By Elizabeth Crnkovich
A recent Family in America conference in D.C. lays out
the problem, and speaker Jennifer Roback-Morse provides a solution.
Past generations of American
pioneers, known for their openness to life, would not have believed it. They
would be astonished to learn that, in the second decade of the twenty-first
century, a woman’s fertility is not celebrated but discouraged. Women who marry
early, leave the workforce, and devote themselves to the birthing and raising
of children are not the norm. On the contrary, a woman is expected to pass her
most fertile years acting like a man, building up a strong career, and making a
lot of money. Only after she is thus “established” and has “enough money” is
she allowed to start thinking about having children.
In all of this, of course, there is
no assumption that she will abstain from sex. Rather, she is expected to use
pills and implants, diaphragms and injections in order to foil conception and
escape the “burden of children.” The Sandra Flukes of the world are not,
however, expected to pay for their own contraceptives. Our
“Contraceptor-in-Chief” has decreed that Obamacare (that is to say, all of us)
will bear this burden. Apparently, in the view of some, modern women are
helpless creatures who need government assistance to postpone and control their
own fertility to keep it from spiraling out of control.
At a recent Family in America
conference, Dr. Jennifer Morse, founder and president of the Ruth Institute,
spoke of society’s lack of acceptance of women’s fertility. Young women are
told they must be just like men if they want to enter the workforce and fit in
in the workplace. They are advised not to have children right out of school
because that will get in the way of a career. Universities accept ever larger
numbers of female students, but only with the unspoken understanding that they
will not have children while on campus.
According to Dr. Morse, fertility is
not seen as the norm for women but is rather viewed as a problem. And since
society’s progressives view fertility as problematic, a government constituted
of progressives takes action to curb it. This is evident in the recent HHS
mandate, in which contraception is considered “preventive care” and is to be
“free.” In other words, as Dr. Morse noted, “pregnancy is seen as a disease, a
problem to be solved.” So long as this view of women’s fertility is widely
held, the government will continue to find ways to control fertility and keep
the numbers of mothers and babies down.
The feminist movement has done a
good job of portraying women’s fertility in a bad light. Dr. Allan Carlson,
President of the Howard Center for Family, Religion, & Society and Editor
of The Family in America,
addressed precisely this point at the conference: “Feminists want choices, but
don’t want women to choose to stay with kids at home, they might like it!”
Instead of catering to these views, according to Dr. Carlson, public policies
should allow for more choices. Specifically, policies should be put in place to
make it easier for women to choose to stay at home if they so desire.
The government should not stand in
the way of a woman’s fertility, but should rather safeguard it. Women should be
allowed to choose when to bear children and how to raise their families.
This prescription also makes
demographic sense. The birth rate has dropped below replacement in America over
the past few years. Despite this birth dearth, fertility is still not seen as a
good thing, but rather as a problem to be dealt with. If America is to
sustain herself, her people need to start replacing themselves. Given that our
present policies discourage childbearing, this will not be an easy task.
A recurring theme at the Family in America
conference was how American society as a whole has grown to disfavor fertility
and disregard marriage. As the institution of marriage declines, this tends to
lower fertility even further. Both trends affect public policy since
politicians tend to cater to general societal trends. Charles Murray, author of
the recent book Coming Apart: The State of White America, 1960-2010, who also
addressed the conference, pointed out: “Once you don’t have marriage, you need
a stronger state. The welfare state is absolutely essential for America’s
people.”
While a good first step in promoting
marriage and fertility as societal goods is to institute pro-family and
pro-fertility policies, this is only a first step. Ultimately, society itself must
embrace the idea that men and women are each unique in their own way, and that
marriage is a natural means of uniting their unique strengths so that the whole
is greater than the parts. We must recover the truth that a woman’s fertility
is integral to her womanhood and is something to be nurtured, not thwarted.
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