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Revenge of the Rugrats (A new generation weighs in on divorce)
The Weekly Standard ^ | October 10, 2005 | Mary Eberstadt

Posted on 10/04/2005 7:09:26 PM PDT by RWR8189

JUDGING BY LETTERS to the editor and furious Internet circulation, the New York Times struck a collective nerve the other week with its front-page story announcing that "Many Women at Elite Colleges Set Career Path to Motherhood." According to the article, surveys of 138 female students at Yale revealed that roughly 60 percent planned to cut back or stop work when they had children. Scattered interviews at other high-end schools confirmed that many of today's young women do not dream of supercharged 12-hour days at the future office, at least not when their children are young. And though hardly scientific, the Times report did track with similar recent soundings on other campuses, as well as with the statistical fact that well-educated women with youngsters in the house are indeed now slightly more likely to be at home than were women in the same group a decade earlier.

What accounts for this gradual but real shift in what many of today's privileged young women seem to want? Interestingly enough, one factor appears to be personal experience. "I've seen the difference between kids who did have their mother stay at home and kids who didn't, and it's kind of like an obvious difference when you look at it," one explains. "I see a lot of women in their 30s who have full-time nannies, and I just question if their kids are getting the best," says another. To the exasperation of the older generation of feminists now shepherding them through elite institutions, at least some of these young women have grown up in the very world their progressive foremothers dreamed of--and reject it precisely because they know it.

Just as interesting, this demurral based on experience is part of a much larger story now being written by today's adolescents and young adults. A funny thing happened to the kids raised on Sesame Street and all the other fare touting politically correct notions of the family: They grew up--and as they did, a significant number looked at their own lives and found progressive happy-talk about the family coming up short.

This questioning--an unforeseen domestic blowback--may not have the status of a full rebellion. But certainly there is insurgency on several fronts. Women must have full-time careers to be fulfilled, the dogma that is questioned in the Times story and elsewhere, is one such proposition now openly contested. Now consider two other articles of progressive faith that are similarly under assault by young voices of experience: that all families are equal from the child's point of view, and that divorce and other forms of family breakup or novelty do no lasting harm.

For years now, scholarship based on actual testimony of kids from broken homes--in particular, Judith Wallerstein's unequalled 25-year study, The Unexpected Legacy of Divorce--has successfully challenged and overruled both ideas. Hundreds more dissenting voices of young adults, surveyed in Elizabeth Marquardt's new book, Between Two Worlds, confirm the findings of Wallerstein and like-minded revisionist scholars. Of course the usual qualifiers apply--not all biological parents can live together, not everyone suffers equally from a broken home, and many children appear to weather losing one or another parent just fine. But the work of Wallerstein and Marquardt, grounded firmly on what the grown-up children of divorce report themselves, confirms what some enlightened people still want very much to deny: The children of broken homes operate at an emotional disadvantage to their peers with intact biological parents--a disadvantage that persists, in the telling of many, on into adulthood.

One does not need to look to scholarship alone to find many of today's kids and young adults openly nostalgic for that mother of all scapegoats, the nuclear family itself. The most dramatic evidence of this yearning comes from an unexpected place: popular music.

To survey the biggest acts of the last several years--among them Blink 182, Papa Roach, Korn, Nickelback, Everclear, Pink, Good Charlotte, Tupac Shakur, and Eminem--is to find oneself far off the progressive reservation indeed. Unbeknownst to many adults, divorce, abandonment, dysfunction, and absent parents are now some of the themes that make contemporary platinum go round. Aforementioned artist Pink, to cite one of many examples, devoted an entire (hit) album to the subject of her parents' divorce. Good Charlotte, profiled on the cover of Rolling Stone as "The Polite Punks," sing repeatedly of family breakup (three of the four members had divorced parents, and two went so far as to legally change over to their mother's maiden name). Everclear's ubiquitous top-40 hit of a few years ago, "Wonderful," was one long lament for a broken home by a boy narrator who wanted his family back--and was only one of many contemporary hits that could be summarized in exactly those words.

