[Congressional Record Volume 171, Number 39 (Thursday, February 27, 2025)]
[House]
[Pages H905-H907]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                   DESTRUCTION OF THE NUCLEAR FAMILY

  The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Haridopolos). Under the Speaker's 
announced policy of January 3, 2025, the Chair recognizes the gentleman 
from Wisconsin (Mr. Grothman) for 30 minutes.
  Mr. GROTHMAN. Mr. Speaker, we just got done with a very interesting 
week in which this House passed a budget bill, and now we proceed 
actually to the more difficult process in which, sometime over the next 
4 months, we plan on passing both the reconciliation bill and 
appropriations bills.
  Between the two, we deal with all of government spending. As a 
result, we have an opportunity to look at programs and examine programs 
the way we haven't before, particularly because we have someone as 
President who is somewhat of a person who promises change. Clearly, his 
election meant that they want fundamental changes in government.
  Mr. Speaker, different programs have different goals. Just so the 
public understands, the appropriations bills are for what we call 
discretionary spending. The reconciliation bills are what are referred 
to as mandatory spending. Between the two bills that must eventually 
pass or several separate appropriations bills, we will be looking at 
virtually all of the Federal Government.
  Mr. Speaker, different programs have different goals, and obviously 
one of our goals has to be to reduce spending given that we have over 
$35 trillion in debt.
  Some of these programs also have goals that are perhaps intentional 
and perhaps unintentional. These are the goals that I am going to 
address today.
  By the way, this is relevant whether we are running a $1 trillion or 
over a $1 trillion increase in debt every year, or whether we were, in 
fact, in a surplus situation.
  I am going to look at some programs, which, again, maybe 
intentionally, maybe unintentionally, penalize people who are raising 
children while they are married.
  We had a hearing a couple of weeks ago in a subcommittee which I have 
been fortunate enough to chair. In that hearing, Robert Rector, who 
works for the Heritage Foundation, found approximately 90 programs in 
which eligibility depended upon having a small income.
  In other words, you would lose eligibility for these programs if you 
either worked and, depending on the program, made more than $12,000, 
made more than $25,000, made more than $50,000, or had somebody else in 
the household making more than this amount of money.
  This would include if, say, a single parent had a husband or a wife 
and the single parent was not working or making very little. If they 
married someone with an income of $30,000, $40,000, or $50,000, they 
would lose the benefits from that program.
  We are all familiar with some of these larger programs. I think most 
people wouldn't be able to name all 90, but there are things like 
FoodShare. There is the earned income tax credit, which requires a 
little bit of work, but

[[Page H906]]

as you work your way up and get a higher income in the company where 
you work, you would lose that.
  Low-income housing, which I think is maybe the worst program of the 
bunch because you are given housing if you are a young person, allowing 
you to get out from having to live with your parents as a benefit for 
having a low income.
  Medicaid; TANF, a cash benefit; childcare; Pell grants; payments for 
children with some disabilities, all of these programs are conditioned 
upon not making too much money and, of our primary concern today, not 
marrying somebody who makes too much money.
  Frequently, these programs are, in certain ways, more generous than 
the middle class normally receives. A perfect example would be section 
42, low-income tax credits. I have known people who have looked for 
housing, and the housing they get is not as lavish as the housing 
available in low-income housing.
  The programs are set up in a way that the owners of the low-income 
housing are encouraged to build very modern, very upscale apartments 
that maybe some of the average people cannot afford. As a matter of 
fact, a lot of the average people may still be living with their 
parents for a while even after they get married.
  We have our Medicaid program, which is a fine program, providing 
healthcare for the poor. Again, there are a lot of people out there 
working who may have a $10,000 or $15,000 or $20,000 deductible on 
their medical payments, and of course the government program has, in 
most cases, no deductible.
  We have the FoodShare. All you have to do is talk to people who work 
in the food stores, and they will say that frequently people on the 
FoodShare program can afford types of food that the people who are 
working at the grocery store feel they cannot afford. Not only do we 
have these programs which are conditioned upon not marrying somebody 
with an income, but they even have benefits that are sometimes superior 
to people who are not taking advantage of these programs.
  I mentioned Robert Rector and what he said at the relevant hearing. 
The penalty for getting married obviously varies from person to person, 
but, in his example, a young person who married a father or mother of 
their children would be penalized by $28,000.
  It is, therefore, not surprising that, if my colleagues ask around, 
they will find examples of people who are living together but not 
getting married because they want the benefits. Inevitably, they will 
find the percentage of people getting married when they have children 
falls because the generosity of the programs is such that there is a 
feeling of: Why would I get married at all?
  These programs also cause cheating or breaking the law because, of 
course, they frequently don't catch it if you are getting cash off the 
books. All of these programs encourage working for cash. They also 
encourage, I think, earning money by doing things illegally because 
that is another thing that is not reportable.
  We were in a different hearing the other day, and there was a feeling 
of one of our witnesses who, I think, I would have to say leans toward 
supporting the Democratic Party. They didn't like the fact that 
sometimes people are stuck in the muck and are not making as much money 
as other Americans.

