FEATURES:
Marriage and the Limits of Contract
 
                  By Jennifer Roback Morse 
 A libertarian case
 
                                  Marriage is a naturally      occurring, pre-political institution that emerges spontaneously from      society. Western society is drifting toward a redefinition of marriage as a      bundle of legally defined benefits bestowed by the state. As a libertarian,      I find this trend regrettable. The organic view of marriage is more      consistent with the libertarian vision of a society of free and responsible      individuals, governed by a constitutionally limited state. The drive toward      a legalistic view of marriage is part of the relentless march toward      politicizing every aspect of society.  
        Although gay marriage is the current hot-button topic,      it is a parenthetical issue. The more basic question is the meaning of      love, marriage, sexuality, and family in a free society. I define marriage      as a society’s normative institution for both sexual activity and the      rearing of children. The modern alternative idea is that society does not      need such an institution: No particular arrangement should be legally or      culturally privileged as the ideal context for sex or childbearing.   
       The current drive for creating gay unions that are the      legal equivalent of marriage is part of this ongoing process of dethroning      marriage from its pride of place. Only a few self-styled conservative      advocates of gay marriage, such as Andrew Sullivan and Jonathan Rauch, seem      to understand and respect the social function of marriage. Marriage as an      institution necessarily excludes some kinds of behavior and endorses other      kinds of behavior. This is why the conservative case for gay marriage is so      remarkable: It flies in the face of the cultural stampede toward social      acceptance of any and all sexual and childbearing arrangements, the very      stampede that has fueled so much of the movement for gay marriage.   
       This article is not primarily about gay marriage. It      isn’t even about why some forms of straight marriage are superior to      others. Rather, the purpose of this article is to explain why a society,      especially a free society, needs the social institution of marriage in the      first place. I want to argue that society can and must discriminate among      various arrangements for childbearing and sexual activity.   
       The contrary idea has a libertarian justification in      the background: Marriage is a contract among mutually consenting adults.      For instance, libertarian law professor Richard Epstein penned an article      last year called “Live and Let Live” in the Wall Street Journal (July 13, 2004). In it, he treated      marriage as a combination of a free association of consenting individuals      and an institution licensed by the state.   
       But the influence of the libertarian rationale goes far      beyond the membership of the Libertarian Party or the donor list of the      Cato Institute. The editors of the Nation, for instance, support gay marriage but do not usually defend      the sanctity of contracts. This apparent paradox evaporates when we realize      that the dissolution of marriage breaks the family into successively      smaller units that are less able to sustain themselves without state      assistance.  
       Marriage deserves the same respect and attention from      libertarians that they routinely give the market. Although I believe      life-long monogamy can be defended against alternatives such as polygamy,      it is beyond the scope of a single article to do so. My central argument is      that a society will be able to govern itself with a smaller, less intrusive      government if that society supports organic marriage rather than the      legalistic understanding of marriage.   
       
