Posted on 03/31/2017 6:59:46 AM PDT by markomalley
You have seen, I take it, that our vice president has outed himself as a cultural criminal of the first order by revealing that, like some conservative Christian men, he doesnt put himself in situations where he could be tempted to compromise his marital vows, or be plausibly accused of same. He never eats alone with another woman, or goes to events where alcohol is served unless his wife is with him. This is pretty quaintly conservative, admittedly, and not something I would do. But I cant fault the guy, especially given the life politicians have to live. If I were Mrs. Pence, I would surely be grateful.
To no ones surprise, this has earned Pence denunciation from the more progressive protuberances of the body politic. Emma Green, in customary form, does a good job examining what this weird episode tells us about Americans and gender. Excerpts:
Some folksmostly journalists and entertainers on Twitterhave reacted with surprise, anger, and sarcasm to the Pence family rule. Socially liberal or non-religious people may see Pences practice as misogynistic or bizarre. For a lot of conservative religious people, though, this set-up probably sounds normal, or even wise. The dust-up shows how radically notions of gender divide American culture.
Were the Pences Orthodox Jews or practicing Muslims, nobody would have batted an eye. But theyre Evangelical Christians, so that means its open season on tearing them apart.
Pence told The Hill in 2002 that his practice is about building a zone of protection around his marriage. Green:
The 2002 article notes that Pence arrived in Congress a half decade after the 1994 Republican revolution, when Newt Gingrich was the speaker of the House. Several congressional marriages, including Gingrichs, encountered difficulty that year. Pence seemed wary of this. Ive lost more elections than Ive won, he said. Ive seen friends lose their families. Id rather lose an election. He even said he gets fingers wagged in his face by concerned Indianans. Little old ladies come and say, Honey, whatever you need to do, keep your family together, he told TheHill.
These comments show that the Pences have a distinctively conservative approach toward family, sex, and gender. This is by no means the way that all Christians, or even all evangelical Christians like the Pences, navigate married life. But traditional religious people from other backgrounds may practice something similar. Many Orthodox Jews follow the laws of yichud, which prohibit unmarried men and women from being alone in a closed room together. Some Muslim men and women also refuse to be together alone if theyre not married. These practices all have different histories and origins, but theyre rooted in the same belief: The sanctity of marriage should be protected, and sexual immorality should be guarded against at all costs.
Again, this is not a set of precautions I, as a Christian, would take, or feel it necessary to take, but I admire the Pences for the seriousness with which they take their marriage vows. Mike Pence is willing to be thought a countercultural weirdo for the sake of doing right by his wife, his kids, and his God. Thats totally admirable in my book.
One more bit from Green:
That some people are so quick to be angeredand others are totally unsurprisedshows how divided America has become about the fundamental claim embedded in the Pence family rule: that understandings of gender should guide the boundaries around peoples everyday interactions, and protecting a marriage should take precedence over all else, even if the way of doing it seems strange to some, and imposes costs on others.
HuffPo puffed a gay couple who started a store catering to diaper-wearing pervs, but ran a piece criticizing the Pences as weirdos for the patriarchy. Given their standards (if standards is the word), I would take criticism from HuffPo as a compliment.
Somebody put on Twitter this deeply affecting World magazine piece showcasing the hard lessons that Mark Souder, a Republican Congressman from Indiana and religious-right stalwart, learned after his longterm adulterous affair with a staffer became public. Souder talks in the piece about his own terrible failure, and how his life as a Washington politician set him up to fall. Heres an excerpt from that 2010 piece relevant to our discussion today:
Mike Pence, R-Ind., took the Quayles advice and moved his family (with three children then under the age of 8) after winning election in 2000. Later, when Mike and Karen Pences fourth-grade son broke his collarbone on the playground at school, the congressman was able to come to the emergency room straight from Capitol Hill. Karen was composed until he walked into the room, then melted. I realized, Im really glad hes here and I dont have to do this all by myself, she recalled.
Karen Pence talked with me about how she sits down with her husbands scheduler to scrutinize school calendars so they can map out days that Mike needs to be available to his family: Not only do my kids need Mike, Mike needs the kids. She doesnt prescribe a Washington move for everyone: We were blessed that our kids were at an age where they could move easily. . . . Every family has to make its own choice.
Some legislators fill their Capitol Hill offices with family pictures, not only to impress constituents but to remind themselves. When Mike Pence took office in 2001, Karen installed a red landline phone in his Capitol Hill office-and only she knew the number. Its a bit of a gimmick now, since she can connect with him on his BlackBerry much more easily, but the phone sticks out as a reminder.
Plainly these are horrible neo-Amish trolls who deserve pop cultures disdain. Meanwhile, anybody heard lately from Carlos Danger? Wonder what Huma Abedin thinks about the Pence arrangement
UPDATE: Great comment by Mark:
Evangelicals are hypocrites for voting for Trump given the disrespect he has for marriage, and his willingness to defile the marriage bed. Because thats Bad For Women.
