Fatherless America – Part 3

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    Bestieboy666
    Bestieboy666
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    Count ’em: Seventy percent of juveniles in state reform institutions grew up in single- or no-parent situations.
    Source: Alan Beck et al., Survey of Youth in Custody, 1987, US Bureau of Justice Statistics, 1988.

    The Main Thing: The relationship between family structure and crime is so strong that controlling for family configuration erases the relationship between race and crime and between low income and crime. This conclusion shows up time and again in the literature.
    Source: E. Kamarck, William Galston, Putting Children First, Progressive Policy Inst. 1990

    Examples: Teenage fathers are more likely than their childless peers to commit and be convicted of illegal activity, and their offenses are of a more serious nature.
    Source: M.A. Pirog-Good, “Teen Father and the Child Support System,” in Paternity Establishment, Institute for research on Poverty, Univ. of Wisconsin. 1992.

    The ‘hood The likelihood that a young male will engage in criminal activity doubles if he is raised without a father and triples if he lives in a neighborhood with a high concentration of single-parent families.
    Source: A. Anne Hill, June O’Neill, “Underclass Behaviors in the United States,” CUNY, Baruch College. 1993

    Bringing the war back home The odds that a boy born in America in 1974 will be murdered are higher than the odds that a serviceman in World War II would be killed in combat.
    Source: US Sen. Phil Gramm, 1995

    Get ahead at home and at work: Fathers who cared for their children intellectual development and their adolescent’s social development were more like to advance in their careers, compared to men who weren’t involved in such activities.
    Source: J. Snarey, How Fathers Care for the Next Generation.Harvard Univ. Press.

    Diaper dads: In 1991, about 20 percent of preschool children were cared for by their fathers — both married and single. In 1988, the number was 15 percent.
    Source: M. O’Connell, “Where’s Papa? Father’s Role in Child Care,” Population Reference Bureau. 1993.

    Without leave: Sixty-three percent of 1500 CEOs and human resource directors said it was not reasonable for a father to take a leave after the birth of a child.
    Source: J.H. Pleck, “Family Supportive Employer Policies,” Center for research in Women. 1991.

    Get a job: The number of men who complain that work conflicts with their family responsibilities rose from 12 percent in 1977 to 72 percent in 1989. Meanwhile, 74 percent of men prefer a “daddy track” job to a “fast track” job.
    Source: James Levine, The Fatherhood Project.

    Long-distance dads: Twenty-six percent of absent fathers live in a different state than their children.
    Source: US Bureau of the Census, Statistical Brief . 1991.

    Cool Dad of the Week: Among fathers who maintain contact with their children after a divorce, the pattern of the relationship between father-and-child changes. They begin to behave more like relatives than like parents. Instead of helping with homework, nonresident dads are more likely to take the kids shopping, to the movies, or out to dinner. Instead of providing steady advice and guidance, divorced fathers become “treat dads.”
    Source: F. Furstenberg, A. Cherlin, Divided Families . Harvard Univ. Press. 1991.

    Older’s not wiser: While 57 percent of unwed dads with kids no older than two visit their children more than once a week, by the time the kid’s seven and a half, only 23 percent are in frequent contact with their children.
    Source: R. Lerman and Theodora Ooms, Young Unwed Fathers . 1993.

    Ten years after: Ten years after the breakup of a marriage, more than two-thirds of kids report not having seen their father for a year.
    Source: National Commission on Children, Speaking of Kids. 1991.

    No such address: More than half the kids who don’t live with their father have never been in their father’s house.
    Source: F. Furstenberg, A. Cherlin, Divided Families. Harvard Univ. Press. 1991.

    Dadless years: About 40 percent of the kids living in fatherless homes haven’t seen their dads in a year or more. Of the rest, only one in five sleeps even one night a month at the father’s home. And only one in six sees their father once or more per week.
    Source: F. Furstenberg, A. Cherlin, Divided Families. Harvard Univ. Press. 1991.

    Measuring up? According to a 1992 Gallup poll, more than 50 percent of all adults agreed that fathers today spend less time with their kids than their fathers did with them.
    Source: Gallup national random sample conducted for the National Center for Fathering, April 1992.

    Father unknown. Of kids living in single-mom households, 35 percent never see their fathers, and another 24 percent see their fathers less than once a month.
    Source: J.A. Selzer, “Children’s Contact with Absent Parents,” Journal of Marriage and the Family, 50 (1988).

    Missed contact: In a study of 304 young adults, those whose parents divorced after they left home had significantly less contact with their fathers than adult children who parents remained married. Weekly contact with their children dropped from 78 percent for still-married fathers to 44 percent for divorced fathers.
    Source: William Aquilino, “Later Life Parental Divorce and Widowhood,” Journal of Marriage and the Family 56. 1994.

    Commercial breaks: The amount of time a father spends with his child — one-on-one — averages less than 10 minutes a day.
    Source: J. P. Robinson, et al., “The Rhythm of Everyday Life.” Westview Press. 1988

    High risk: Overall, more than 75 percent of American children are at risk because of paternal deprivation. Even in two-parent homes, fewer than 25 percent of young boys and girls experience an average of at least one hour a day of relatively individualized contact with their fathers.
    Source: Henry Biller, “The Father Factor…” a paper based on presentations during meetings with William Galston, Deputy Director, Domestic Policy, Clinton White House, December 1993 and April 1994.

    Knock, knock: Of children age 5 to 14, 1.6 million return home to houses where there is no adult present.
    Source: U.S. Bureau of the Census, “Who’s Minding the Kids?” Statistical Brief. April 1994.

    Who said talk’s cheap? Almost 20 percent of sixth- through twelfth-graders have not had a good conversation lasting for at least 10 minutes with at least one of their parents in more than a month.
    Source: Peter Benson, “The Troubled Journey.” Search Institute. 1993.

    Justified guilt. A 1990 L.A. Times poll found that 57 percent of all fathers and 55 percent of all mothers feel guilty about not spending enough time with their children.
    Source: Lynn Smith and Bob Sipchen, “Two Career Family Dilemma,” Los Angeles Times, Aug. 12, 1990.

    Who are you, mister? In 1965, parents on average spent approximately 30 hours a week with their kids. By 1985, the amount of time had fallen to 17 hours.
    Source: William Mattox, “The Parent Trap.” Policy Review. Winter, 1991.

    Waiting Works: Only eight percent of those who finished high school, got married before having a child, and waited until age 20 to have that child were living in poverty in 1992.
    Source: William Galston, “Beyond the Murphy Brown Debate.” Institute for Family Values. Dec. 10, 1993.

    This is the last of the main stats. Its incredible these were 20-30 years ago, so the problem was being investigated back then. So why the f~~~ is it getting worse every year!

    Women are so bad, if they changed the law so I kept the house, I still wouldn't marry one. I'd rather be homeless.

    #229996
    +1
    Jan Sobieski
    Jan Sobieski
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    28791

    Great posts, great facts. However as you know a female needs a man like a fish needs a bicycle, science be dammed.

    Love is just alimony waiting to happen. Visit mgtow.com.

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