 
      A natural institution  
      
 
      Libertarians   have every reason to respect marriage as a social institution.      Marriage is an organic institution that emerges spontaneously from society.      People of the opposite sex are naturally attracted to one another, couple      with each other, co-create children, and raise those children. The little      society of the family replenishes and sustains itself. Humanity’s      natural sociability expresses itself most vibrantly within the family. A      minimum-government libertarian can view this self-sustaining system with      unadulterated awe.  
       Government does not create marriage any more than      government creates jobs. Just as people have a natural “propensity to      truck, barter and exchange one thing for another,” in Adam      Smith’s famous words from the second chapter of The Wealth of Nations, we likewise have      a natural propensity to couple, procreate, and rear children. People      instinctively create marriage, both as couples and as a culture, without      any support from the government whatsoever.   
       The sexual urge is an engine of human sociability. Our      desire for sexual satisfaction draws us out of our natural      self-centeredness and into connection with other people. Just as the desire      to make money induces business owners to try to please their customers, so      too, the desire to copulate induces men to try to please women, and women      to try to attract men. The attachment of mothers to their babies and women      to their sex partners tends to keep this little society together. The      man’s possessiveness of his sexual turf and of his offspring offsets      his natural tendency toward promiscuity. These desires and attachments      emerge naturally from the very biology of sexual complementarity with no      assistance from the state.   
       But this is not the only sense in which the institution      of marriage arises spontaneously. In every known society, communities      around the couple develop customs and norms that define the parameters of      socially acceptable sexual, spousal and parental behavior. This culture      around marriage may have some governmental elements. But that cultural      machinery is more informal than legal by far and is based more on kinship      than on law. We do things this way because our parents did things this way.      Our friends and neighbors look at us funny if we go too far outside the      norm.   
       The new idea about marriage claims that no structure      should be privileged over any other. The supposedly libertarian subtext of      this idea is that people should be as free as possible to make their      personal choices. But the very nonlibertarian consequence of this new idea      is that it creates a culture that obliterates the informal methods of      enforcement. Parents can’t raise their eyebrows and expect children      to conform to the socially accepted norms of behavior, because there are no      socially accepted norms of behavior. Raised eyebrows and dirty looks no      longer operate as sanctions on behavior slightly or even grossly outside      the norm. The modern culture of sexual and parental tolerance ruthlessly      enforces a code of silence, banishing anything remotely critical of      personal choice. A parent, or even a peer, who tries to tell a young person      that he or she is about to do something incredibly stupid runs into the      brick wall of the non-judgmental social norm.   
       
 
      State impartiality in a free society
 
      
 
      The spontaneous   emergence of marriage does not imply that any laws the state      happens to pass will work out just fine. And it certainly does not follow      that any cultural institutions surrounding sexual behavior, permanence of      relationships, and the rearing of children will work out just fine. The      state may still need to protect, encourage or support permanence in      procreational couplings just as the state may need to protect the sanctity      of contracts.  
       No libertarian would claim that the presumption of      economic laissez-faire means that the government can ignore people who      violate the norms of property rights, contracts, and fair exchange. Apart      from the occasional anarcho-capitalist, all libertarians agree that      enforcing these rules is one of the most basic functions of government.      With these standards for economic behavior in place, individuals can create      wealth and pursue their own interests with little or no additional      assistance from the state. Likewise, formal and informal standards and      sanctions create the context in which couples can create marriage with      minimal assistance from the state.   
       Nor would a libertarian claim that people should be      indifferent about whether they are living in a centrally planned economy or      a market-ordered economy. No one disputes the free speech rights of      socialists to distribute the Daily Worker. It does not follow that impartiality requires the economy to      reflect socialism and capitalism equally. It simply can’t be done. An      economy built on the ideas in The Communist      Manifesto will necessarily look quite different      from an economy built on the ideas in The      Wealth of Nations. The debate between socialism      and capitalism is not a debate over how to accommodate different opinions,      but over how the economy actually works. Everything from the law of      contracts to antitrust law to commercial law will be a reflection of some      basic understanding of how the economy works in fact. Somebody in this      debate is correct, and somebody is mistaken. We can figure out which view      is more nearly correct by comparing the prosperity of societies that have      implemented capitalist principles with the prosperity of those that have      implemented socialist principles.   
       There are analogous truths about human sexuality. I      claim the sexual urge is a natural engine of sociability, which solidifies      the relationship between spouses and brings children into being. Others      claim that human sexuality is a private recreational good, with neither      moral nor social significance. I claim that the hormone oxytocin floods a      woman’s body during sex and tends to attach her to her sex partner,      quite apart from her wishes or our cultural norms. Others claim that women      and men alike can engage in uncommitted sex with no ill effects. I claim      that children have the best life chances when they are raised by married,      biological parents. Others believe children are so adaptable that having      unmarried parents presents no significant problems. Some libertarians seem      to believe that marriage is a special case of free association of      individuals. I say the details of this particular form of free association      are so distinctive as to make marriage a unique social institution that      deserves to be defended on its own terms and not as a special case of      something else.  
       One side in this dispute is mistaken. There is enormous      room for debate, but there ultimately is no room for compromise. The legal      institutions, social expectations and cultural norms will all reflect some      view or other about the meaning of human sexuality. We will be happier if      we try to discover the truth and accommodate ourselves to it, rather than      try to recreate the world according to our wishes.   
       