Evangelicals are crazy religious fanatics for having rules like Pences for safeguarding marriage, and avoiding even situations that might begin a pattern that could flower into defiling the marriage bed. Because thats Bad For Women.
Luke chapter 7:
31 To what then shall I compare the men of this generation, and what are they like? 32 They are like children who sit in the market place and call to one another, and they say, We played the flute for you, and you did not dance; we sang a dirge, and you did not weep. 33 For John the Baptist has come eating no bread and drinking no wine, and you say, He has a demon! 34 The Son of Man has come eating and drinking, and you say, Behold, a gluttonous man and a drunkard, a friend of tax collectors and sinners! 35 Yet wisdom is vindicated by all her children.When the heart is corrupted, everything looks foolish and corrupt.
I never called this a rule.
I admire the Pence's commitment to their marriage, and also think it's wise in these days of "gotcha" journalism.
Well, the left clearly prefers the inverted Muslim version that demands all women stay indoors so they aren’t tempted to rape them.
I would not do that. But that is just me. And it would be worse if we got along well.
It’s not that I don’t trust me. It’s that, being a man, I know the heart of man and, a bit less so, woman.
I think it is more likely that Mr. & Mrs. Pence are avoiding any opportunity for the conservative-loathing “press” to take pictures of him dining with any other woman and accusing him of infidelity, etc. The “press” would LOVE to slam any conservative if they can. I’m guessing that anyone in the Trump administration would be wise to follow the same guidelines.
Billy Graham always made it a policy to have a man around him so no one could snap a photo of him “alone with a another woman”. Wise as serpent, gentle as doves.
I guess since so many Leftist women have used such "private meetings" in the past as a primary tool in their political career advancement, the thought that someone like Pence would deprive them of the opportunity to do so is intolerable - and worse if it starts to catch on.
Because if Leftist women were not angry about being denied opportunities to sleep their way to the top of the political food chain, they would have no argument whatsoever to make against Pence's practice.
“I find it a little overboard, but if thats what works for Mike and his marriage, more power to him.”
Considering how the democrats are going crazy wanting to hang anything and everything on members of President’s Trump’s cabinet, I don’t blame VP Pence and his wife....smart.
As a fellow swamp-dweller, I have to say that I am surprised at the level of depravity folks will exhibit in public, creating every appearance of a scandal when there is none. Even worse is when the appearance of a scandal is because the individuals involved don’t care whether there is a scandal or who might be hurt, assuming that it is not themselves.
I do as well, I had a business lunch during the day alone with a woman 25 years ago. When I got home, my wife asked me who it was, since one of her friends saw me eating lunch with a woman!
I think it is something called a ‘near occasion’ in Catholic terminology, and is to be avoided. After that one time, I avoided it even though innocent. She was kinda hot though.
That’s what our pastor does - he says he does not want someone asking his wife why he was seen with another woman.
“Socially liberal or non-religious people may see Pences practice as misogynistic or bizarre. For a lot of conservative religious people, though, this set-up probably sounds normal, or even wise.”
Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil; that put darkness for light, and light for darkness; that put bitter for sweet, and sweet for bitter! - Isaiah 5:20 KJV
Billy Graham did the same thing and insisted on it for all his associates in ministry. He is now almost 99 years old, and there has never been an iota of sexual scandal about him or his many associates.
I have never been a big fan of his politics, but he was a very decent man of the old-style Democrats, before the party became communist. I very much admired how he returned home after retiring and did not interfere with Eisenhower. This is my favorite photo of Bess and Harry, in retirement:
LOL! I once got a tearful wrong number call from a woman who said, "Tell my husband to come home. I know he's with you, but his children need him." I kept trying to tell her she had a wrong number, but she thought I was the other woman, just lying to her. This was decades ago, but it made a big impression. Hope the bastid went home.
Such tidy people, the Trumans.
Whats up with Pence guy? Doesn’t he realize a Christ centered marriage is so 19th century. He’s Vice President and can seduce all the interns he wants?
Maybe.
Some people don't realize how fragile a marriage is until they have broken it by being careless.
I once had a wise minister say to me, "Few people wake up in the morning and say, "What a lovely day! I think I will toss my marriage away." But that is exactly what they end up doing. By setting up a few rules at the start of your marriage you can prevent that from happening."
Since he and his wife were married 68 years before death did them part (for about an hour) I thought that he probably knew what he was talking about.
Very true. It was just the way he said it (and he makes a living as a writer), "... not something I would do."
Not if your wife asked you to, Rod, because she was feeling vulnerable, what with your being away so much promoting your book? Not if things were difficult in your marriage right now, and young women who admire you were looking pretty interesting?
From my husband, I would be looking for a comment like, "I would do that if it seemed like a good idea for some reason."
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