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Tuesday, September 26, 2006
Maggie Gallagher :: Townhall.com Columnist
The new revolution in parenthood: Does biology matter?
by Maggie Gallagher
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Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


Do mothers and fathers matter to children? When adult rights and desires clash with children's needs, how should the conflict be resolved?

"These are the questions raised by this report," says Elizabeth Marquardt, the principal author of a stunning new essay, "The Revolution in Parenthood" (available at www.marriagedebate.com and co-published by the Institute for Marriage and Public Policy, where I am president). Hard on the heels of redefining marriage, legal elites are rapidly moving to change the very meaning of the word "parent," and in ways that disconnect parenthood -- not to mention children -- from biology, from the man and woman who together make the child.

Marquardt points to some of the obvious reasons, good and bad, for this new legal development: family fragmentation, child abandonment, the blessings of adoption, new reproductive technologies, cultural movements endorsing adults' rights to form diverse families of choice -- all of which call into question the "old" model connecting sex, love, marriage, babies, and mothers and fathers.

But I think there are subtler reasons for this culture shift as well: We live in an incredibly powerful and productive society that got that way primarily by unleashing the talents of the mind. In science, technology, academia, media, financial markets -- everywhere, it is the immense and amazing productive capacities of symbolic analysts that are recognized and rewarded, with increasingly lavish returns. These are our governing, culture-making elites. In such a society, the power of the body to generate something as magnificent as new life appears a strange anomaly. The parents are the people who play "Baby Mozart" to the child. Does physically making a baby really matter? If no graduate degrees are required, how important can it be?

How important? Let me tell you a story. It's not the single most important story I could tell you, just the one I happened to read in the paper this morning:

In 2000, one of the foremost symbolic analysts in the country, neuroscientist Paul Greengard, won the Nobel Prize. He used the $400,000 award to help establish the Pearl Meister Greengard Prize for outstanding work by a female biomedical researcher.

Why? He wanted "to create something in honor of my mother." Well, don't we all? Except in this case, Dr. Greengard never even knew Pearl Meister existed until he was 20 years old. His mother died giving birth to him, and when he was just 13 months old, his father remarried. "I don't have a single photograph of my mother," Dr. Greengard says. "When I married, my wife, Ursula, put a picture of a woman we thought was Pearl Meister above our mantelpiece. Ten years later," he says, "we discovered this was someone else's mother."

So Dr. Greengard, (a Nobel Prize-winning neuroscientist, remember) gave away $400,000 to create a new $50,000 science prize in part to honor a woman he can't remember because "Since there's not a shred of physical evidence that my mother ever existed, I wanted to do something to make her less abstract." Continued...

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About The Author

Maggie Gallagher is a nationally syndicated columnist, a leading voice in the new marriage movement and co-author of The Case for Marriage: Why Married People Are Happier, Healthier, and Better Off Financially.

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I take the fifth
Commandment:

Dueteronomy 5:16 Honour thy father and thy mother, as the LORD thy God hath commanded thee; that thy days may be prolonged, and that it may go well with thee, in the land which the LORD thy God giveth thee.

Aurorawatcher, Demosthenes
You're both right, in a way. I dont believe the hype about women being the "virtuous sex"; we're both flawed in different ways. However, women so seem to be much less flawed sexually. Monogamy, pornography, sexual abuse, even chastity are much less of a problem for women.

(Tangent: take it or leave it, but there seems to actually be a biological, not psychological reason for this: men expel certain toxins through their sexual system, women expel the same through their menstrual system. An unhealthy man literally needs to release those toxins, and his mind will tempt and twist him until he does. Sane sexuality is near-impossible for a man unless he is physically and spiritually healthy...moving on)

In a marriage, who really knows, but the stats I've seen tell that men are almost twice as likely as women to cheat. In fact, a slight majority of husbands cheat.

Now let's put a few things in perspective. In modern times, a majority of girls are raised in homes that are broken and/or fatherless. A third of women will be sexually abused before their 18th birthday. The vast majority of women will have had sex out of wedlock. In wedlock, a majority of wives are cheated on. Yet, Demosthenes, your "troubling" stat is that 90-99% of children born in marriage are legitimate. Think about it; it's not exactly proof of the innate wickedness of women.

If men are the leaders of a society, and they are, women follow their examples, not their orders. No one's advocating servanthood. By the time a modern woman's a wife, most will have had a failed father and a string of failed boyfriends behind her eyes, and more often than not, a failed husband.

I blame men.

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