 
      Which freedom?  
      
 
      Distinguishing   between competing understandings of “natural freedom”      will clear up one source of confusion in this debate. Jean-Jacques Rousseau      presents a view of natural freedom quite different from the modern economic      libertarian understanding. In Part I of A      Discourse on Inequality Rousseau describes      sexual pairing in the state of nature:  
      As males and females united fortuitously according to      encounters, opportunities and desires, they required no speech to express      the things they had to say to each other, and they separated with the same      ease. The mother nursed her children at first to satisfy her own needs,      then when habit had made them dear to her, she fed them to satisfy their      needs; as soon as they had the strength to find their own food, they did      not hesitate to leave their mother herself; and as there was virtually no      way of finding one another again once they had lost sight of each other,      they were soon at the stage of not even recognizing one another. 
         Rousseau could be describing the modern hook-up      culture, down to and including the reluctance of hook-up partners to even      talk to each other. He seems to define “natural” as acting on      impulse and “freedom” as being unencumbered by law, social      convention or even attachment to other people.   
       Libertarians cannot accept these definitions. Being      free does not demand that everyone act impulsively rather than      deliberately. Libertarian freedom is the modest demand to be left alone by      the coercive apparatus of the government. Economic liberty, and libertarian      freedom more broadly, is certainly consistent with living with a great many      informal social and cultural constraints.   
       Rousseau specifically depicted a state of nature that      is not only pre-political, but nonsocial. Whether he intended this as a      description of some long-lost, pre-social time, or as a goal to which the      good society should aspire, his version of the state of nature is surely      unnatural in this sense: A widespread nonsystem of impersonal sexual      couplings has never occurred in any known society. In no known society have      the ruling authorities, whether governmental or informal, been completely      indifferent to the forms sexual couplings take, or the context in which      sexual activity takes place. Nor has any belief system, whether religious      or philosophical, ever claimed that sexual activity is intrinsically      meaningless, having only the meaning individuals privately assign to it.   
       Until now.   
       We now live in an intellectual, social, and legal      environment in which the laissez-faire idea has been mechanically applied      to sexual conduct and married life. But Rousseau-style state-of-nature      couplings are inconsistent with a libertarian society of minimal      government. In real, actually occurring societies, noncommittal sexual      activity results in mothers and children who require massive expenditures      and interventions by a powerful government.   
       Let me construct a hypothetical family to illustrate      what I mean. In contrast to Rousseau’s mythical state of nature, my      hypothetical family occurs all too frequently in real-life modern Western      democracies.  
       
 
      
