The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Our selfish dismantlin­g of marriage has left children in a lonely Dickensian hell

- Peter Hitchens Read Peter’s blog at hitchensbl­og.mailonsund­ay.co.uk and follow him on Twitter @clarkemica­h

BY KILLING lifelong marriage we are killing children. Liberal Britain cannot see this, but until somebody does, the tragedies will continue. Last week great publicity was rightly given to a report on children’s social care. It predicted that the number of children in care, now 80,000, would rise to 100,000 by 2032, costing taxpayers a colossal £15billion a year.

Of course many terrible things happen to children in so-called ‘care’ apart from actual violence and death. The general outcomes for children deprived of what we would once have called stable family life, and deprived of fathers, are just not very good. No doubt plenty of social workers, foster parents and others do all they can, and I am not trying to criticise these individual­s but they just cannot do what a loving, stable home can do.

The report does recognise that ‘it is loving relationsh­ips that hold the solutions for children and families overcoming adversity’. But how will they be created by bureaucrac­y and state cash – the solutions generally offered by those who run our society?

A long time ago the Blairites promised us ‘joined-up thinking’, but in fact modern dogmas, in which there is no right and wrong and the old Christian rules are spurned, often refuse to see vital connection­s.

The tragedy of care is a direct consequenc­e of 50 years in which the law, and our culture, have encouraged the idea that lifelong marriage is dispensabl­e – a cruel prison from which adults should be free to escape. The latest loosening of the marriage laws, effectivel­y allowing divorce on demand, follows the same failed view.

Should we not connect the number of children in care to the fact that the numbers getting married fell in 2019 to the lowest rate since

I SUSPECT most reporters now writing about the Ukraine war do not even know that it began in 2014 with a violent US-backed putsch against the legitimate, elected president. Or perhaps they just don’t believe it. Well, this is what Jack Matlock, who was Ronald Reagan’s ambassador to Moscow, says. He states that the USA ‘supported an illegal coup d’etat that changed the Ukrainian government in 2014, a procedure not normally considered consistent with the rule of law or democratic governance’. He should know. This shocking fact is true and shameful.

The first shots in this horrible, needless war were not fired by Russia. records began? Less than 20 per cent of these weddings were in a religious building, where the idea that marriage is for life is still pretty much insisted upon. Many modern weddings are lavish affairs in beautiful places, but they simply do not demand the commitment that couples used to make. And many modern couples, seeing which way the wind is blowing, never bother to marry at all. Such commitment is generally discourage­d, even viewed as foolish.

And of course this results in much freer lives for adults in their prime, no longer tied down by crabby old rules. But the children are the ones who suffer, and whose freedom from worry and insecurity has been sacrificed to allow for grownup freedoms to do as we will.

Among the well-off, the damage is generally not so bad, though there is damage. But among the poor, and in the parts of the country where the schools are bad and the streets are grim, it is another story. And that story often ends in care, with all its miseries, loneliness, insecurity and disappoint­ment.

It is not the same sort of hell as the workhouses and the orphanages of the past were, but it can be hell even so. We need a modern Charles Dickens to depict it. If more people realised how bad it was, we might start to wonder if the gradual dismantlin­g of stable marriage was such a good idea after all.

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 ?? ?? POWERFUL: Luca Barbaresch­i and Emmanuelle Seigner in J’Accuse
POWERFUL: Luca Barbaresch­i and Emmanuelle Seigner in J’Accuse

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