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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

Is it antifeminist to promote marriage

80 replies

HumanWrites · 29/01/2024 11:37

instead of encouraging women to separately set up all the legal protections they believe marriage confers? It could be cheaper and more effective.

OP posts:
DustyLee123 · 29/01/2024 11:39

Marriage can be a good thing, especially if you’re taking time off to look after kids.
Its getting it right financially, for any eventuality.

Zonder · 29/01/2024 11:40

Depends on the marriage.

Theinnocenteyeballsinthesky · 29/01/2024 11:50

marriage is a legal contract. It’s all the nonsense around weddings that is the problem

and from what I see on the relationships board, men who don’t want to enter into the legal contract of marriage “just a piece of paper” are rarely keen on setting up a whole bunch of pieces of paper to confer the legal rights marriage brings

aname1234 · 29/01/2024 12:01

Why would it be cheaper? You don't need a wedding ceremony at all to get married/civil partnership.

fedupandstuck · 29/01/2024 12:02

There are some aspects to marriage which can't be replicated, such as the inheritance tax nil rate. Obviously that depends on whether you have enough assets for that to be relevant.

If in a partnership, one of you is going to stop work and spend a period of time providing childcare for your shared children, it is usually in that person's advantage to be married as some form of financial protection in case of the relationship ending. Usually, the person who takes on that role is the woman in an opposite sex relationship. Of course, if they have their own independent income or existing assets that will be enough to support them, then it's less important.

aname1234 · 29/01/2024 12:03

Maybe there needs to be a contract detailing the amount of chores they both need to do at home... and to be clear that all income is to be shared for all members of the family, especially when there are kids. Men seem to miss this point from many posts in MN.

QueenCremant · 29/01/2024 12:04

I would always encourage any woman who is having kids and giving up work/reducing hours/reducing pension payments to be married. You need that legal protection if the relationship ends.

aname1234 · 29/01/2024 12:07

A woman needs to make sure she has her name on the house deed also, just to make it 100% clear.

Do you mean it'll be more feminist to promote that marriage doesn't cover everything, and MORE protections are needed on top?

Talkamongstyourselves · 29/01/2024 12:08

Now Civil Partnerships are available why would anyone "need" to get married? I can understand why some would want to but when it comes to the legal stuff a CP will do just as well.

New2024 · 29/01/2024 12:08

Marriage or civil partnership are legal constructs to help you achieve security, equality, rights etc.

The old fashioned notion it needs to be about patriarchy is just history now.

WhereYouLeftIt · 29/01/2024 12:14

New2024 · 29/01/2024 12:08

Marriage or civil partnership are legal constructs to help you achieve security, equality, rights etc.

The old fashioned notion it needs to be about patriarchy is just history now.

Well said.

As for "encouraging women to separately set up all the legal protections they believe marriage confers? It could be cheaper and more effective" - can all the legal protections be set up? Is it cheaper? Is it more effective?

@HumanWrites, you're going to have to give some more detail here, not just sweeping statements. Make your case!

123ZYX · 29/01/2024 12:26

It's more important to encourage women not to settle for a bad or just good enough partnership. Ideally knowing what that looks like before being tied by marriage and children, but making sure you're never in a position that you can't walk away if it becomes bad.

So that would mean teaching teenage girls what a good relationship looks like, to stay financial independent, how to spot when an abusive partner is starting to separate them from their support network, etc.

AdamRyan · 29/01/2024 12:48

It depends what you mean by "promote marriage".
If its "promoting marriage" in a traditional, religious, patriarchal man as the head of the household, woman has a duty to defer to his authority sense then yes, promoting it is antifeminist.

If its "promoting marriage" as a way women can maintain some financial and legal protections when they have children with a man who turns out to be a wrong 'un, especially if they are planning to be the main child carer, then no, that's not antifeminist.

I suspect you mean the former though.

TedMullins · 29/01/2024 12:56

Marriage as an institution certainly has antifeminist roots. You could argue that its purpose today is different (it's not about ownership of women, it's about protection etc) but personally I do still think it is antifeminist. I'd like to see a massive cultural shift in what we model to, and expect of, boys and girls. So encouraging women to be financially independent, encouraging men to be engaged parents. And yes, teaching children what a healthy relationship should look like.

NoBinturongsHereMate · 29/01/2024 12:56

WhereYouLeftIt · 29/01/2024 12:14

Well said.

As for "encouraging women to separately set up all the legal protections they believe marriage confers? It could be cheaper and more effective" - can all the legal protections be set up? Is it cheaper? Is it more effective?

@HumanWrites, you're going to have to give some more detail here, not just sweeping statements. Make your case!

You can draw up a cohabitation agreement (I did one with my DP when we first bought a house together). It's possible to make it more detailed and.tailored than a marriage contract (more like marriage contract plus prenup).

But it's not simpler (because you do have to actually think about all the specifics and contingencies instead of just plumping for the standard legal terms of marriage), it's not cheaper (compared with a no-frills marriage), and it can't replicate some aspects - like the tax advantages of marriage.

