Rise
in Out-of-Wedlock Births Is
Bad News for America’s Kids
By Jeffery M. Leving and Glenn Sacks
© 2006

The recent announcement from the
National Center for Health Statistics that the out-of-wedlock birth
rate is at an all-time high is bad news for America’s children. It
would be easier to understand, perhaps, if it were naive teenage
mothers who were creating this trend. However, according to the new
NCHS study, the trend--which is creating 1.5 million babies a
year--is being driven by adult women, many of whom are in their 30s
and 40s and are choosing single motherhood. They should know better.
The rates of the four major youth pathologies--teen pregnancy, teen
drug abuse, school dropouts and juvenile crime--are tightly
correlated with fatherlessness, often more so than with any other
socioeconomic factor, including income and race. The research is
clear that children need fathers, not simply as breadwinners, but
also for the valuable parenting--and fathering--they provide.
For example, a long-term study of teen pregnancy rates was conducted
in the United States and in New Zealand and published in the journal
Child Development. The study concluded that a father’s absence
greatly increases the risk of teen pregnancy. The researchers found
that it mattered little whether the child was rich or poor, black or
white, born to a teen mother or an adult mother, or raised by
parents with functional or dysfunctional marriages. What mattered
was dad.
There are various popular interpretations of the out-of-wedlock
trend. One is to blame men who, we are told, routinely impregnate
naïve, hapless women and then abandon them. However, given modern
women's birth control and reproductive options, when women have
children outside of marriage, it’s usually because they want to.
Nevertheless, our society often goes to great lengths to see unwed
mothers as victims. The highly-publicized Fadia Ward case provides a
good example. Ward founded www.sorryassbabydaddies.com to publicly
shame “deadbeat dads” and “take their manhood away." She has
appeared on ABC News Now, Black Entertainment Television, BBC Radio,
Good Day Philadelphia, and many others, and has been portrayed as a
heroine in numerous newspaper articles. Few have challenged her
assertion that she bears no responsibility for her situation, even
though she had four children by four different men by the age of 27.
Another explanation for the rise in single motherhood is that it’s a
symbol of women's increasing independence and empowerment. According
to this view, it’s hard to find a good man, so women are justified
in having kids on their own, and we should be happy that yesterday’s
unfair stigma against out-of-wedlock births is gone.
Two of the leading proponents of this view are Rosanna Hertz, Ph.D.,
author of the new book Single by Chance, Mothers by Choice: How
Women Are Choosing Parenthood Without Marriage and Creating the New
American Family, and Peggy Drexler, Ph.D., who last year released
Raising Boys Without Men: How Maverick Moms Are Creating the Next
Generation of Exceptional Men.
Drexler portrays father-absent homes—particularly “single mother by
choice” homes—as the best environments for raising boys. Hertz
concludes that “intimacy between husbands and wives [is] obsolete as
the critical familial bond." For her, fathers aren’t necessary—in
fact, "what men offer today is obsolete."
Our children would beg to differ. Studies of children of divorce
confirm their powerful desire to retain strong connections to their
fathers. For example, an Arizona State University study of
college-age children of divorce found that the overwhelming majority
believed that after a divorce "living equal amounts of time with
each parent is the best arrangement for children."
Famed athlete Bo Jackson provided a heart-wrenching depiction of a
child’s father hunger in his autobiography, the first chapter of
which is devoted to the father he didn’t have. Jackson explained
that as a child, when he wanted something, “I could beat on other
kids and steal…[but] I couldn't steal a father. I couldn't steal a
father's hug when I needed one."
There are some unwed mothers who really are victims. As a society
we're very aware of the ways some men misuse their power,
particularly in the family. Now, however, it’s time to take a hard
look at the ways some women misuse their power. Needlessly creating
fatherless babies is one of them.

Jeffery M. Leving is one of
America's most prominent family law attorneys. He is the author of
the book Fathers' Rights:
Hard-hitting and Fair Advice for Every Father Involved in a Custody
Dispute. His website is
www.dadsrights.com.
Glenn Sacks'
columns on men's and fathers' issues have appeared in dozens of
America's largest newspapers. Glenn can be reached via his website
at
www.GlennSacks.com or via email at
Glenn@GlennSacks.com.
Copyright 2006 Glenn
Sacks, all rights reserved