 
      A  man and   woman have a child. The mother and father have no permanent      relationship to each other and no desire to form one. When the relationship      ceases to function to their satisfaction, it dissolves. The mother sues the      father for child support.  
       The couple argues through the court system over how      much he should pay. The woman wants him to pay more than he wants to pay.      The court ultimately orders him to pay a particular amount. He insists on      continuing visitation rights with his child. She resists. They argue in      court and finally settle on a periodic visitation schedule to which he is      entitled.   
       The agreement works smoothly at first. Then the parents      quarrel. At visitation time, the mother is not home. He calls and leaves a      nasty message on the answering machine. They quarrel some more. She says      his behavior is not appropriate. He smokes too much and overindulges the      child in sweets. She says the child, who is now a toddler, is impossible to      deal with after visits. He quits paying child support. The court garnishes      his wages to force him to pay. He goes to court to try to get his      visitation agreement honored. The court appoints a mediator to help the      couple work out a solution. The mother announces that she plans to move out      of state. He goes to court and gets a temporary order to restrain her from      moving. She invents a charge of child abuse and gets a restraining order      forbidding him from seeing the child.   
       Say what you like about this sort of case. You may      think this is the best mere mortals can do. You may think this      contentiousness is the necessary price people pay for their adult      independence. You may blame the mother or the father or both. Or perhaps      you think this is a nightmare for both adults as well as for children. But      on one point we can all agree: This is not a libertarian society.   
       Some libertarians might focus on the specific      activities of the family court, regarding them as grotesque infringements      of both parties’ privacy. Agents of the government actively inquire      into, pass judgments upon and intervene in the most intimate details of      this couple’s life. Or we might view the entire existence of the      court system as an outrageous subsidy to this couple, paid by the rest of      society. When the woman asks for the state’s help in collecting child      support, the state provides this service at no charge to her. When she      makes a charge of child abuse, the state keeps the man away from her and      her child. If the charge is proven to be unfounded or frivolous, the state      does not require her to pay compensation for its expenses or the man for      his losses.   
       This is not the posture of a night watchman state.   
       The state solicitude for the mother and her child is a      direct result of father absence. Without a father’s assistance, this      woman and her child are more likely to become dependents of the state. The      state believes, quite reasonably, that it is more cost-effective to help      the mother extract assistance from the father than to provide      taxpayer-funded financial assistance. Aggressive programs for tracking down      “dead-beat dads” become a substitute for providing direct      payments through the welfare system as conventionally understood.   
       A radical individualist might argue that the state      should allow this couple to sink or swim on its own. If the man abandons      her, tough luck for her and her child. If she kicks the man out, for good      reason or no reason, tough luck for him. The social order simply cannot      afford to indulge people who can’t get along with their closest and      most intimate family members. If the state would get out of the family      business or charge people the full cost for the use of its services, fewer      people would get into these contentious situations. People would be more      careful in forming their intimate childbearing unions.   
       But our current ideological environment makes this      position impossible, however much it might appeal to the radical      individualist. The political pressures for the state to intervene on behalf      of the unmarried mother are simply overwhelming. The welfare state is so      entrenched that singling out unmarried mothers at this late date is not      plausible. Given that reality, it is not realistic to expect the state to      cease and desist from all the activities of the family court, no matter how      intrusive or highly subsidized they may be.   
       Nor does the sense of financial entitlement exhaust the      entitlement mentality. Unlimited sexual activity is now considered an      entitlement. Marriage is no longer the only socially acceptable outlet for      sexual activity or for the rearing of children. It is now considered an      unacceptable infringement on the modern person’s liberty to insist      that the necessary context of sexual activity is marriage with rights and      responsibilities, both implicit and explicit. It is equally unacceptable to      argue that having children outside of marriage is irresponsible. Women are      entitled to have as many children as they choose in any context they      choose. In this sense, children have become a kind of consumer good.      Choosing to have a child is a necessary and sufficient condition for being      entitled to have one. Given this social and cultural environment, it is      completely unrealistic to think that we can muster the political will to      deprive unmarried parents of the use of the courts to prosecute their      claims against one another.   
       Contrast this scenario with intact married couples. Not      deliriously happy married couples with stars in their eyes at all times.      Just ordinary, everyday, run-of-the mill married couples.  
       No one from the state forces them to pool their      incomes, if they both work. If they have the traditional gender-based      division of household labor, no one forces the husband to hand over his      paycheck to his wife to run the household. No one makes the wife allow him      to take the kids out for the afternoon. No one has to come and supervise      their negotiations over how to discipline the children. When he’s too      tough, she might chew him out privately or kick him under the table. When      she lets them off the hook too easily, he might have some private signal      for her to leave so he can do what needs to be done.   
       The typical married couple has regular disagreements      over money, child-rearing, the allocation of household chores, how to spend      leisure time and a hundred other things. Every once in a while, even a      stable married couple will have a knock-down, drag-out, (usually) private      quarrel. But they resolve their disagreements, large and small, perhaps a      dozen a day, completely on their own with neither supervision nor subsidy      from any court.   
       