Chersfrozenface · 29/01/2024 13:00

As for "encouraging women to separately set up all the legal protections they believe marriage confers? It could be cheaper and more effective" - can all the legal protections be set up? Is it cheaper? Is it more effective

Also, how do you stop one partner revoking or altering those protections?

NoBinturongsHereMate · 29/01/2024 13:03

If it's done by a legal contract, the same way as with any contract. There will be penalty clauses and possibility of legal remedy.

Godwindar · 29/01/2024 13:03

The issue now is that marriage is not really enough to confer protections. The fact CMS is not enforced in this country, and the rise of the 'clean break' settlements in which each party is expected to come out of it with joint assets and be able to set up home. Which in effect will mean the partner needs the resources to be able to finance a separate home, as messher orders and the non-working parent, still usually the mother, getting some deal in the settlement until the child is 18, are now much less common. Divorces where settlements are legally contested and fought for are also expensive and there is no legal aid now unless there is demonstration of abuse/coercive control. So you need to be asset rich to even pursue a settlement that has been contested as you can run average assets down in paying court costs.

Despite the view of men being 'taken to the cleaners', the divorce outcomes for non-working mothers with no personal assets are pretty poor.

The best protection is to fight for more affordable childcare and for families in which both parents work. Don't ever give up your job for marriage, if you divorce, you are most likely to be housing your children, losing maintenance, If it is paid) at 16/18/20 - depending on how long they are in education and needing to get back into the job market with a poor pension.

AnneLovesGilbert · 29/01/2024 13:19

What have you got against marriage? It persists for a reason.

TedMullins · 29/01/2024 13:34

Godwindar · 29/01/2024 13:03

The issue now is that marriage is not really enough to confer protections. The fact CMS is not enforced in this country, and the rise of the 'clean break' settlements in which each party is expected to come out of it with joint assets and be able to set up home. Which in effect will mean the partner needs the resources to be able to finance a separate home, as messher orders and the non-working parent, still usually the mother, getting some deal in the settlement until the child is 18, are now much less common. Divorces where settlements are legally contested and fought for are also expensive and there is no legal aid now unless there is demonstration of abuse/coercive control. So you need to be asset rich to even pursue a settlement that has been contested as you can run average assets down in paying court costs.

Despite the view of men being 'taken to the cleaners', the divorce outcomes for non-working mothers with no personal assets are pretty poor.

The best protection is to fight for more affordable childcare and for families in which both parents work. Don't ever give up your job for marriage, if you divorce, you are most likely to be housing your children, losing maintenance, If it is paid) at 16/18/20 - depending on how long they are in education and needing to get back into the job market with a poor pension.

Yes I agree with this. Also, low-earning couples who don't own a house, don't have savings and have tiny pensions don't have any assets to split, so marriage only provides protection if one or both parties are high earners. I agree CMS is a joke and it shouldn't be so easy for non-resident parents (overwhelmingly men) to get away with not financially providing for their child, or being physically present (unless there's a reason they need to be kept away like abuse). Affordable subsidised childcare, affordable housing and a higher minimum wage would give people choices.

Chersfrozenface · 29/01/2024 13:39

Even if women work, there's the pay gap between the sexes and the motherhood penalty to contend with

Happyinarcon · 29/01/2024 14:34

I’m a bit tired of women constantly being given social engineering hoops to jump through. I was excited about getting married when I was a kid, and my daughter likes looking at wedding dresses. Modern feminism is starting to get a bit soulless. Men don’t seem to get this constant scrutiny about what they should and shouldn’t like or discussions about what should or shouldn’t be promoted to them.

Logainm · 29/01/2024 14:42

Happyinarcon · 29/01/2024 14:34

I’m a bit tired of women constantly being given social engineering hoops to jump through. I was excited about getting married when I was a kid, and my daughter likes looking at wedding dresses. Modern feminism is starting to get a bit soulless. Men don’t seem to get this constant scrutiny about what they should and shouldn’t like or discussions about what should or shouldn’t be promoted to them.

Feminism has always been about enabling equal rights and protections for women, not validating your enjoyment of wedding dress shopping, though. I agree with @TedMullins on the best ways of protecting women financially being affordable childcare and family-friendly workplace practices, as well as an end to sexist assumptions about women’s careers becoming weirdly optional after they have a child. No one should be relying on their relatiinship for financial support.

I’m not personally keen on the patriarchal baggage of marriage. We only did it because it was quicker and easier than trying to draw up documents to replicate marriage as far as possible.

IncompleteSenten · 29/01/2024 14:50

No. It's only anti feminist to tell women they don't have the right to choose what works best for them and that if they see it differently they aren't real feminists.
Choices are fine. Great in fact.

RawBloomers · 29/01/2024 14:56

Marriage as an institution has an anti-feminist history. In its current form it is useful protection for a significant number of mothers, but still has massive gaps. I think promoting it as a solution to the problems we have as a sex class with unjust outcomes for mothers is anti-feminist. Suggesting it (or civil partnership) as the best that is currently available for many women is sensible.