By Jerome Woehrle March 15, 2024, Liberty Unyielding
“Marriage fundamentalism” promotes “white supremacy,” according to a professor at Virginia’s largest university.
“Marriage fundamentalism, like structural racism, is a key structuring element of White heteropatriarchal supremacy,” wrote George Mason University Professor Bethany Letiecq in the Journal of Marriage and Family. ““Marriage fundamentalism can be understood as an ideological and cultural phenomenon, where adherents espouse the superiority of the two-parent married family.”
Letiecq, an official of the American Association of University Professors, says she employs “critical family theorizing…to delineate an overarching orientation to structural oppression and unequal power relations that advantages [white heteropatriarchal nuclear families] and marginalizes others as a function of marriage fundamentalism.”
Letiecq says the government has coerced “its citizens to enter into an institution built upon White heteropatriarchal supremacy.” Letiecq says marriage as an institution has allowed white heterosexual couples “to gain access to benefits, rights, and protections.”
She lives with her partner and their children in what she describes as “a committed heterosexual union outside the institution of marriage.”
Letiecq claims that only white heterosexual couples reap the social and financial benefits of marriage subsidized by the government while minority Americans do not gain any such benefits.
In reality, the social benefits of marriage are experienced equally by a person of any race who enters into it. The marriage laws apply equally to all races, and the tax code often imposes a marriage penalty, rather than a benefit, as do government financial aid laws and laws administered by the Social Security Administration. These penalties, like benefits associated with marriage, are experienced by people of all races.
Marriage benefits people of all races by reducing crime — which disproportionately affects black people, who are overrepresented among murder victims, according to the FBI — and by improving the lot of children. Consider these frightening statistics about how the vast majority of juvenile delinquents and young criminals come from fatherless households, which are what typically occurs in the absence of marriage:
85% of all children that exhibit behavioral disorders come from fatherless homes (Source: Center for Disease Control)
80% of rapists motivated with displaced anger come from fatherless homes (Source: Criminal Justice & Behavior, Vol 14, p. 403-26, 1978.)
70% of juveniles in state-operated institutions come from fatherless homes (Source: U.S. Dept. of Justice, Special Report, Sept 1988)
85% of all youths sitting in prisons grew up in a fatherless home (Source: Fulton Co. Georgia jail populations, Texas Dept. of Corrections 1992)
University of Virginia sociologist Brad Wilcox disagrees with Professor Letiecq, saying that marriage does have a social benefit. “Marriage is an institution that has advanced the common good in many civilizations, from Europe to the Americas, and from Asia to Africa. Marriage benefits children of all racial and ethnic backgrounds,” he says. Wilcox has written multiple articles about the importance of married fathers and the negative effects of single-parent households.
As head of the AAUP at George Mason University, Professor Letiecq attacked academic freedom. She endorsed a call by UnKochMyCampus for a “Congressional investigation” of its law school’s hiring of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh as an adjunct faculty member. There were no legitimate grounds for an investigation. Judges often teach at law schools. Liberal Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer taught many classes at Harvard Law School when he was a judge on the appeals court in Boston. Yet Letiecq found it beyond the pale for a conservative justice to teach about law. A law professor responded, “Prof. Letiecq, the law school chose to hire him, it has nothing to do with Koch, and you are advocating a gross violation of our academic freedom.” In the face of such criticism, Letiecq deleted her foolish tweet endorsing the call for an investigation. But she later approvingly tweeted a link to an article titled, “I don’t want Justice Brett Kavanaugh teaching at my alma mater.”
The AAUP has a disturbing ideological double standard. It supported intrusive public-records requests aimed at a conservative academic in Kansas, even while denouncing similar requests aimed at liberal academics in Wisconsin and Virginia. When liberals are targeted, it claims they have “academic freedom.” But when the conservative Kansas instructor was targeted, it claimed that was “an issue of academic integrity, not academic freedom.”