  This woman did not seem to realize that one of the reasons that 
people sometimes make less money is because they shouldn't try to 
improve their lot in their employer's company because, if they improved 
their lot, they would lose some of these 90 benefits.
  Mr. Speaker, a question is: Is this a penalty for getting married? It 
has had a huge impact on society. I point out that in the 1950s, 4 
percent of the children in this country were born out of wedlock. That 
number is now over 40 percent. America has fundamentally changed 
because of these programs.
  The question is: Was this on purpose, or was it an inadvertent 
problem caused by these programs? I think most people would say that 
people didn't realize what they were doing. The fact that we have had 
the number of children born out of wedlock skyrocket from 4 percent to 
over 40 percent was an oversight.
  One thing I think America should realize is there were always 
radicals out there who were trying to get rid of the American family.
  Karl Marx, back in the 1800s, made it clear, I think, because he 
wanted the government to have the absolute power, that he felt that, to 
have his socialist paradise, we had to get rid of the family.
  In the 1960s, the leading feminists, who were celebrated by the left 
at that time, made it clear that a goal of theirs was to get rid of the 
nuclear family.
  Here is Kate Millett, who has been described as the mother of women's 
studies classes which dot our universities around the country: ``The 
complete destruction of traditional marriage and the nuclear family is 
the `revolutionary or utopian' goal of feminism.''
  Linda Gordon, another prominent feminist: ``The nuclear family must 
be destroyed. . . . Whatever its ultimate meaning, the break-up of 
families now is an objectively revolutionary process.''
  Michelle Barrett, in the book ``The Anti-Social Family,'' wrote: 
``The family sucks the juice out of everything around it, leaving other 
institutions stunted and distorted.''
  There is no shortage of radical feminists. I could quote Angela 
Davis, who some on the left view as a hero, as another person who was 
antifamily.
  More recently, Black Lives Matter, during their ascendancy a few 
years ago, in documents written by their founders, wanted to get rid of 
the Western-prescribed, so-called nuclear family.
  Even after that was out there on the internet, before they took it 
down, a significant number of people in this institution, I think, 
showed up at rallies, or whatever one would call them, sponsored by 
Black Lives Matter, a group that at least initially said they were 
against the traditional family.
  It is entirely possible that one of the reasons we have all of these 
programs is because some of the powerful feminists and Marxists that 
influence what goes on in this body were in favor of destroying the 
nuclear family.
  Mr. Speaker, people can say that there is nobody in this conference 
who would yield to these radical feminists. I remind the public that 
the radical feminists are for abortions at 8\1/2\ months.
  Mr. Speaker, my colleagues would say that nobody here would be for an 
abortion like that--oh, my goodness--but there are individual States 
that have that law right now, and that is what the radical feminists 
wanted.
  My colleagues would say that nobody would allow transgender women in 
women's sports, but, again, that is what the radical feminists want. 
They want to blur the distinctions between men and women, and almost 
all Democrats in this institution follow along and vote to allow 
transgender women in women's sports.
  There is the same thing about transgender women in women's bathrooms. 
My colleagues would say that nobody in Congress would be for 
transgender women in women's bathrooms, but, in fact, the Democratic 
Party is overwhelmingly for that.

                              {time}  1315

  Now, ask yourself, if the Democratic Party is for these things, all 
of which would have been considered absurd 40 years ago--8\1/2\ month 
abortions, transgender in sports, transgender in women's bathrooms--is 
it too much to conclude that one of the reasons our government's 
programs are designed to destroy marriage is because the power of the 
radical feminists and the power of the Marxists in the Democratic 
Party. It has to be in there for some reason. It is something that we 
should look out for.
  I will point out one more time that I think this is the most critical 
debate that we are going to have over the next 4 or 5 months as we 
debate our appropriation bills and as we debate our reconciliation 
bills. This is a debate we should have regardless of whether we are in 
a difficult financial plight or not.
  I want to emphasize that I don't care if we are running trillion-
dollar surpluses around here, the idea of putting out programs, 
substantially generous programs whose effect is to destroy the family, 
is wrong.

[[Page H907]]

  While I certainly know many single parents who are doing a tremendous 
job and have done a tremendous job, when I talk to people in different 
fields, they say the explosion in families without a mother and father 
at home is causing other problems for society. When I talk to law 
enforcement, they feel one of the root causes of crime is the breakdown 
of the American family.
  I am sure, like everybody around here who has been in politics for a 
while, you sit in these committee hearings and hear the problems of 
high crime and murders and such, and people have suggestions as to how 
to deal with them, but we don't spend enough time pointing out that one 
way that would certainly reduce the crime rate, maybe back down to 
where it was in the 1950s, is to do what we can to build up the 
traditional family rather than what we do now, which is trying to have 
as few people as possible in the family.
  The second thing that I am told is that families of all backgrounds 
can have problems with drug abuse. Right now, we have over 100,000 
people a year dying of drug abuse. It can happen everywhere, but again, 
when I talk to the professionals who deal with this, 
disproportionately, the 100,000 people who die every year are from 
difficult family backgrounds. This drug culture, I think, would be less 
strong in America if we did more to promote the traditional family 
rather than doing all we can to make sure the traditional family is 
weakened.
  The third institution I will point out that is harmed by this 
government's policy of penalizing traditional families is education. I 
know my friends on the other side of the aisle like to claim they care 
about education. When I have talked to school superintendents, when I 
have talked to teachers about the additional money that has to be spent 
on children with certain problems, again, those kids are 
disproportionately from families in which you don't have both a mom and 
dad there.
  Again, I know a lot of families like that who do a fantastic job, but 
I am pointing out that if you really cared about education, you would 
look at these programs that have caused the children who are born into 
a family with only one parent there to have skyrocketed from 4 percent 
to over 40 percent.
  I ask the chairman of the relevant committees that are going to have 
to deal with the appropriation bills and deal with their designated 
spending limits on the reconciliation bill to pay particular attention 
to the programs that are designed to penalize the nuclear family, which 
is so despised by Karl Marx and some of the radicals who were around in 
the 1960s and 1970s.
  Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.

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