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Economy

Santorum’s Plan To End Poverty: More Marriage

Rick Santorum, the GOP 2012 presidential hopeful who has seen his support triple in Iowa, laid out a plan to end poverty at a campaign stop yesterday. As the Huffington Post’s Amanda Terkel noted, one of the plan’s two components is more marriage:

“Do you know if you do two things in your life — if you do two things in your life, you’re guaranteed never to be in poverty in this country? What two things, that if you do, will guarantee that you will not be in poverty in America?” he asked the crowd.

Number one, graduate from high school. Number two, get married. Before you have children,” he said. “If you do those two things, you will be successful economically. What does that mean to a society if everybody did that? What that would mean is that poverty would be no more. If you want to have a strong economy, there are two basic things we can do.”

An Economic Policy Institute report from September explained that poverty is “is a jobs
and employment problem, not a marriage problem.” But Santorum’s stance is not surprising considering that he considers “huge moral failings” — among them “letting the family break down” — to be the “root” cause of the nation’s economic woes. And as Terkel pointed out, Santorum “is virulently against same-sex marriage, even though it would increase the number of marriages in the country and theoretically lower the nation’s poverty rate, according to his logic.”

Santorum said earlier this month that he is “for income inequality,” even as he rails against slowing economic mobility as he travels the campaign trail. And though equalizing marriage treatment would, according to his theory, lower the poverty rate, it’s not likely that Santorum is going to be changing his tune on that subject anytime soon.

NEWS FLASH

Pro-Adultery Website Endorses Gingrich | A website that promotes adultery has endorsed Newt Gingrich for president, and even erected a giant billboard in Pennsylvania to announce it. Next to a picture of Gingrich making a “shh” gesture, the billboard reads: “Faithful Republican, Unfaithful Husband.” Ashleymadison.com, a dating website for people looking to cheat on their spouses, welcomes visitors with the tag line, “Life is short, Have an affair.” Gingrich has admitted to cheating on his wives, and Noel Biderman, the founder of the cheaters website explained, “Now that Newt is the leading contender in the race for the GOP nomination, we felt compelled to make a point to illustrate how times have changed when a serial divorcee/adulterer is capturing the hearts of the American people.” The billboard:

LGBT

Iowa’s Influential Social Conservative: Gingrich Convinced Us He ‘Asked God’s Forgiveness’ Over Affairs

During an appearance on MSNBC’s Morning Rundown today, Steve Scheffler, the influential social conservative and president of Iowa Faith & Freedom Coalition, tore into Mitt Romney over his past positions on “homosexual marriage” and for not addressing the “the life issue” on the campaign trail or appearing at conservative events in Iowa.

Scheffler also said Evangelical Christians were not concerned about Newt Gingrich’s complicated martial history, telling Chuck Todd, “I actually sat with the Speaker about a year ago with a group of pastors in talking about some of his past history and that he was regretful of that and that he’d asked God’s forgiveness. And I think by and large most Evangelicals accept that for what it is, that their concern for somebody’s present lifestyle as opposed to their past.” Watch it:

Polls show that conservative Evangelical voters prioritize the economy over social issues like marriage or abortion and most — 34 percent of white evangelicals expected to attend the Republican caucuses on January 3 — now support Gingrich. Romney is attracting 10 percent of the Evangelical vote. While the Iowa Faith & Freedom Coalition has yet to endorse a candidate in Iowa, another powerful social conservative group, the FAMiLY Leader, may be close to backing the former speaker.

NEWS FLASH

Social Conservatives Hit Gingrich For Multiple Marriages, Affairs In New Ad | An anonymous group calling itself Iowans for Christian Leaders in Government — which is also pressuring Iowa’s FAMiLY Leader not to endorse the former House speaker — is out with a new ad today targeting Newt Gingrich for his multiple marriages and extramarital affairs. Gingrich has sought to consolidate Evangelical support for his candidacy by playing up his close relationship with his third wife, all the while dismissing same-sex marriage as “a temporary aberration that will dissipate.” Watch the ad:

NEWS FLASH

Gingrich Campaigns For Social Conservative Votes In South Carolina | Thrice divorced Newt Gingrich met with pastors in South Carolina yesterday in his ongoing effort to shore up support from Christian conservatives in the state. “They asked how does God influence, how does your religion influence your decisions. And he said that is very important to him, that faith is very important,” said a supporter, Dana Bertoluzzi. “They wanted to know just various things about what should happen at the state level, what should happen within the communities and how he plans to support various things.” Interestingly, Bertoluzzi said Gingrich was “not asked about his three marriages and extramarital affair,” having apparently satisfied pastors with his past explanations, in which he attributed his failings to fervent patriotism.

Yglesias

Soviet Union Fact Of The Day

From Kate Bolick’s article on the new single women:

Or take 1940s Russia, which lost some 20 million men and 7 million women to World War II. In order to replenish the population, the state instituted an aggressive pro-natalist policy to support single mothers. Mie Nakachi, a historian at Hokkaido University, in Japan, has outlined its components: mothers were given generous subsidies and often put up in special sanatoria during pregnancy and childbirth; the state day-care system expanded to cover most children from infancy; and penalties were brandished for anyone who perpetuated the stigma against conceiving out of wedlock. In 1944, a new Family Law was passed, which essentially freed men from responsibility for illegitimate children; in effect, the state took on the role of “husband.” As a result of this policy—and of the general dearth of males—men moved at will from house to house, where they were expected to do nothing and were treated like kings; a generation of children were raised without reliable fathers, and women became the “responsible” gender. This family pattern was felt for decades after the war.

The piece is fascinating throughout. See also her interview with Edith Zimmerman. I have a pet theory that alongside the gender dynamics Bolick talks about, rapid improvements in the entertainment field are raising the marriage “reservation wage” for men and women alike.

Alyssa

Guest Post: The Reduction Of River Song

By Jess Zimmerman

Let me start by saying I really liked the Doctor Who finale. But it was also emblematic of the Lady Problems the show’s been having, where otherwise good female characters keep getting turned into The Girl Who Waited or The Doctor’s Wife — people who are defined in the negative space of the central male character. We’ve found out a lot about River Song this season, which culminates in this episode as she both marries and kills the Doctor — but she does both as part of his character development, not hers.

River and Amy, most of the time, are fully-realized, interesting, flawed, admirable characters. At minimum, they look like someone really tried. But writing a character who’s some caricature dippy socialite or gross nouveau Stepford wife isn’t the only way to be sexist. You could also, for instance, forget that your fully-realized female characters are supposed to be fully-realized, just as soon as the need arises for them to fulfill some symbolic function.

Last season ended with a wedding, where the hoary old “something old, something new, something borrowed, something blue” rhyme actually SAVED THE UNIVERSE. Existence depended on Amy and Rory not only tying the knot, but doing it in the most heteronormative of possible ways — if they’d just gone to the courthouse, everything would have been wrong forever. (Other important plot points in the following season: Amy and Rory get pregnant, Amy and Rory get a house, the Doctor stops calling Amy “Amy Pond” and calls her “Amy Williams.” Ugh.)

In this episode, a wedding has to save the universe again, although I’m honestly not certain why. This time it’s a little less traditional — whatever the Time Lord version of the Wedding Industrial Complex is, I’m guessing it doesn’t involve bow ties. But the symbolic weight of the wedding is the same as it was last season. These weddings aren’t just plot, they’re allegory: they bring friends back together, heal broken memories and broken universes, knit fragmented timelines, put time back in its proper place. Which is pretty okay! Weddings are fundamentally symbolic anyway — why not put that cultural significance to use? Let them stand for unity and harmony and all those nice things.
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