Similarly, parents who have long wondered what makes Eminem the bestselling recording artist in America might look no further than these themes, scrawled large on every album he has released: My father left me; my mother neglected me; I'll never abandon my own child the way my parents did me. Of course Eminem's music, like that of most other current balladeers, also plumbs themes of sex, drugs, and rock and roll (to say nothing of date rape, mayhem, and violence). Yet its insistence on the damage done by abdicating adults is also an unmistakable, if backhanded, compliment to the nuclear family. And it affirms along with many other such voices that from the point of view of some significant number of young adults, at least some of the social experimentation of the recent past has gone awry.

As progressive sociologists like to point out, widespread divorce, illegitimacy, dual-income homes, and other changes to the way kids now grow up are indeed here to stay. As they also like to point out, children are in fact resilient, and many will simply thrive no matter what is thrown their way. But what emanates from the popular culture these days is a dissenting point: Some will not. Moreover, in an era when half of all children will live without a biological parent in the home at some point in growing up, when the 2004 statistic for babies born to unwed mothers reached a record 34-plus percent, and when creative minds demand ever more recognition for what are said to be ever braver new experiments in family formation, the unhappy testimonials of these former children have not peaked. They have only just begun.

Mary Eberstadt is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution and author of Home-Alone America: Why Today's Kids Are Overmedicated, Overweight, and More Troubled Than Before (Sentinel), just out in paperback.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: divorce; echoboomers; family; familyvalues; generationy; marriage; rugrats; traditionalvalues

1 posted on 10/04/2005 7:09:31 PM PDT by RWR8189
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To: RWR8189
What accounts for this gradual but real shift in what many of today's privileged young women seem to want? Interestingly enough, one factor appears to be personal experience.

There is another factor - natural selection. Feminist "emancipated" women have one child or none. New generation is not raised by them.

2 posted on 10/04/2005 7:14:18 PM PDT by A. Pole (" There is no other god but Free Market, and Adam Smith is his prophet ! Bazaar Akbar! ")
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To: RWR8189

It makes you wonder! Why were we so terrorized by being a "nobody"
I got it, these girls get it.. MOM'S ROCK!


3 posted on 10/04/2005 7:14:32 PM PDT by acapesket (never had a vote count in all my years here)
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To: RWR8189

Whatr kind of study announces a change but doesn't have either historical data to cpompare to or a control group - for example men? Maybe 60% of men would like to cut back for various reasons too. Maybe not but the study apparently didn't compare.

Also at Yale more people have the kind of money that makes one spouse staying home an option. If they want to make generalizations about a generation they ought to do that study at big state universities too.


4 posted on 10/04/2005 7:19:31 PM PDT by gondramB (Conservatism is a positive doctrine. Reactionaryism is a negative doctrine.)
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To: RWR8189
          I am a public defender up here in MA. My clients are drunks, junkies, illegal aliens, jailbirds, imprisoned felons, thieves and bums. I'd feel dirty if I had to practice family law.
          Kidding aside.... slightly... when family law intersects with my world (in the form of violated restraining orders... sometimes the accused is forced to violate those orders...) it is tragedy cubed by acrimony.
5 posted on 10/04/2005 7:28:56 PM PDT by JAWs
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To: RWR8189

"I see a lot of women in their 30s who have full-time nannies, and I just question if their kids are getting the best,"

&&
Amen. All concerned would be better off if the parents had gotten a pet instead of having a child.


6 posted on 10/04/2005 7:35:25 PM PDT by Bigg Red (Do not trust Democrats with national security!)
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To: RWR8189

No, no, no, no. These girls want to stay home and be moms all or part time, because they remember being little (not that many years ago) and they had to go to daycare no matter how they felt. Mom was always leaving...and leaving then in the care of people making something like $4.00 per hour to watch them. They know what not having a mom all the time feels like and they want better for their little ones....also, the ultimate rebellion against Mommie Dearest (but YOU HAVE TO GO TO YALE!!!)...


