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Newsweek Quotes Glenn on ‘Single Mothers by Choice’

2007-10-30
By

Newsweek magazine writer Lorraine Ali quotes from my co-authored column Rise in Out-of-Wedlock Births Is Bad News for America’s Kids (Washington Times, 12/4/06) in her new piece Knocking Yourself Up–Some women laugh about turkey basters replacing Mr. Right. The ongoing debate over going it alone (Newsweek, 11/5/07). The piece centers around Louise Sloan, author of the new guidebook Knock Yourself Up: A Tell-All Guide to Becoming a Single Mom. Sloan now has a fatherless 16-month-old son.

As you could guess, the piece favors women who decide to have fatherless children–the only named opposition to the practice in the piece is my short quote. Ali also quotes Rosanna Hertz, author of Single by Chance, Mothers by Choice. Hertz and Peggy Drexler, author of Raising Boys Without Men: How Maverick Moms Are Creating the Next Generation of Exceptional Men, are the leading feminist gurus of voluntary single motherhood.

[To read my previous critique of Hertz and her book, see my co-authored column Are Single Mothers the 'New American Family?' (World Net Daily, 9/28/06). To see my previous critique of Drexler and her book, see my column Raising Boys Without Men: Lesbian Parents Good, Dads Bad (World Net Daily, 9/10/05)]

Obviously I disagree with much of what Ali (and Hertz and Drexler) have written, but I’ll limit myself to just two:

1) Ali tries to denigrate the importance of fathers in children’s lives by downplaying the numerous studies which show the vast differences in child well-being between single mother and two-parent households. She is correct that this difference is narrower when looking only at highly-educated, economically-secure mothers. However, the difference is still there.

2) Not all “well-being” can be measured by social scientists. Are there any adults who really believe that it won’t matter to Sloan’s 16-month-old boy that he doesn’t have a father?

Ali’s article is below. 

Knocking Yourself Up–Some women laugh about turkey basters replacing Mr. Right. The ongoing debate over going it alone
By Lorraine Ali
Newsweek, 11/5/07

Sex And The City’s” Carrie Bradshaw once asked, “What if Prince Charming had never shown up? Would Snow White have slept in that glass coffin forever? Or would she have eventually woken up, spit out the apple, gotten a job, a health-care package and a baby from her local neighborhood sperm bank?” Though it’s hard to say how Disney would have grappled with a no-show prince, if Ms. White were to awaken alone today, it’s possible she’d take the advice of Louise Sloan, author of the guidebook “Knock Yourself Up: A Tell-All Guide to Becoming a Single Mom.”

Sloan found herself single at 41, though she’d always considered herself “definitely the marrying kind.” Determined to become a mother, the Brooklyn-based writer inseminated herself with sperm from an unknown donor she refers to as No. 2, “a tall, handsome green-eyed actor (Favorite color: blue. Favorite pet: dogs)” in the attic of her conservative family’s Kennebunkport, Maine, summer house. Sloan now has a 16-month-old son, and uses her experience—as well as those of almost 50 more unpartnered, educated and financially independent straight and gay females over 30—to propel her humorous “how to” book for aspiring single moms. She offers practical advice on choosing the right donor and informing prospective grandparents in chapters titled “Oops, I Forgot to Have a Baby” and “Trysts With the Turkey Baster.”

Sloan’s amusing take on this provocative subject is already spurring caustic feedback online, though it’s the lightest offering among several recent books that include Rosanna Hertz’s academic account, “Single by Chance, Mothers by Choice,” and Mikki Morrissette’s firsthand account/guide, “Choosing Single Motherhood.” “We’re in a transition period—people are not just getting married because that’s what you do if you want to have kids,” says Sloan. “Women now have careers, are financially independent and waiting until they find the right guy. Most of us want to meet the perfect person and live happily ever after, but sometimes we don’t.”

Whether by choice or circumstance, the evidence suggests that more and more women are considering single parenthood. Unwed births among 30- to 44-year-olds rose 20 percent from 1991 to 2006, and last year alone, four in 10 U.S. babies were born outside of marriage even though teen pregnancies hit their lowest point in 65 years. Fairfax Cryobank, one of the biggest sperm banks in the United States, says its single-female clientele jumped 20 percent in the last decade and now accounts for 60 percent of its customer base.

Not everyone is embracing the unorthodox version of mommy. Fifteen years after Vice President Dan Quayle admonished TV’s Murphy Brown for having a baby out of wedlock, a recent review of “Knock Yourself Up” on Salon.com generated plenty of criticism, like that from someone who identified himself as “straight, married white male, three biological children.” He wrote that Sloan is an “upper-middle-class white woman pursuing her pregnancy fantasies.” And recently, blogger Glenn Sacks wrote on the Fathers & Family Web site that the rise of single mothers by choice was a “disturbing” phenomenon and is “bad news for America’s children.” “It’s provocative, this question of ‘Do men bring something unique in the raising of a child?’?” says Hertz, chair of the women’s studies department at Wellesley College…

Read the full article here.

