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Posted by Contributing Writer on September 19, 2010 · 10 Comments
2010 SingleWomenRule.com Blog Crawl for National Unmarried and Single Americans Week
September 19 – 25, 2010
Day 1
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Today’s Prize: An introductory pack of cards to Cheek’d – a fun, safe, and non-intimidating way to meet intriguing strangers. Open to U.S. Residents only. Comment on this post to be entered to win! Winners will be selected by random drawing and all comments must be made by Sept. 19 at 11:59 PM EST.
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By Nicky Grist, executive director of the Alternatives to Marriage Project
ngrist(at)unmarried.orgAs the executive director of the Alternatives to Marriage Project (AtMP), a small nonprofit with the huge mission of fairness and equality for all unmarried people, allow me to mark the beginning of National Unmarried and Single Americans Week by sharing some highlights from my previous week.
Monday morning, I arrived at work with a smile, remembering the story that Sarah in Los Angeles recently told me: she’d taken serious action in response to an AtMP email explaining how easy and important it is to protect your hospital rights. Not only did she and her partner document their own wishes, but they also emailed blank forms to all their friends! That’s great news for them, and it felt even better to know my efforts made a difference in her life.That afternoon I corresponded with a reporter at the Associated Press. I thanked him for writing about adoption trends and told him about a bill in Congress; the bill would allow all single and cohabiting people to be considered as potential foster/adoptive parents. He interviewed me about America’s’ “steadily increasing recognition of unmarried couples – gay and straight – as families.” I told him society’s acceptance of diversity – what people say they believe – seems to lag behind social behavior – how people actually live. According to Census estimates, if you knocked on the door of every home in the U.S. you’d find a married couple less than half the time, and you’d find more people living alone than married couples with children. You’d also find over six million homes where people live with unmarried partners, including over 700,000 same-sex couples.
On Tuesday, I left work early to vote in New York’s primary election. Voting has always been really important to me, and became even more so when I discovered that unmarried people don’t vote as much as married people do. No wonder so many politicians ignore us! After voting, I prepared a special birthday dinner celebrating 150 years of life: my aunt’s 80th, and my partner’s 70th. We’ve been unmarried to each other for 13 years.
After the celebrations, Wednesday found me catching up. I almost finished a big paper I’d been writing for weeks: recommendations for President Obama’s proposed Fatherhood, Marriage and Families Innovation Fund. This fund would use even more anti-poverty money than the Bush administration’s marriage initiatives, which AtMP and our colleagues think is unwise at best (unfair at worst). At least the current administration won’t be pushing people to get married as much as the Bush folks did. That makes the marriage movement hopping mad; they’d be funny if they weren’t so powerful. For example, the $65 million Heritage Foundation, a research and educational institution that formulates and promotes conservative public polices, complains that the proposed fund “is in fact just another jobs program.” In this economy, isn’t that a good thing?
Speaking of Heritage, on Thursday they sent me a newsletter with this silly headline: “Poverty Explodes: Root Cause is the Collapse of Marriage.” They, like many policy organizations, were reacting to new Census data on poverty and health insurance. I sent their press release, along with a more reality-based statement from a less ideological think tank, to about 500 of AtMP’s 9,000 members through our interactive email listserve. I also sent list members a statement from Physicians for a National Health Program. With the number of Americans who lack health insurance jumping a record 4.3 million to 50.7 million, they’re stepping up the call for a single-payer health insurance system.
AtMP has long advocated a single-payer system as the only way to give all individuals equal levels of basic health care and costs. The current patchwork system, even after health reform, still forces people to make relationship decisions based on access to health care, instead of love. Some feel they must get married to get affordable insurance, others can’t afford to marry (or divorce) because they’d lose coverage. The sad fact is nearly 60% of Americans without health insurance are unmarried. That’s why AtMP suggested lots of solutions during the national health reform debate, and we continue advocating fairness and equality in access to health care for everyone.
After the bad news on growing poverty and shrinking health insurance, I needed cheering up. Cue my part-time assistant, who came into the office on Friday to help me plan two house parties. House parties bring together AtMP’s diverse membership of singles, partners, parents and friends. We chat, snack and raise money for expenses including office rent, phone, postage, and website maintenance. We’re really looking forward to this year’s parties in November: one in New York, one in Los Angeles. It was so nice to end the week on a positive note, just like it began.
I hope this week starts and ends positive for you too. Happy Unmarried and Single Americans Week!
Join AtMP for monthly updates, action campaigns and special invitations!
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The Ah Ring, from DivineDiamonds.com
Filed under Blog Crawl, News, Relationships · Tagged with alternatives to marriage, alternatives to marriage project, cheekd, divine diamonds, fatherhood, fatherhood initiative, hospital rights, marriage and families innovation fund, national unmarried and single americans week, national usa week, singlewomenrule.com blog crawl, the ah ring, unmarried
Monday, February 21, 2011
SWR Blog Crawl: A Week in My Life as an Advocate for Unmarried and Single Americans : Single Women Rule
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