By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, October 28, 2015
It’s been a good month for champions of the traditional
family, but don’t expect the family wars to be ending any time soon.
In recent weeks, a barrage of new evidence has come to
light demonstrating what was once common sense. “Family structure matters” (in
the words of my American Enterprise Institute colleague Brad Wilcox, who is
also the director of the National Marriage Project at the University of
Virginia).
Princeton University and the left-of-center Brookings
Institution released a study that reported “most scholars now agree that
children raised by two biological parents in a stable marriage do better than
children in other family forms across a wide range of outcomes.” Why this is so
is still hotly contested.
Another study, co-authored by Wilcox, found that states
with more married parents do better on a broad range of economic indicators,
including upward mobility for poor children and lower rates of child poverty.
On most economic indicators, the Washington
Post summarized, “the share of parents who are married in a state is a
better predictor of that state’s economic health than the racial composition
and educational attainment of the state’s residents.”
Boys in particular do much better when raised in a more
traditional family environment, according to a new report from MIT. This is
further corroboration of Daniel Patrick Moynihan’s famous 1965 warning: “From
the wild Irish slums of the 19th century Eastern seaboard, to the riot-torn
suburbs of Los Angeles, there is one unmistakable lesson in American history: a
community that allows a large number of men to grow up in broken families,
dominated by women, never acquiring any stable relationship to male authority,
never acquiring any set of rational expectations about the future — that
community asks for and gets chaos.”
Perhaps most intriguing — and dismaying — a new study by
Nicholas Zill of the Institute of Family Studies found that adopted children
have a harder time at school than kids raised by their biological parents. What
makes this so dismaying is that adoptive parents tend to be better off financially
and are just as willing as traditional parents, if not more so, to put in the
time and effort of raising kids.
Zill’s finding highlights the problem with traditional
family triumphalism. Adoption is a wonderful thing, and just because there are
challenges that come with adoption, no one would ever argue that the problems
adopted kids face make the alternatives to adoption better. Kids left in
orphanages or trapped in abusive homes do even worse.
In other words, every sweeping statement that the
traditional family is best must come with a slew of caveats, chief among them:
“Compared with what?” A little girl in a Chinese or Russian orphanage is
undoubtedly better off with two loving gay or lesbian parents in America. A kid
raised by two biological parents who are in a nasty and loveless marriage will
likely benefit from her parents getting divorced.
“In general,” writes St. Lawrence University professor
Steven Horwitz, “comparisons of different types of family structures must avoid
the ‘Nirvana Fallacy’ by not comparing an idealized vision of married
parenthood with a more realistic perspective on single parenthood. The choices
facing couples in the real world are always about comparing imperfect
alternatives.”
Of course, that point can be made about almost every
human endeavor, because we live in a flawed world. And just because we don’t —
and can’t — live in perfect consistency with our ideals, that is not an
argument against the ideals themselves.
It shouldn’t surprise anyone that family structure is so
controversial. The family, far more than government or schools, is the
institution we draw the most meaning from. From the day we are born, it gives
us our identity, our language, and our expectations about how the world should
work. Before we become individuals or citizens or voters, we are first and
foremost part of a family. That is why social engineers throughout the ages see
family as a competitor to, or problem for, the state.
And the family wars will never end, because family
matters — a lot.
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