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July 11, 2004 Let Them Eat Wedding Cake By BARBARA EHRENREICHCommitment isn't easy for guys - we all know that - but the Bush administration
is taking the traditional male ambivalence about marriage to giddy new
heights. On the one hand, it wants to ban gays from marrying, through
a constitutional amendment that the Senate will vote on this week. On
the other hand, it's been avidly promoting marriage among poor women -
the straight ones anyway. Opponents of gay marriage claim that there is some consistency here,
in that gay marriages must be stopped before they undermine the straight
ones. How the married gays will go about wrecking heterosexual marriages
is not entirely clear: by moving in next door, inviting themselves over
and doing a devastating critique of the interior decorating? It is equally unclear how marriage will cure poor women's No. 1 problem,
which is poverty - unless, of course, the plan is to draft C.E.O.'s to
marry recipients of T.A.N.F. (Temporary Assistance to Needy Families).
Left to themselves, most women end up marrying men of the same social
class as their own, meaning - in the case of poverty-stricken women -
blue-collar men. But that demographic group has seen a tragic decline
in earnings in the last couple of decades. So I have been endeavoring
to calculate just how many blue-collar men a T.A.N.F. recipient needs
to marry to lift her family out of poverty. When I suggested that - with food pantries maxing out and shelters overflowing
across the nation - poor women might have other priorities, Horn snapped
back: "It's fine for you to make the decision on what low-income
couples need." Silly old social-engineering-type liberal that I am,
I had actually doubted that marriage education might be helpful to couples
doomed to spend their married lives on separate cots in the shelter. Besides, he went on, low-income people are eager for government-sponsored
marriage education. Lisalyn Jacobs, who tracks T.A.N.F. marriage policy
at the women's group Legal Momentum, told me she finds it "obscene"
that, in the face of coming cuts in housing subsidies and other services,
H.H.S. is planning to spend any money at all on marriage, much less the
$200 million now proposed. But she may be unaware, as I am, of the mobs
of poor women who picket H.H.S. daily, chanting: "What do we want?
Marriage education! When do we want it? Now!" If marriage were a cure for poverty, I'd be the first to demand that
H.H.S. spring for the Champagne and bridesmaids' dresses. But as Horn
acknowledged to me, there is no evidence to that effect. Married couples
are on average more prosperous than single mothers, but that doesn't mean
marriage will lift the existing single mothers out of poverty. So what's
the point of the administration's marriage meddling? Jacobs thinks that
the administration's mixed signals on marriage - O.K. for paupers, a no-no
for gays - are part of the conservative effort to "change the subject
to marriage." From, for example, Iraq. Copyright 2004 The New York Times Compa
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