Link to your divorce stats?
Here's one.
https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopula...es/divorce/datasets/divorcesinenglandandwales
It turns out I was actually wrong (or rather I was relying on information I learned in A-level sociology and which is now outdated). Nowadays, divorce among young people is actually quite uncommon. Instead, as you can see, the average age of divorce has risen consistently, peaking in the 40s. Even in the early 50s, people still divorce at a similar rate to people in their 30s.
This is why you suddenly have a lot of single elderly people, it's not because people have turned their back on monogamy and want to live a glamorous single life, it's because marriage isn't working out for most people. Half of marriages end in divorce. Half of people married at any given time report that their marriage is unhappy. If you want to look for the social engineering in our society, look at the way people (especially women) are constantly fed a romantic fantasy that marriage is their path to happiness. It statistically is not.
I am interested in different types of marriages. Long suggested: different marriage licenses. When marrying, choose a type: easy no fault divorce, fault based, and no divorce option but only annulment. I'd add to that a marriage for term.
I can't see this happening, because it doesn't really solve any of the problems with marriage as an institution. People who get married do not typically intend to divorce.
Instead, I think what will happen is that we will keep the concept of marriage, but we will increasingly recognise that it is not a lifetime commitment but instead a contingent commitment that people are free to leave if they want to. I think eventually we will also get round to dismantling the economic need for marriage out of necessity.
I think we will end up with a system where it is normal for children to have two families, and where much of the financial and labour burden of raising children is spread across society as a whole rather than being the sole responsibility of parents. I don't think this will happen quickly and I think it will be strongly opposed, but I think it will ultimately become necessary because the current institutions we have are failing.
You can find articles that critiques that advocates do not only want the freedom to abort but are hostile to choose life efforts such as that advertisement about the value of even a down syndrome person's life.
The abortion debate is built on hostility, violence and religious dogma. So called "pro-life" advocates have literally murdered people, actual adult humans with families and dreams and thoughts, in order to protect the "lives" of fetuses. The reason liberals care so much about the abortion debate is not because they hate babies, it's because that debate is the frontline in a conflict between liberals, who want to live in a secular society, and religious conservatives who want to live in an authoritarian Christian society.
In most of Europe, secularism is much more deeply ingrained into the political system than it is in Ireland or the US, and thus the abortion debate doesn't really happen. It's an issue that was already settled decades ago, and thus there's no reason to bring it up. The reason people care in Ireland and the US is because their right to have medical control over their own lives is constantly under threat from lawmakers who are using the political system to advance their own religious agenda.
Not by giving married women more rights. As it is, our Family court systems are a mess. The biases men face in them are staggering.
This is a myth, especially now.
In the past, there was a certain anxiety about how the experience of shared custody affected children, and it was generally considered better for children to have a single, stable home with occasional custodial visits. This is where the "father's rights" narrative of the biased family courts came from, because in cases of contested custody the court system typically favoured granting custody to a child's primary carer, who was usually the mother.
The idea of a bias in family courts was based solely on statistics about who was awarded custody, without any consideration of context. For example, in the majority of cases in which women received sole custody, the arrangement was mutually decided and agreed upon by both parents without court involvement at all. Only a tiny proportion of cases in which women received sole custody were due to court order. Furthermore, statistically, mothers typically spend
twice as much time on childcare activities when compared to fathers, which would factor into court decisions around custody.
What has happened in the past few decades, partly due to our greater research into the outcomes of joint parenting, partly due to a greater effort towards mediation and amicable resolution in divorce cases and (unfortunately) partly due to misinformation and political pressure to not appear biased, family courts have shifted towards a model whereby joint custody is generally seen as the ideal solution. It is now the most common outcome in divorce cases involving children which actually make it to court, and it is written into law in most US states that family courts should seek joint custody as the preferred solution in cases of divorce.
And this is generally a good thing for most children, but there is an extremely, extremely dark side to it. Content warning for accounts of rape, child abuse and other nasty stuff.
https://www.theguardian.com/comment...athers-then-i-found-the-rot-at-the-core-of-it
https://www.theguardian.com/society...an-you-share-parenting-with-an-abusive-parent
https://www.themonthly.com.au/issue/2015/november/1446296400/jess-hill/suffer-children#mtr
http://www.ncdsv.org/images/RB_What...-children-during-the-Family-Court-process.pdf
https://www.louisehaigh.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/sites/74/2019/08/Family-Court-Consultation.pdf
If you don't want to trawl through those links (and I could provide more links, this is a pretty well documented phenomenon), the family courts at this point are typically
so concerned with protecting parental contact for both parties that they have, on occasion, actively enabled very serious cases of child abuse, or actively threatened parents who report child abuse with a loss of custody. That's how "not biased" the courts are.