The First Amendment guarantees “freedom of speech,” not freedom “from” speech. The AAUP seems to have forgotten this, in its recent endorsement of certain forms of campus censorship.
In 2018, the AAUP criticized campus free-speech legislation because it would disproportionately benefit conservatives, who are often subjected to campus censorship. Free-speech bills, it complained, “are tailored specifically to respond to the kinds of incidents that have affected conservative speakers,” and “rarely address other constraints on campus free speech, such as the recording of professors in classrooms or professor watch-lists.”
What it characterized as “constraints” on speech are actually exercises of free speech rights. Courts have consistently ruled that recording an incident is itself a form of expression for First Amendment purposes. As an appeals court observed in Fields v. City of Philadelphia (2017), “every Circuit Court of Appeals to address this issue … has held that there is a First Amendment right to record police activity in public.” Similarly, criticism of professors — such as professor watch-lists — are forms of protected speech. Criticism of college officials is protected speech, unless it contains “overt threats,” as courts have made clear in decisions like Barnes v. Zaccari (2012) and Bauer v. Sampson (2001).
It may be true that free speech on campus disproportionately benefits conservatives. After all, they are more likely to be censored, due to the unpopularity of conservative views among college administrators, who are overwhelmingly progressives. But that is not a valid argument against protecting such speech. As a journalist observed, “Free speech is meant to protect unpopular speech. Popular speech, by definition, needs no protection.” As the Supreme Court explained in NAACP v. Button (1963), whether speech is protected does not turn on whether it lacks “popularity.”
The AAUP claims treating conservatives equally will “disempower public higher education.” Rather than laws stiffening penalties for First Amendment violations, which will supposedly create a “litigious atmosphere,” America’s “colleges and universities should decide their campus policy,” without any “interference.”
Allowing universities to punish students for conservative or religious views defeats, rather than promotes, the purpose of higher education. As the Supreme Court explained in Rosenberger v. Rector of the University of Virginia (1995), in overturning a restriction on religious speech that the AAUP supported, for a “university, by regulation, to cast disapproval on particular viewpoints of its students risks the suppression of free speech and creative inquiry in one of the vital centers for the Nation’s intellectual life, its college and university campuses.”
The AAUP was wrong to suggest that the First Amendment leaves state “colleges and universities” free to “decide their campus policy” about free speech, such as whether to protect the rights of conservative speakers. As the Supreme Court noted in Healy v. James (1972), “state colleges and universities are not enclaves immune from the sweep of the First Amendment.”
AAUP president Rudy Fichtenbaum complained about conservatives making earmarked donations to support higher education and scholarly research, which he views as undermining left-wing control of higher education. In his mind, such laudable activity should be squelched in the name of “shared governance,” as he put it in a commentary in which he also denounced a 2010 Supreme Court decision vindicating First Amendment freedoms.
3 comments
I’d bet she is not on Trump’s Christmas card list! 😂
Yesterday, the Loudoun GOP held an election for chair — and it was as crazy and nasty as you’d expect (according to former Trump official Nick Minock, who now works as a “journalist” at right-wing-propaganda Sinclair’s WJLATV7, tweeted, “A few folks described the race to me as “bare knuckle” “off the rails” and filled with ‘personal attacks’” – such as the incumbent Chair, Scott Pio, accusing his opponent, Paul Lott, of “abusing his wife and Children in 2024”). In the end, incumbent Chair Pio (see below for more about him) barely held off a challenge from Lott (who Del. Rip Sullivan, in his “Flip-and-Defend-a-District-Friday,” described as “focused on Critical Race Theory, banning books, attacking transgender students…taking away a woman’s right to choose…a right-wing extremist”; Lott also claims that transgender “ideology” is “contrary to human history, biology, and commonsense”) – by 37 votes out of 1,159 cast, in a highly divided party
Sadly, this is not a surprise, under the far-left leadership at GMU of President Gregory Washington.