Exactly. RW propaganda. |
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Yeah this article isn't just pushing getting married young but a specific version of marriage as well.
And I think it is likely to backfire. Portraying marrying young as being part of the right wing stuff isn't going to be attractive to many young women. I'm someone who married young but this rhetoric was a bit skin crawling. |
| I married young to my college boyfriend (married at 25) and am happily married to him 25 years later but there is no one size fits all. I have friends who happily married in their late 30s. It’s whether you are compatible that matters. |
Yep. And it is also a tell that he doesn’t actually care about the well-being of families and children. The RW commenters who actually genuinely believe that family and kids are beneficial advocate for family friendly policies that help everyone. I think they realize that not only are these policies good for them and their communities, but that the whole point is to make family life seem like an attractive option to younger people - and moral browbeating doesn’t really get you there even if you are religious. |
Exactly. I did a quick search of the origin of the Family Life whatever happiness data he reports and it comes out of BYU. Religiosity is a variable in his research. Which is fine, but he’s either has a major blind spot or is being less than honest by not presenting it as such. And fwiw, Erika Kirk was 32 when she married a 27 year old Charlie. If she’d married whoever she was dating in her early 20s she wouldn’t have her children. Sometimes things work out the way they’re supposed to as opposed to forcing it because that same podcaster is telling you to do as they say, not as they do. |
Yes, actually family friendly policies like maternity AND paternity leave, sick leave, PreK, etc. Yelling at people to get married will do diddly squat. |
Also giving young women on-ramps to rejoin the workforce later. |
| I think it depends on the person. I don’t think you should have to drag it out if you have a really great relationship and you are super sure about it, but I don’t think pushing a 21 year old who are unsure of themselves is a good idea. I was an anxious mess at that age, waiting was the right decision. Everyone should not just marry their college or high school boyfriend. I know someone who is happily married to their college boyfriend, and one who divorced theirs. |
It was also her second marriage. |
And she was swinging on a Tarzan swing on stage 3 weeks after his death. |
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We married at 25 and our last child is graduating from college this year.
Our oldest married at 25 and a year later they’re buying a house in NoVA. They both make decent money and have no intention of having kids yet so they’re saving and investing their extra income. |
What do people qualify as a young marriage? I don’t see 25 as a young marriage, my mother was married at 21 and my grandmother was 19. I see a young marriage as 22 and below. |
It's youngish compared to the current median marriage ages (29 for men and 28 for women). I don't know the generation of your mother or grandmother, but the median marriage age for women in the 1950s was 19 and for men 21. Admittedly, there is probably a floor of maybe 18 that existed at least in the 20th century. |
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The article was generally a huge eye roll.
IMO, there are two reasons to be open to getting married early/finding spouse in college: 1) amazing pool of eligible options (but you have to be proactive about it, since dating is rare now); 2) IF you find the right person AND support each other's career goals, you can really benefit financially with two high-flying careers. Children don't have to come right away, but a shared life and stability are cheaper. Anyway, neither of those need to be policy recommendations, but they are things I hope my kids think about. |
Nope. I don't want my daughter (or my son) getting married that young. I want them to explore the world, themselves, etc., and then settle down |