This is the man who can save marriage, or at least believes he can.
![[Image: headshot.jpg]](http://www.huffingtonpost.com/contributors/richard-reeves/headshot.jpg)
All it takes is one look at that puppy-dog look and you know that this is going to be some bull.
This article ignores the every truth that this forum acknowledges, and celebrates the new model of marriage as a partnership of equals. It says nothing about women needing to improve themselves to make them more attractive to men or about reforming the legal system so that men don't fear marriage as an institution. No, the mainstream answer is more bitchwork for men.
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/arch...ca/283732/
The writer categorizes marriage as traditional, romantic, or equal (or to use his disgusting acronym HIP). His label of high-investment parenting is misleading since what really means is equal (i.e. man and wife share responsibilities at home). A woman who stays at home while her husband works can more easily give attention to her children than a family of two executives who dump their kids off at daycare. If anything, the traditional model provides an even higher intensity of parenting since a stay-at-home mom has nothing better to do all day. Anyway, here's how he sees each of these categories:
![[Image: Screen%20Shot%202014-02-13%20at%2010.37.18%20AM.png]](http://cdn.theatlantic.com/newsroom/img/posts/Screen%20Shot%202014-02-13%20at%2010.37.18%20AM.png)
He waves off traditional marriages as a thing of the past, but this is the only model that ever worked. The problems with the marriage rate have only started as society warmed to this equalist nonsense.
The author points to the graph below as evidence of progress (and as a confirmation of his HIP model) because now men do chores around the house too. But he doesn't even mention that there is more work overall for both spouses in the new equal model than in the division of labor model.
![[Image: Screen%20Shot%202014-02-13%20at%2010.38.51%20AM.png]](http://cdn.theatlantic.com/newsroom/img/posts/Screen%20Shot%202014-02-13%20at%2010.38.51%20AM.png)
He also breezes over the study that more equal marriages have less sex. Here's what he writes:
To be fair, he's probably been cooking up this pot of shit for a while, and that NY Times piece came out about a week ago, but you can't wave off something as important to marriage as sex in one sentence and expect to be credible.
Here's how he ends the article:
To sum up his argument, it's that men should wife sluts who spent their prime on education and career, and that, once married, men need to work to earn money, pitch in with the household drudgery, and look after any kids. The reward for this arrangement is that men can expect less sex and less leisure time than in previous generations, all of which men should agree to for the sake of the children. Sounds great!
![[Image: headshot.jpg]](http://www.huffingtonpost.com/contributors/richard-reeves/headshot.jpg)
All it takes is one look at that puppy-dog look and you know that this is going to be some bull.
This article ignores the every truth that this forum acknowledges, and celebrates the new model of marriage as a partnership of equals. It says nothing about women needing to improve themselves to make them more attractive to men or about reforming the legal system so that men don't fear marriage as an institution. No, the mainstream answer is more bitchwork for men.
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/arch...ca/283732/
Quote:Quote:
American marriage is not dying. But it is undergoing a metamorphosis, prompted by a transformation in the economic and social status of women and the virtual disappearance of low-skilled male jobs. The old form of marriage, based on outdated social rules and gender roles, is fading. A new version is emerging—egalitarian, committed, and focused on children.
[...]
The glue for these marriages is not sex, nor religion, nor money. It is a joint commitment to high-investment parenting—not hippy marriages, but "HIP" marriages. And America needs more of them. Right now, these marriages are concentrated at the top of the social ladder, but they offer the best—perhaps the only—hope for saving the institution.
The writer categorizes marriage as traditional, romantic, or equal (or to use his disgusting acronym HIP). His label of high-investment parenting is misleading since what really means is equal (i.e. man and wife share responsibilities at home). A woman who stays at home while her husband works can more easily give attention to her children than a family of two executives who dump their kids off at daycare. If anything, the traditional model provides an even higher intensity of parenting since a stay-at-home mom has nothing better to do all day. Anyway, here's how he sees each of these categories:
![[Image: Screen%20Shot%202014-02-13%20at%2010.37.18%20AM.png]](http://cdn.theatlantic.com/newsroom/img/posts/Screen%20Shot%202014-02-13%20at%2010.37.18%20AM.png)
He waves off traditional marriages as a thing of the past, but this is the only model that ever worked. The problems with the marriage rate have only started as society warmed to this equalist nonsense.
The author points to the graph below as evidence of progress (and as a confirmation of his HIP model) because now men do chores around the house too. But he doesn't even mention that there is more work overall for both spouses in the new equal model than in the division of labor model.
![[Image: Screen%20Shot%202014-02-13%20at%2010.38.51%20AM.png]](http://cdn.theatlantic.com/newsroom/img/posts/Screen%20Shot%202014-02-13%20at%2010.38.51%20AM.png)
He also breezes over the study that more equal marriages have less sex. Here's what he writes:
Quote:Quote:
Indeed, there is some evidence that there is less sex in these egalitarian, child-focused marriages. But least for this chapter of the relationship, sex is not what they’re about.
To be fair, he's probably been cooking up this pot of shit for a while, and that NY Times piece came out about a week ago, but you can't wave off something as important to marriage as sex in one sentence and expect to be credible.
Here's how he ends the article:
Quote:Quote:
The Polish anthropologist Bronislaw Malinoski once described marriage as a means of tying a man to a woman and their children. Nowadays, women don’t need to be tied to a man. Sex and money can be found outside the marital contract. But children do need parents—preferably loving, engaged parents. Indeed they may need them more than ever. In 21st century America, nobody needs to marry, although many will still choose to. Recast for the modern world, and re-founded on the virtue of committed parenting, marriage may yet have a future. That future of marriage matters most for the individuals in the house that aren't in the union: our children.
To sum up his argument, it's that men should wife sluts who spent their prime on education and career, and that, once married, men need to work to earn money, pitch in with the household drudgery, and look after any kids. The reward for this arrangement is that men can expect less sex and less leisure time than in previous generations, all of which men should agree to for the sake of the children. Sounds great!