Women are "the problem" in divorce says Arkansas GOP Rep.
Did you gurls know that you are "the problem in divorce? This fool says so. From RawStory.com:
Rep Tom Cotton (R-Douchbag) |
Thanks to online archives, Rep. Tom Cotton (R-AR)’s college-era
thoughts about women have been exposed to voters who may be asked to
consider him for the U.S. Senate in 2014. Cotton, during his time at
Harvard University, penned a 1997 column in which he wrote that men are
“simple” and women are “the problem” when it comes to divorce in the
United States.
According to the Huffington Post, Cotton argued in a column titled “Promises and Covenants” for the Harvard Crimson
he interviews an unspecified number of women (which he admits is a
“admittedly small and perhaps unrepresentative”) about their greatest
fear only to discover that it is living without a man.
I have been asking women two questions. My first question was “What is your greatest fear in life?” Uniformity characterized the responses. (Yes, these are actual responses from Cliffies; I did not fabricate them.) “Watching my husband walk out on me.” “Losing my lover.” “Getting a divorce.”
My second question was very similar: “What is your deepest hope in life?” Again, the responses were uniform. “Finding and holding onto the love of my life.” “Being a good wife and mother.” “Marrying a man who worships me and whom I worship.”
He went on to tout remedies to this fear, including the then-upcoming
march on Washington by the evangelical group Promise Keepers (PK) — a
group whose membership rapidly declined by the turn of the century,
according Hartford Institute for Religion Reserach’s John P. Bartkowski,
who described the decline in his 2003 book, The Promise Keepers: Servants, Soldiers, and Godly Men.
“The Promise Keepers’ annual budget dwindled from $117 million in 1997
to $34 million in 2001, and its surviving office staff of one
hundred—those rehired after the layoff—was a skeleton troupe when
compared with the veritable army of three–hundred and fifty that it
employed during its heyday,” Bartkowski wrote.
Cotton also encouraged his readers to support politicians fighting to
repeal no-fault divorce laws, even though today every state in the
nation has laws that allow it. New York state became the last to pass a no-fault divorce bill in 2010. Instead,
he touted biblically rooted “covenant marriages,” which try to prevent
divorce except under extreme circumstances such as adultery, abandonment
or — in the words of one such model law passed in Arkansas in 2001 – ”cruel and barbarous treatment.” As the New York Times reported
at the time of Arkansas becoming the third state to pass such a law,
“Fewer than 3 percent of couples who marry in Louisiana and Arizona take
on the extra restrictions of marriage by covenant.”
Cotton postulated that “feminists understandably view movements like
PK and covenant marriage with anxiety,” even though the National
Organization for Women’s New York chapter actually opposed the no-fault divorce bill
at the time of its passage (a move many other feminist groups
criticized at the time). “Feminists who allegedly speak for women should
attack divorce, not its effects,” Cotton wrote.
“If restrained, however, men can fulfill women’s deepest hopes. They
can learn that personal happiness comes from the desire to devote and
sacrifice oneself to one’s beloved,” Cotton concluded. “A few men can
see this by themselves, and women are quite lucky to hook them. Ordinary
women must not only defend these men against feminism, but also demand
that all other men accept the lifelong nature of marriage. If not,
one-half of all women who marry see their ‘greatest fear’ come true. If
so, they can have their ‘deepest hopes’ fulfilled.”
[Screenshot of Tom Cotton speaking to CNN]
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