From the Desk of Wendy Wixom:
Today, we often hear the phrase “love just love” or “love don’t judge.” But, is using judgment to determine the consequences (short or long term) of a behavior judgmental or common sense? Actually, might sharing the information to help protect people and society from those negative consequences be more loving?
In today’s article, Kari McEvoy reports on efforts of the media and the American Psychological Association to downplay the important impact of traditional marriage by trying to normalize and encourage other “relationship structures.” However, if one uses judgment and asks, “Where will this lead?” one discovers the loss of traditional marriage between one man and one woman produces a greater risk for children and society.
In 1948, there was an internationally-recognized call to endow the family with “protection by society and the state” (UDHR 16.3). That call is just as important today. Let’s respond by considering how all of us can provide the best environment for children, family and society to thrive – and then act accordingly.
Faithfully for Family,
Wendy Wixom, President
Polyamory and the Domino Effect
United Families International: Dedicated to informing you about the issues and forces impacting the family.
Contributed by Kari McEvoy
In 2013 Hans van Leeuwen of Leiden University set out to find just how powerful a domino chain reaction could be. Through a mathematical model, Leiden found a domino small enough to hold in your hand could start a chain reaction that would eventually topple a 112-meter tower. If we use Leiden’s discovery to look back in time at the history of traditional marriage, we may see a similar force.
If the “No-fault divorce” law of 1969 can be compared to the first small domino, what is the 112-meter domino of today? According to John Murawski of Real Clear Investigations, it’s polyamory. Polyamory activists are working to clarify “misconceptions” about their “love don’t judge” lifestyle. To avoid confusion about polyamorous relationships, we should understand the differences between polygamy, polygyny, and polyamory. While each of these terms defines non-monogamy, activists claim they are profoundly different. Polygamy is the general term for a union of more than two people. The practice of polygyny is defined as one man and multiple women, and polyandry, which is quite rare, is the practice of one woman taking several husbands. Polyamory, “allows both men and women to engage in concurrent sexual or romantic relationships with multiple people, with the knowledge and consent of everyone involved.” Jane and John love each other, but John is welcome to have other relationships, as is Jane. Polyamorous structures also differ from polygamous structures as all members and genders can be intimately involved simultaneously. John and Jane fell in love with Joe. Polyamory has been around for years but has recently begun to gain the momentum needed to knock down the next domino.
Polyamory – an emerging civil rights movement
It’s estimated that more than one-fifth of American’s have participated in non-monogamous relationships in the past and that number is expected to rise after quarantine. The American Psychological Association has recently established a “Consensual Non-monogamy Task Force”, whose main goal is to “make sleeping around with multiple partners in a variety of situations acceptable.” The APA argues that as long as “sex is consensual, no judgment should be attached.” Polyamory is also a growing trend on college campuses and among Millennials. Students are organizing clubs, and advocacy groups in support of “ethical non-monogamy”. Some of the greatest chain reactions build momentum from media and entertainment. HGTV ratings went up after they aired an episode featuring Brian, Lori, and Geli, a “throuple”, on the hunt for a home to accommodate them and their two children. After featuring six different polyamorous celebrities in February, Insider states that polyamory has become “ mainstream” in our society and having it’s “time in the spotlight”.
Murawski believes that polyamory activists, “are laying the groundwork to have their cause become the next domino to fall in a long line of civil rights victories”. University of California’s Heath Schechinger, a counseling psychologist believes, “There is plenty of evidence that consensual non-monogamy is an emerging civil rights movement”. Poly activists are not wasting time in gaining elected official support. Over a dozen local governments are working on anti-discrimination ordinances to include, “relationship structure” definitions. If this is true and the legalization of “relationship structure” or polyamory is the next domino to fall, what domino will be next? Where does society draw the line? Will societies need for the novel ever end? It looks like, when it comes to aberrant sexual behavior, you can never get enough of something you don’t need.
Where does this lead?
Lost in the discussion of the right of adults to define and form relationship structures based on their desires is the effect polyamory has on children. Rates of child abuse skyrocket for children living with non-biological guardians and that rate will increase as the number of adult guardians increase. Given the human propensity for breaking down sexual boundaries, it is likely that polyamory is not the final 112-meter domino to fall at the end of this experiment with human sexuality. What will be the next safeguard to fall in this destructive chain reaction?
When organizations like SEICUS, Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States, and Planned Parenthood advocate for the “sexual rights” of children, and others move to classify pedophilia as a sexual orientation, and libraries and parents support drag queen story hours for children, is it unrealistic to wonder if society might at some point knock down prohibitions against consensual sexual relations between adults and children? The history of the sexual revolution provides ample evidence that we now live in a world where adults prioritize what feels good for them. Lost is what is good for children, families, and society – and polyamory just isn’t.
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Kari McEvoy is a BYU-Idaho student majoring in Marriage and Family Studies and an intern with United Families International. Kari works full-time teaching K-6 music education at a Utah charter school. She doesn’t believe her job is work, “it’s just play!” Kari enjoys running, fitness, healthy cooking/eating, and reading. However, her greatest love is spending time with her husband and their six children and one beautiful granddaughter. She and her family enjoy singing, playing music together, sports and playing cards.