By George Neumayr on 4.9.08 @ 12:08AM
Will Lawrence v. Texas protect the polygamists at the Yearning for Zion ranch?
The assumptions underlying secularism's embrace of promiscuity
are essentially polygamous. Who cares, secularists say, if people
aren't monogamous over the course of their lives?
After all, the principle upon which monogamy rests -- that
sexual love possesses by nature an exclusive, permanent, and
procreative character -- is annoyingly antiquated and was long ago
discarded, clearing the path for a glorious lifetime of multiple
partners, easy divorce, maybe a detour or two into homosexuality,
and if all else fails a Clintonian open marriage.
Polygamy is just a more organized and immediate form of
promiscuity, lining the women up all at once instead of pacing them
out over time. But the illuminati -- most of whom have an
assortment of spouses, just not simultaneously, through habitual
divorce -- still recoil at the sight of the polygamous "Yearning
for Zion ranch" in Eldorado, Texas. Very troubling indeed. While
they chuckle at HBO's Big Love, they blanche at polygamy
on the prairie.
Perhaps if the polygamous Texas patriarchs looked more like Bill
Paxton and less like Charles Ingalls, perhaps if they opened up a
bathhouse instead of a compound, they would win the approval of the
elite and privacy advocates.
Apparently Lawrence v. Texas -- which progressive
guardians praised for establishing a constitutional right to define
morality anyway one likes without interference from "the community"
-- won't be kicking in for the Yearning for Zion ranch.
How quickly the Texas authorities have forgotten Anthony
Kennedy's important musings on the "mystery of human life" and the
sanctity of personal autonomy against intrusive moralists and
statists.
A GOVERNMENT RAID on a neighborhood in San Francisco -- to pluck
adopted children from the arms of gay couples lest their orgies
corrupt them -- would cause days of disquiet amongst reporters. But
this raid feels right to them. "Our hearts go out to the children,"
groaned an anguished FOX anchor, as she watched the women and
children trooped off to state services.
Since these children and women are in obvious need of
enlightenment from the state -- they wear 19th-century prairie
attire and spend part of their days quilting -- its rounding up of
hundreds of them needn't provoke close media scrutiny or calls for
circumspection from social libertarians.
I liked this headline on an Associated Press story: "Life on
Texas polygamist compound old-fashioned, but far from pleasant,
authorities say."
Far from pleasant? Well, that doesn't sound very good. While the
state is at it, concerned that minors are marrying older men, why
doesn't it also raid NEA-run public schools?
They don't seem too terribly troubled that underage girls might
be having sex with older men and even outfit them with
contraceptives to contain the consequences of such statutory
rape.
IN A SOCIETY that has normalized the corruption of children and
teens, whether by crazy sects or by secularist craziness, the work
of "Children's protective services" always looks comically
arbitrary.
Nothing really qualifies as the "corruption" of teens at this
point, except maybe smoking (nicotine, not pot), which is why Bill
Paxton's Big Love caused delight amongst elite critics (it
is "gracefully odd," one said) and blase acceptance by the
public.
As if to emphasize the point that promiscuous America was ready
for polygamy to assume its place at the table of the sexual
revolution, if only to munch on its crumbs, Paxton disclosed that
he used Bill Clinton as a model for his character. HBO worried at
first about the "yuck factor," but that concern quickly passed,
since most shows are predicated on sexual free-wheeling and the
tricky juggling of multiple affairs.
Since marriage is man-made anyways, elite reasoning goes, what's
the big deal if humans unmake it and squeeze polygamy into newer
and more elastic models of it? Open marriage, plural marriage --
does it matter?
It is not as if children need one father and one mother, as
homosexualists repeatedly argue, and married couples certainly
shouldn't be expected to stay together for the welfare of children.
Maybe the literature down at Children's Protective Services will
need to be changed -- Heather Now Has Seven Mommies -- but
that's a quick fix.
After the launch of Big Love, nobody in the mainstream
media, as far as I could tell, even raised a moral objection in
defense of children. If they raised an objection at all, it
reflected concern not for minors but for women exploited by dirty
dog patriarchs who have benefited from the confusions of the sexual
revolution.
The handcuffed patriarchs at the Yearning for Zion ranch must be
muttering to themselves: How come we don't get to join this
parade?
topics:
Bill Clinton, Constitution, Law, Oil