Excuse Me, Gov. Hochul, You Can't Really Say That About Black Kids
Dem Strategists Agree That Biden Is Totally Screwed If He Loses This State...
Of Course, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Found This to Be a Racist Conspiracy
Stop Caring
The Insanity at the Heart of the Trump Trial
That '70s Show -- Is Biden Taking America Back to the Age of...
Ilhan Omar Hit With Censure Resolution
'Incubator of Bigotry': Group of Federal Judges Tells Columbia They Won't Hire Any...
Minors Are Being Seduced by Transgenderism on Reddit. Those Who Oppose Get Banned.
RNC Steps Up for Election Integrity
When California Came to Harvard
The Best Legislative Solution to Election Integrity Is Here
Outrageous: Chicago Teachers Union Demands $50 Billion in Pay Hikes Among Other Perks
Iran Is Winning This War
Saving America Requires Unprecedented Engagement by the Citizens
Tipsheet

Polyamory: A Choice. Homosexuality: Not a Choice

That's a main push of Jessica Bennet's latest piece on Newsweek -- Polyamory: The Next Sexual Revolution? The primary problem, she says, is parenting, which "polys" don't legally have the right to do:
Advertisement

Anecdotally, research shows that children can do well in poly families—as long as they're in a stable home with loving parents, says Elisabeth Sheff, a sociologist at Georgia State University, who is conducting the first large-scale study of children of poly parents, which has been ongoing for a decade. But because academia is only beginning to study the phenomenon—Sheff's study is too recent to have drawn conclusions about the children's well-being over time—there is little data to support that notion in court.
Oh, and the other issue -- "fighting mother nature":
Polyamory might sound like heaven to some: a variety of partners, adding spice and a respite from the familiarity and boredom that's doomed many a traditional couple. But humans are hard-wired to be jealous, and though it may be possible to overcome it, polyamorous couples are "fighting Mother Nature" when they try, says biological anthropologist Helen Fisher, a professor at Rutgers University who has long studied the chemistry of love.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement