Comment by 542354234235

Comment by 542354234235 7 days ago

7 replies

The other being that once women have largescale representation in the workforce, can open bank accounts and credit cards on their own, and can support themselves financially, one of the key pressures to marry is removed. Once there was no fault divorce and women did not need to prove why they needed to divorce, one of the key pressures to stay married is removed.

dfxm12 7 days ago

Perhaps important, republicans from state lawmakers up to the VP are interested in repealing no fault divorce laws.

  • ryandrake 7 days ago

    And that's just what they'll openly admit to! Rest assured, they would absolutely not stop at no-fault divorce. They would undo all of the progress you mentioned, and likely more.

  • UncleMeat 7 days ago

    As the gender gap in voting patterns widens, denying rights to women goes from not only being an ideological project of the right but a political project as well. "We will win more elections if women have less social power" is not a good situation to be in.

  • 542354234235 7 days ago

    I am the opposite of surprised. How else are terrible, low-quality men going to trap women into a life of unpaid home labor if they can control their own finances, reproduction, and choice to enter or leave a marriage.

Jensson 7 days ago

That happened a long time ago though, much much longer ago than the number of relationships started to drop, so its unrelated.

  • 542354234235 3 days ago

    In 1969, California passed no-fault divorce, followed quickly by other states, and by the mid-80s, nearly all states had adopted no-fault divorce laws.

    In 1974, the Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA) made it illegal for banks to discriminate in lending based on sex or marital status, allowing women to get credit cards, loans, etc.

    In 1978, the US passed the Pregnancy Discrimination Act.

    The rate of working women went from 30% in the post WWII 40s, to over 50% in the 1970s.

    And divorces. They went from 9.2% in 1960, to 22.9% in 1980, and have been slowly declining since then.