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- <text id=94TT1078>
- <title>
- Aug. 22, 1994: Essay:Real Baby, Illegitimate Debate
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Aug. 22, 1994 Stee-rike!
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 90
- Real Babies, Illegitimate Debates
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Barbara Ehrenreich
- </p>
- <p> If she followed the welfare-reform debate, Anita Hill must be
- having post-traumatic flashbacks. Here we have a collection
- of important white males, including Bill Clinton, Pat Moynihan
- and Bill Bennett, scowling down on one small, scared, female
- figure--embodied, in this case, in the Welfare Recipient.
- The women in the 5 million families on welfare are no more,
- and no less, representative of American womanhood than Anita
- Hill was. But the assault on welfare, like the Senate committee's
- interrogation of Professor Hill, is an implicit attack on the
- dignity and personhood of every woman, black or white, poor
- or posh.
- </p>
- <p> Take first the universal, nearly unquestioned assumption that
- welfare mothers "don't work," and that the goal of reform is
- to get them out of their own kitchens and into those of, say,
- Burger King. Well, ladies, what have we been doing in our kitchens
- all these years if not some species of work? No one receives
- AFDC payments without having at least one child to feed, wash,
- dress and pick up after, and the assumption of the welfare reformers
- seems to be that these activities are on a par with bonbon consumption.
- In the conceptual framework that holds that welfare mothers
- "don't work," affluent married homemakers can't rank much higher
- than courtesans.
- </p>
- <p> Churlish males have suspected for decades that homemaking is
- little more than a sinecure for the low-skilled and occupationally
- impaired. Of course no husband dares look his wife in the eye--often bloodshot from sleep deprivation--and tell her that
- she "doesn't work." Yet somehow the insult is assumed to be
- forgivable when directed at the down-and-out.
- </p>
- <p> The most pernicious feature of the recent welfare debate, though,
- from a feminine point of view, has to be the thriving new rhetoric
- of "illegitimacy." Until a few months ago, the term illegitimate,
- when applied to a human child, had more or less fallen from
- use and been replaced by the less pejorative out-of-wedlock.
- The courts have been steadily erasing the ancient disadvantages
- of being born to unmarried parents. Feminists have insisted
- that every child is equally real and deserving, regardless of
- the circumstances of his or her conception.
- </p>
- <p> Then Dan Quayle, followed by professional welfare basher Charles
- Murray, decided that the old stigma against the out-of-wedlock
- was in urgent need of revival. They argue that "illegitimate"
- babies are clogging the welfare rolls, and that welfare, perversely,
- is an incentive for the production of more of them. According
- to one online database, the number of newspaper articles linking
- welfare and "illegitimacy" hovered at about 100 a year or fewer
- between '90 and '93 and then jumped to 157 for the first six
- months of '94 alone.
- </p>
- <p> In fact, "illegitimacy" has about as much to do with welfare
- as baldness does with Social Security expenditures. Numerous
- studies have established that welfare does not serve as an incentive
- to bear additional babies. Furthermore, out-of-wedlock births
- are increasing throughout the industrial world--not because
- of generous welfare policies but because of changing mores and,
- in many instances, declining male wages. Recall that Dan Quayle's
- original target wasn't some impecunious pregnant teenager but
- the high-achieving Murphy Brown.
- </p>
- <p> Now women may differ on whether extramarital sex is a sin. But
- when the products of such unions are restigmatized as "illegitimate,"
- all women, chaste or otherwise, are potentially on shaky ground.
- The implication is that a mother can give birth, but only a
- father can confer full membership in the human community, i.e.,
- "legitimacy." A child that no man has claimed--either through
- marriage or later legal "legitimation" procedures--becomes
- somehow less worthy and less human. In English common law, an
- out-of-wedlock child was filius nullius, meaning child of no
- one. The kid was a bastard; the mother, being single and female,
- counted for nothing at all.
- </p>
- <p> The immediate victims of the new welfare rhetoric will be the
- children of poor single women. They're the ones who will have
- to face the restigmatization of "illegitimacy"--in the playground,
- where it will really hurt. They're the ones who will come home
- to empty apartments while their mothers process words and flip
- burgers. And, as dozens of disappointing welfare-to-work programs
- have shown, the low-wage jobs available to welfare recipients
- are hardly a cure for poverty. The net result of forcing welfare
- mothers to work will be a further decline in wages for everyone--as desperate women flood the work force--plus a surge of
- commuting among the preschool set.
- </p>
- <p> But the ultimate targets of the antiwelfare rhetoric are women,
- and not only the poor. Going after upscale women can still be
- a political faux pas, as Dan Quayle discovered. But the welfare
- mother makes an ideal scapegoat for the imagined sins of womankind
- in general. She's officially manless, in defiance of the patriarchal
- norm, just like any brazen executive-class single mother by
- choice. At the same time, she's irritatingly "dependent," like
- the old-fashioned, cookie-baking mom. But unlike her more upscale
- sisters, the welfare mom is too poor and despised to mount a
- defense. And unlike Anita Hill, she has hardly ever, in the
- entire debate, been invited to speak.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-