Puppycow
Penultimate Amazing
I know this has been brought up before and I probably started a thread myself, but it seems like it's been a while, so here goes:
Just came across this:
How The TLC Show "Sister Wives" Makes Polygamy Seem Appealing
Haven't seen the show myself, but it sounds interesting.
A couple issues. First the legal aspect:
So, they cohabitate, but don't have legal marriage contracts. They say they are happy and they aren't hurting anyone else. Why should the police bust this up? It's true that it is their job to enforce the law, but maybe the law needs to be changed. Or sometimes laws stay on the books, but the police and prosecutors just stop enforcing them.
The second issue is, is it really right? Is it really workable?
There's that magic word there: "empowered."
Reminds me of a funny article from the Onion a few years back:
Women Now Empowered By Everything A Woman Does
Just came across this:
How The TLC Show "Sister Wives" Makes Polygamy Seem Appealing
Haven't seen the show myself, but it sounds interesting.
A couple issues. First the legal aspect:
News broke this week that police in Lehi, Utah, are looking into prosecuting the Brown family, stars of TLC's new reality show Sister Wives, for being bigamists. According to the Salt Lake Tribune, Utah code "defines bigamy through cohabitation, not just through legal marriage contracts." As Sister Wives portrays the happily polygamist relationship of the aggressively cheerful Kody Brown and his wives Meri, Janelle, Christine and Robyn, it's not surprising that local cops don't appreciate the show—it not only celebrates an illegal relationship taking place in their town; it's also been receiving positive publicity from national publications.
So, they cohabitate, but don't have legal marriage contracts. They say they are happy and they aren't hurting anyone else. Why should the police bust this up? It's true that it is their job to enforce the law, but maybe the law needs to be changed. Or sometimes laws stay on the books, but the police and prosecutors just stop enforcing them.
The second issue is, is it really right? Is it really workable?
And the program does show this polygamist family in a pretty glowing—and mesmerizing—way. Sister Wives is edited to make a four-wife household seem not only normal and relatable, but the wives also use the language of choice to make clear that their lifestyle is a conscious, wise decision—they're not being coerced into sharing one man.
. . .
But back to actual life, in which I am a critically thinking person who realizes that reality shows are not real and that sharing one's husband is not tenable or desirable. (Watch the sister wives describe how they negotiate sex in the below clip.) It's worth noting that two out of the three wives featured in the first episode (Kody Brown tells his family he is bringing on the fourth wife at the end of that episode) were raised by polygamists. The editors go out of their way to show that the decision to be in this union was a conscious, thought-out, even empowered choice by all the wives—they were not forced into it. However, one has to wonder how much of a "choice" it was for the women raised in polyg families, who have never known any other sort of relationship.
There's that magic word there: "empowered."
Reminds me of a funny article from the Onion a few years back:
Women Now Empowered By Everything A Woman Does