 
      What’s natural  
      
 
       A skeptic   might      respond to my example of the dysfunctional      noncouple by saying that their actions arise naturally from the society.      Their spontaneous actions are entitled to the same libertarian endorsement      as those of a married couple.  
       A sophisticated analogy with the market must go beyond      a ritual incantation of “leave us alone.” Adam Smith recognized      in the tenth chapter of The Wealth of Nations that “people of the same trade seldom meet      together, even for merriment and diversion, but the conversation ends in a      conspiracy against the public, or in some contrivance to raise      prices.” Smith understood that the “natural” tendency to      cheat the public must be checked by legal and social norms. The law must      prohibit some economic behavior. Equally important, the culture as a whole      must socialize people into accepting self-imposed limits on their      self-interested behavior. The need for laws and socialization did not lead      Adam Smith to conclude that the market is a mere social construct that can      be carelessly discarded.   
       Likewise, the observation that men and women alike      sometimes fail to live up to the ideal of lifelong married love does not      prove that marriage is unnatural. We must ask ourselves the question about      the family that Adam Smith taught us to ask about business: How can we      direct natural human motivations into socially constructive channels? The      answer is to create a cultural and legal order that supports and sustains      lifelong married love as the normative institution in which to beget, bear,      and rear children. Random sexual encounters, dissolved at will, are not      socially responsible when children are involved.   
       When Adam Smith’s modern follower Friedrich Hayek      championed the concept of spontaneous order, he helped people see that      explicitly planned orders do not exhaust the types of social orders that      emerge from purposeful human behavior. The opposite of a centrally planned      economy is not completely unplanned chaos, but rather a spontaneous order      that emerges from thousands of private plans interacting with each      according to a set of reasonably transparent legal rules and social norms.        
       Likewise, the opposite of government      controlling every detail of every single      family’s life is not a world in which everyone acts according to      emotional impulses. The opposite is an order made up of thousands of people controlling themselves for the greater good of the little society of their family and the      wider society at large.  
       
 
      Social costs of private conflicts  
      
 
      Whether a   couple loses the ability to negotiate, or whether they never      had it in the first place, the dissolution of their union has significant      spillover effects. The instability in their relationship is likely to be      detrimental to their children. The children of unmarried or divorced      parents are more likely than other children to have emotional, behavioral      and health problems. As these children become old enough to go to school,      they absorb more educational resources than other children because the      school has to deal with lowered school achievement, poor school attendance,      and discipline problems. As these children mature, they are more likely to      get into trouble with the law, commit crimes, abuse drugs, and end up in      jail.  
       These costs are more than purely private costs to the      mother and father. The costs of health care, schooling, and mental health      care are not entirely private in this society, no matter how much      libertarians might wish they were. In modern America, a child who cannot      behave in school is a cost to the local school district as well as to all      the other children in the classroom. A seriously depressed person or a      drug-addicted person is likely to make demands on the public health sector.      If the child ends up in the criminal justice system, as the children of      unmarried parents are significantly more likely to do, he or she will be a      significant cost to the state.   
       The demand that the government be neutral among family      forms is unreasonable. The reality is that married-couple families and      childless people are providing subsidies to those parents who dissolve      their marriages or who never form marriages. Libertarians recognize that a      free market needs a culture of law-abidingness, promise-keeping, and      respect for contracts. Similarly, a free society needs a culture that      supports and sustains marriage as the normative institution for the      begetting, bearing, and rearing of children. A culture full of people who      violate their contracts at every possible opportunity cannot be held      together by legal institutions, as the experience of post-communist Russia      plainly shows. Likewise, a society full of people who treat sex as a purely      recreational activity, a child as a consumer good and marriage as a      glorified roommate relationship will not be able to resist the pressures      for a vast social assistance state. The state will irresistibly be drawn      into parental quarrels and into providing a variety of services for the      well-being of the children.   
       