Fathers & Families: Advocacy for the Child-Father Bond
Fathers & Families is a non-profit organization advocating for the right of every child to have two parents. Fathers are an essential part of a child’s life–divorce or separation should not change this. www.FathersandFamilies.org
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  • roger

    turkey basters are repugnant. but what is worse is the larger fraction of women that willfully deceive a man to get themselves pregnant “to meet their reproductive goals”. this opens the social services smorgasborg. and, of course, destroys the man’s life in the doing.

    these women are truely better off with a cat. as this is what the child is replacing. something that will give her that undying love and affection….until they finally mature and figure out what really happened.

  • PolishKnight

    Sadly, Glenn’s quote was used to tittilate such women who engaged in such behavior precisely to “disturb” others and get attention. Notice the emphasis on doing the dirty turkey baster deed in her “Kennebunkport, Maine, summer house”.

    If you want to disturb THEM, point out that women who truly go it alone aren’t eligible for “child” support. Also, argue that such women wound up alone in their 40′s because they weren’t the “marrying kind”. There are hundreds of services available to singles they could have taken advantage of.

    librarians2001 hits it on the head: I always wondered that if a woman couldn’t make a relationship work with a man, an adult person who, albeit not perfect, still works and produces an income then how could she be a parent and handle the incredible massive responsibility of such all by herself? Answer: They don’t. That’s why they whine about hard they have it “alone” (even when they have support from a smorgasborg of agencies as Ed points out.)

  • Ed

    It’s pathetic that Newsweek writes “an amusing” tale of some broad who makes a bunch of cash writing a book that embraces educated, finacially independant broads and their need to have children without the tradtional “male” around. So, the other 99.99% of these bumbling idiots are doing what exactly?

    Every time I date one of these (slow soft music playing in the background please maestro) “I’m just a single mom raising my ____ (fill in the number) children by myself” mummies I always smile and ask them if “male” is providing alimony, child support, health insurance, life insurance in mummies name least “male” get hit by a bus, day care (all or a pro rated portion according to HIS higher salary), and extra sundry expenses which invariably they do. This of course pretty much assures that there’ll be no boom boom that particular evening after I pay for dinner, play and after play drinks because reality, unlike the gossip at the local hair saloon isn’t all about their perceived world.

    Sure, “I’m a single mom raising MY kids all by MYSELF” is a good sound bite but the cost in tax dollars a nd child support/alimony/yadda/yadda/yadda paid to them or the State so they can afford to live “in a manner they are acustomed to” speaks to a different drummer.

    Then invariably comes the story that “women don’t save as much as men”, or “women despite living 36 years longer then men don’t plan for retirement like men do” which is ALWAYS followed by the suggestion that men should be forced to pay higher taxes then women (which we do anyway, and, by the by, is an ACTUAL proposal before the Congress as you read this). You can bet the homosexual saloon keeper is padding his 401(K) with the ridulous amount of money these Fraus are paying because “We’re worth it” accoring to Sarah Jessica parker in the hair dye commericals of yore.

    So, Ed sez forego the handouts “Mummie” ! And shut up. Try and make it on your own. For real this time. Not the well paid cows that work out of their houses writing romance novels or articles for Newsweek. Essentially the same thing.

    It’s the welfare “mummies” supported by yours truly and everyone else. Not only do men pay CS and alimony and in many cases mortgages for the ex-Frau but the increasing tax dollars that go to the same genre of “mummie” that ain’t writing for Newsweek there cupcake.

    Oh, Newsweek didn’t mention them or the millions of ex-wives that live off support?

    Go figure.

  • librarians2001

    Like many women, both married and unmarried, they never developed the maturity to have a real relationship with a man, so they chose someone to have a relationship with: a child. Happened in my marriage to an older career-focused woman, who was educated in the finest all-girl schools. After the divorce, I hopefully am letting my son see what it is to be a child, without the encumbrance of having to support his mother’s emotional needs.

  • daveinga

    IMHo -a very sad lot they are indeed. misery loves company fits them well. they ask questions where they know the answers they refuse to accept. purposely harming children for vanity. only the foolish would doubt the need for two parents. you can site a hundred studies and they will still not be convinced. vanity. and a whole society has followed these flute players, denied the truth, and suffered. sad.







Right.

Man up.

Buy the book now on Amazon.com. Or listen to Ronnie tell a story at escaping-from-reality.com.

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