Gold Digger." Look up the lyrics. Most family
newspapers wouldn't print them.
As a new minority group member, I think I'll start preparing my demands. The
trouble is, to whom do I submit them?
|