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Editorial columns

  • Emancipation tribute survives, now thrives
    “The people of Texas are informed that, in accordance with a proclamation from the Executive of the United States, all slaves are free.
  • Traps could trip optimistic GOP
    Republicans are pleased with themselves. The president is mired in scandals while the public does not believe they have overreached. And the GOP’s strongest leaders are riding high in the polls. Yet there are grounds for concern:
  • Iran still warrants our wary eye
    This weekend, Iran’s interior minister confirmed that Hassan Rowhani had secured an outright majority in presidential elections, eliminating the need for a runoff.
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Getting marriage on the mend

The argument that gay marriage “harms” heterosexual marriage is not one that has found resonance with most Americans. That is not to say that marriage isn’t in trouble.

For the first time we have more unmarried households than married households and more single than married women. That has ramifications for mental health, the economy, politics, childhood development and a slew of other aspects of American life.

We know some of the reasons are voluntary (more working women delaying marriage and children), but that does not mean the atomization of American life makes us more stable, happy and prosperous.

It seems that much of the focus on traditional marriage has consisted of hectoring gay men and lesbians who want to get married and deploring the breakdown of the family with little discussion of policy or the role that churches, synagogues and other mediating institutions play.

Perhaps social conservatives can focus on public policy and private efforts to increase marriage and positively promote intact families. The tax code is one area. Labor laws are another.

More to the point, social conservatives should understand the primacy of local communities, religious and civic institutions and families themselves in promoting and assisting in marriage. We’ve had campaigns aimed at teens to say no to drugs and yes to celibacy, but not much about saying yes to marriage and how to stay out of poverty.

We have a societal problem that is vast and serious and an organized political-social movement that, to be blunt, needs something constructive to do. Dare I say this might be a match made in heaven?

Ironically, with gay marriage and with the Obama economy (lots of young adults now living at home with mom and dad) reducing the number of single households, we may begin to improve the percentage of married households. But economic decline is not a strategy. For all the time, money and energy spent on preventing gay men and lesbians from marrying, imagine if all those efforts were spent trying to encourage and improve the economics of marriage? Now that would be a joyous endeavor.

Jennifer Rubin is a Washington Post columnist.

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