Saturday, December 04, 2004

Texas vs. Massachusetts: Round 1

Just read this. If you can't, read the what I excerpted. From Andrew Sullivan:

So ask yourself a simple question: which state has the highest divorce rate? Marriage was a key issue in the last election, with Massachusetts' gay marriages becoming a symbol of alleged blue state decadence and moral decay. But in actual fact, Massachusetts has the lowest divorce rate in the country at 2.4 divorces per 1,000 inhabitants. Texas - which until recently made private gay sex a criminal offence - has a divorce rate of 4.1. A fluke? Not at all. The states with the highest divorce rates in the U.S. are Alabama, Arkansas, Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, and Texas. And the states with the lowest divorce rates are: Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Every single one of the high divorce rate states went for Bush. Every single one of the low divorce rate states went for Kerry. The Bible Belt divorce rate, in fact, is roughly 50 percent higher than the national average.

Some of this discrepancy can be accounted for by the fact that couples tend to marry younger in the Bible Belt - and many clearly don't have the maturity to know what they're getting into. There's some correlation too between rates of college education and stable marriages, with the Bible Belt lagging a highly educated state like Massachusetts. But the irony still holds. Those parts of America that most fiercely uphold what they believe are traditional values are not those parts where traditional values are healthiest. Hypocrisy? Perhaps. A more insightful explanation is that these socially troubled communities cling onto absolutes in the abstract because they cannot live up to them in practice.

But doesn't being born again help bring down divorce rates? Jesus, after all, was mum on the subject of homosexuality, but was very clear about divorce, declaring it a sin unless adultery was involved. A recent study, however, found no measurable difference in divorce rates between those who are "born again" and those who are not. 29 percent of Baptists have been divorced, compared to 21 percent of Catholics. Moreover, a staggering 23 percent of married born-agains have been divorced twice or more. Teen births? Again, the contrast is striking. In a state like Texas, where the religious right is extremely strong and the rhetoric against teenage sex is gale-force strong, the teen births as a percentage of all births is 16.1 percent. In liberal, secular, gay-friendly Massachusetts, it's 7.4, almost half. Marriage itself is less popular in Texas than in Massachusetts. In Texas, the percent of people unmarried is 32.4 percent; in Massachusetts, it's 26.8 percent. So even with a higher marriage rate, Massachusetts manages a divorce rate almost half of its "conservative" rival.

Comments?

4 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

interesting statistic for sure. and in terms of arguing politically against conservatives on the issue of gay marriage, such a stat is helpful. but ideally, divorce rates wouldn't matter in arguing for gay marriage. who cares if divorce rates go up with gay marriage? gay people shouldn't have to be held to a higher standard than straight people when it comes to divorce--moreover, there should be no standard at all. people should be allowed to marry and divorce as they please. to be even more radical: we shouldn't even call it "marriage" in the first place. but now I'm ranting... back to work! -J

8:59 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

DailyKos linked to a chart today with a similar message: Teen pregnancy in the Red States.

7:12 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Sorry, the link to that was: [http://images.dailykos.com/images/user/3/teenpreg.png]

- Danny Moldovan

7:14 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Sullivan is tracking this theme closely. He just linked to an article about porn superstores thriving in rural America now that big cities have kicked out much of the porn industry: We're Not in G-Rated Kansas Anymore

6:13 AM  

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