As a news junkie, I don’t start my day without reading the Washington Post, I listen to NPR, and finish my day with PBS Newshour. But there are things that fly under the radar. I subscribe to Heather Cox Richardson’s Letters from an American. And I subscribe to Dame, which has started emailing a Friday round up of important news of the week that might have missed MSM. Today there was a piece that about knocked me off my chair. Well, actually, the cheap chair had a bad weld and almost collapsed on me but that’s another story.
Here’s the latest on the GOP War on Women, from the Rolling Stone. As if taking away our bodily autonomy and control of our reproductive health care decisions wasn’t enough. Poor tidy whitey righty podcaster Steven Crowder, his wife filed for divorce. Because she could. Texas is a no fault divorce state, just like the other 49. He is unhappy. She is OBVIOUSLY not happy with him for many reasons, but I don’t want to go there. He’s only unhappy because he can’t control her. He’s hoping the Texas GOP platform plank to eliminate no fault divorce becomes reality.
I’m old enough to remember when California (of course) started the no fault ball rolling back in 1969. I was a high school senior, more than a decade away from my first and only marriage (I like to say I sat out the first round). It only took 40 years for NY to be the last state to put no fault divorce on the books in 2010. Either party could initiate a divorce without having to prove abuse, infidelity, or other bad stuff in court. How civilized. Researchers have tracked impact of the reforms, showing decreases in female suicide and domestic violence, as well as decrease in spousal homicide. I had no idea, but am not surprised, that 2/3 of divorces are initiated by women, like Crowder’s wife.
So eyes wide open everyone. Coming to a state near you. It’s not just Texas. Louisiana is working on it, Nebraska only wants no fault if you have no kids. And don’t count on the TX legislature holding this back. In Texas, all they have to do is find a sympathetic judge. Gee, where could they find one who would understand the message????