Marco Rubio Just Exposed and Obliterated the Left With This Speech
The Maine Dem Senate Debate Could Be Summed Up in Seven Words
It Seems Dems Get Cooked Every Time They Go on This Local NY...
Thom Tillis Tells Todd Blanche What He Must Do to Earn His Support...
Leftist Canadian Who Assaulted Trump Supporters at the Jersey Shore Is Being Deported
We Might Have Found the Source for the Diarrhea Lettuce Outbreak. Yes, Taco...
ACLJ Sues the FBI to Expose Its Lies and Spying on Kash Patel...
Guy Who Got Rich Under Capitalism Says That System Isn't Working
Stars of The Odyssey Just Embarrassed Themselves With This Latest Promo
JD Retreat
America Is in Trouble and Running Out of Time
Radical-Chic Immigration Beliefs Cost an American Woman Her Life
A Second Chance for American Health—and American Farmers
The Billionaires Who Built Platner
In Defense of Data Centers
OPINION

FIRST-PERSON: The consequences of out-of-wedlock births

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
FIRST-PERSON: The consequences of out-of-wedlock births
DALLAS (BP) -- Recently, Tony Perkins, president of the Washington, D.C.-based Family Research Council had a 20-minute one-on-one meeting with presidential candidate Mitt Romney.
Advertisement

Mr. Perkins says the conversation centered on their shared concern for the direction of the country and shared values. It came up that both men had read an extensive story on the importance of marriage published three days earlier in The New York Times.

The article, by Jason deParle, is entitled, "Two Classes, Divided by 'I Do'." It tells the story of two women who work in a daycare center in Ann Arbor, Michigan. One of them -- Chris -- is the other one's — Jessica's -- boss. But they're friends. They both work long days. They have kids in the same age group. They both had modest Midwestern upbringings. They even got tattoos together.

Even though Chris doesn't make all that much more than Jessica, their situations are vastly different. Chris lives in a three-bedroom house in a nice subdivision. Her kids are in sports, scouting and summer camps. The family takes an annual Disney cruise. Her husband, Kevin, works a shift that gets him home in time to take their boys to afternoon swim practice. Plus, he helps manage the Boy Scout troop.

Jessica's family life is much different. Two of her three kids come to work with her in the early morning before she can take them to school. They live in a struggling district. Each kid gets one sports season per year and the family is on food stamps.

Advertisement

The gap between these two women's situations stems from a growing educational and marriage divide. Increasingly, the two divides coincide.

Both Jessica and Chris grew up in traditional homes. Both went off to college. But Jessica got pregnant her freshman year, lost her basketball scholarship and dropped out. She never married her children's father. He finally left six years ago. There was another man in the house for a while. He left, too.

Meanwhile, Chris and Kevin did things in standard order: High school, college, job, marriage, then children.

In his piece, Jason DeParle writes that, "Across middle America, single motherhood has moved from an anomaly to a norm with head-turning speed," extending into what he refers to as "the lower reaches of the middle class."

In 1990, 10 percent of births to white women with some post-secondary schooling, but not a college degree, occurred outside of marriage. Now it's 30 percent. Forty-one percent of all births in the U.S. happen outside of marriage, up from 17 percent 30 years ago.

All the studies show that, without the stable presence of a father in the home, kids are poorer, have more problems in school and in their academic performance and face a worse economic future. They're also more likely to become teenage parents and extend the cycle.

Advertisement

It would be great if both presidential candidates would read this story and be motivated by its lessons.

Penna Dexter is a conservative activist and frequent panelist on the "Point of View" syndicated radio program. Her weekly commentaries air on the Bott and Moody radio networks. Get Baptist Press headlines and breaking news on Twitter (@BaptistPress), Facebook (Facebook.com/BaptistPress ) and in your email ( baptistpress.com/SubscribeBP.asp).

Copyright (c) 2012 Southern Baptist Convention, Baptist Press www.BPNews.net

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement