« The View From Your Window | Main | The Nine Most Bad-Ass Bible Verses » 01 Dec 2007 08:49 pm Slouching Away From GomorrahPete Wehner and Yuval Levin chart the enormous gains in various social indicators since the early 1990s. The one great anomaly is the family, which remains roughly where it was:
Wehner and Levin don't really have a coherent explanation for this - especially since social conservatives have long argued that the breakdown in traditional family structure is the core reason behind other social ills, such as crime. Perhaps it isn't in all social settings. Perhaps living in sin for a while before marriage is actually a social good for some; perhaps lower rates of marriage are not the end of the world - as many victims of awful marriages can attest. Perhaps child-birth outside marriage is not necessarily a bad thing if the relationship is solid and care for the child is secure. Perhaps, in other words, holding the family of the 1950s up as the standard by which all family structure should be measured is not, in fact, very helpful. I don't know, but it seems one obvious inference from the data worth exploring further. TrackBack URL for this entry:http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451c45669e200e54f92e2e68833 Listed below are links to weblogs that reference 'Slouching Away From Gomorrah' |
