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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A critique of an article by Dan Quayle, in which he revisits his social commentary of a decade ago and reiterates his commitment to Christian traditional values as the most positive way of redressing social dysfunction.
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4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JL5_JLquayle.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
in a previous article regarding the structure of the family unit, and explaining why, despite the decade which has passed since the writing of the original article, he still holds
the same views. He is also, however, acknowledging that there have been some positive changes taking place in American society which have had a valuable impact on the kind of
social issues which he was discussing in the earlier article. Quayle is strongly in favour of the traditional Christian
structure of marriage, and the family, which is evident from his insistence that the most productive environment in which children can be raised is that of monogamous heterosexual marriage. In
his earlier article, his criticisms were levelled at single parents - not, he points out, solely at single mothers, but also at men who abdicated their responsibility for childcare and
maintenance. He states that his priority is the "welfare of the child", but it is interesting that the only cultural model which he sees as beneficial to children is that
of monogamous marriage. Somewhat ironically, in this respect, he also points out the increase in the divorce rate, and the fact that lifelong monogamy seems to be less and less
popular as a lifestyle choice amongst Americans. He refers specifically to these changes as being "dysfunctional", rather than as an indication that the entire cultural framework of social and sexual
relationships is changing and developing, and does not seem to acknowledge that family models other than heterosexual lifelong monogamy might be equally valid, in terms of successful child-rearing.
However, he does point out that the issue of absent parents - particularly fathers - seems
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