New York Times wrong
New York Times Gets
Another Story Very Wrong - This Time it’s about Marriage
Accused of
“journalistic malpractice” for skewing stats to incorrectly show most women
not marrying
By Peter Smith
NEW YORK, January 19, 2007
(LifeSiteNews.com) – The New York Times has once again published another 'hit
piece' on the institution of marriage, alleging that for “the first time more
American women are living without a husband than with one”. However, US census
data for 2005 shows that the January 16th front-page story in the New York Times
is just another disturbing showcase of the Times’ tolerance for
“journalistic malpractice”.
“For what experts say is probably the first time,” writes Sam Roberts on the
Times front page, “more American women are living without a husband than with
one, according to a New York Times analysis of census results.”
“In 2005, 51 percent of women said they were living without a spouse, up from
35 percent in 1950 and 49 percent in 2000,” writes Roberts. He adds that now
married couples make up a minority of all American households and “the trend
could ultimately shape social and workplace policies, including the ways
government and employers distribute benefits.”
The plain truth is that Roberts’ findings are at variance with US census
reports for 2005, which demonstrate a far different picture from the profiles
selected by Roberts of single women “delighting in their new found freedom.”
According to the 2005 report “Marital Status of the Population by Sex and
Age”, the United States is not yet a culture that has discarded the
institution of marriage, where 60.4% of men and 56.9% of women over 18 years old
are married.
However, Roberts creates his own analysis by using the Census Bureau’s
“Living Arrangements of Persons 15 Years Old and Over by Selected
Characteristics”, by including in his 51% figure of women living without a
spouse: unmarried teenage and college girls still living with their parents,
women whose husbands work out of town, are institutionalized, or are separated
from husbands serving in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Perhaps most disturbing is how blatantly Roberts’ claims are at variance with
US census bureau statistics. Among marriageable women over 18 years old, 56.9%
of women are married, with 53% having a spouse present, 1.4% with a spouse
absent, 9.9% widowed, and 11.5% divorced. Yet, 67.3% of women 30-34, and 70.5%
of women are married, a far cry from the profiles of women offered by the Times
of women finding fulfillment outside marriage.
“It’s one of a series of articles the New York Times has run…playing games
with numbers in a misleading and dishonest way, each one of them having the same
point: marriage is over, marriage is finished, nobody wants to get married
anymore, people are happier not getting married,” conservative talk show host
Medved told his radio audience, accusing the Times of committing “journalistic
malpractice”
“Obviously 97% of women between the ages of 15 and 19 are never married!”
Medved fumed. “What does it tell you when he’s including girls living home
with their parents as single women and then uses that to create this lie that
the majority of women are unmarried?”
Dr. Scott Stanley, co-director of the Center for Marital and Family Studies at
the University of Denver, said that today’s median marrying age for woman is
26, a fact that radically skew marriage statistics when comparing the data to
other eras where men and women married at younger ages. Far from women
abandoning marriage, he said “the number of people who want to be married and
have it work out well is still extraordinarily high.”
The census data also reflects the reality that women are delaying marriage after
age 25. As a percentage, 95.2% of women 18-19 years old, and 74.6% of women
20-24 years old have never married. However, more than half of women have
married between 25-29 (41.3% never married), a percentage which continues to
increase in the other age groups.
Dr. Bill Maier, psychologist in residence at Focus on the Family described the
article as “another brazen attempt by The New York Times to advance an
ultra-liberal social agenda," adding that the profiles seemed more
interested in disparaging marriage and discouraging young women from even
considering it than reporting the fact that married women have better physical
and emotional health than unmarried ones.
"Marriage as an institution is suffering in our country," he added.
"We should do everything we can to promote healthy, stable marital
relationships, because those relationships remain the bedrock of our
society."
The New York Times is quickly gaining greater notoriety as a source of
journalistic inaccuracy rather than a trusted news source; more interested in
pushing politics than “all the news that’s fit to print.” Doubts as to its
accuracy will further be heightened as the paper intends to let lapse the
position of public editor, since ombudsman Byron Calame admitted that the New
York Times magazine had been caught seriously misrepresenting an abortion case
in El Salvador by LifeSiteNews.com.