7 posted on 10/04/2005 7:38:22 PM PDT by PennsylvaniaMom (Shiny things distract me :))
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To: gondramB

Most people at Yale don't have any money. And quite a few of their parents don't either. This study concerns their goals/desires/aspirations - they will graduate, work hard for 5 years - then hope to settle down.

In fact - covering the more affluent would show what women would rather do - given the choice that these students may have pending husbands (or assume they will have, given relative affluence) - that others may not. Thus it is a good measure of preference.


8 posted on 10/04/2005 8:13:32 PM PDT by Mr. Rational (God gave me a brain and expects me to use it)
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To: Mr. Rational

"
In fact - covering the more affluent would show what women would rather do - given the choice that these students may have pending husbands (or assume they will have, given relative affluence) - that others may not. Thus it is a good measure of preference."

It is a fine measure of preference for the population that they sampled. It is not a good measure of change over time or differences from other populations which is how it was represented, at least in this article.


9 posted on 10/04/2005 8:16:51 PM PDT by gondramB (Conservatism is a positive doctrine. Reactionaryism is a negative doctrine.)
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To: acapesket
It makes you wonder! Why were we so terrorized by being a "nobody" I got it, these girls get it.. MOM'S ROCK!

It makes me wonder why anyone ever attached so much significance to a career. It's one thing if it's always been your aspiration in life, but 95% of people don't have any great talent or love for their profession. For them it's just a paycheck. Sure they might take pride in their work, but they'd do something else if a better offer came along.

If I live long enough I hope to be surrounded by my loving children, grandchildren and great grandchildren on my deathbed. The time I spent with them will be what really mattered in my life and the time I spent at work was merely necessary to support my family. I can't imagine a mother choosing to trade child rearing for a job.

10 posted on 10/04/2005 8:47:02 PM PDT by elmer fudd
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To: elmer fudd

It makes me wonder why anyone ever attached so much significance to a career.

---

Yeah I know. I think it's because many women have been indoctrinated to think that if they don't have a "career" (not a job mind you) they are just not cool/important/made much of their lives/being a "nobody".

I used to ride a shuttlebus that also served the local hospital and university. Most of the workers were female, with many secretary types. I'm sure some of them had to work, but there were others, you could just tell they felt oh-so-important that they had a "~career~". Blech it made me sick, especially when they would then yap at their kids over their cellphones telling them where to get dinner, etc. Poor kids.


11 posted on 10/04/2005 9:14:57 PM PDT by BamaGirl (The Framers Rule!)
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To: PennsylvaniaMom

and they had to go to daycare no matter how they felt.
---

My mom put me in daycare once. Not cause she wanted to, but because her friends said it would be good for us kids. It was really creepy. We never went back again, thank God. And I'll never do that to my kids.


12 posted on 10/04/2005 9:17:02 PM PDT by BamaGirl (The Framers Rule!)
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To: gondramB

That's exactly what was wrong with feminism: it was a bait and switch. Women "get" to have a career and pretty soon every woman must have a job for the family to make ends meet.

In the meantime, the career women marry (if they do) high-earning men, so when the women tire of their career, they simply quit.

All the other women, who never wanted a career in the first place, have to keep slugging away at their jobs they wanted in the first place.


13 posted on 10/04/2005 11:36:00 PM PDT by wouldntbprudent ("Tell the truth. The Pajama People are watching you.")
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To: wouldntbprudent
have to keep slugging away at their jobs they wanted in the first place.

oops---that would be:

have to keep slugging away at their jobs they never wanted in the first place.

14 posted on 10/04/2005 11:38:45 PM PDT by wouldntbprudent ("Tell the truth. The Pajama People are watching you.")
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