 
      The naked individual
 
      
 
      The alternative   to my view that marriage is a naturally occurring      pre-political institution is that marriage is strictly a creation of the      state. The Supreme Court of Massachusetts notoriously asserted this      position. If this is true, then the state can recreate marriage in any form      it chooses. Implicit in this view is the decidedly non-libertarian view      that the state is the ultimate source of social order. 
       Listen to this self-described progressive bring the      implicit connection between the expansive state and the deconstruction of      marriage out of the shadows. Writing in the      Nation in March 2004, New      York University Queer Studies professor Lisa Duggan addressed the marriage      promotion portion of welfare reform:  
      Women and children . . . (according to the welfare      reform model) should depend on men for basic economic support, while women      care for dependents — children, elderly parents, disabled family      members, etc. Under such a model, married-couple households might      “relieve” the state of the expense of helping to support      single-parent households, and of the cost of a wide range of social      services, from childcare and disability services to home nursing. Marriage      thus becomes a privatization scheme: Individual married-couple households      give women and children access to higher men’s wages, and also      “privately” provide many services once offered through social      welfare agencies. More specifically, the unpaid labor of married women      fills the gap created by government service cuts. 
         This statement brings the statist worldview front and      center. Under this vision, the most basic relationships are not between      husband and wife, parent and child, but between citizens and state. The      family is not the natural unit of society. The most basic unit of society      is not even the libertarian individual, embedded within a complex web of      family, business and social relationships. Rather, the natural unit of      society is the naked individual, the isolated individual, standing alone      before the state, beholden to the state, dependent upon the state.   
       The libertarian approach to caring for the dependent is      usually described in terse form as “let families and private charity      take care of it, and get the government out of the way.” This      position is sometimes ridiculed as unrealistic or attacked as harsh. But      the libertarian position, once fully fleshed out, is both humane and      realistic.  
       The libertarian preference for nongovernmental      provision of care for dependents is based upon the realization that people      take better care of those they know and love than of complete strangers. It      is no secret that people take better care of their own stuff than of other      people’s. Economists conclude that private property will produce      better results than collectivization schemes. But a libertarian preference      for stable married-couple families is built upon more than a simple analogy      with private property. The ordinary rhythm of the family creates a cycle of      dependence and independence that any sensible social order ought to harness      rather than resist.   
       We are all born as helpless infants, in need of      constant care. But we are not born alone. If we are lucky enough to be born      into a family that includes an adult married couple, they sustain us      through our years of dependence. They do not get paid for the work they do:      They do it because they love us. Their love for us keeps them motivated to      carry on even when we are undeserving, ungrateful, snot-nosed brats. Their      love for each other keeps them working together as a team with whatever      division of labor works for them.   
       As we become old enough to be independent, we become      attracted to other people. Our bodies practically scream at us to reproduce      and do for our children what our parents did for us. In the meantime, our      parents are growing older. When we are at the peak of our strength,      stamina, and earning power, we make provision to help those who helped us      in our youth.  
       But for this minimal government approach to work, there      has to be a family in the first place. The family must sustain itself over      the course of the life cycle of its members. If too many members spin off      into complete isolation, if too many members are unwilling to cooperate      with others, the family will not be able to support itself. A woman trying      to raise children without their father is unlikely to contribute much to      the care of her parents. In fact, unmarried parents are more likely to need      help from their parents than to provide it.  
       In contrast to the libertarian approach,      “progressives” view government provision of social services as      the first resort, not the last. Describing marriage as a      “privatization scheme” implies that the most desirable way to      care for the dependent is for the state to provide care. An appreciation of      voluntary cooperation between men and women, young and old, weak and      strong, so natural to libertarians and economists, is completely absent      from this statist worldview.  
       This is why it is no accident that the advocates of      sexual laissez-faire are the most vociferous opponents of economic      laissez-faire. Advocates of gay marriage are fond of pointing out that      civil marriage confers more than 1,049 automatic federal and additional state protections,      benefits and responsibilities, according to the federal government’s      General Accounting Office. If these governmentally bestowed benefits and      responsibilities are indeed the core of marriage, then this package should      be equally available to all citizens. It follows that these benefits of      marriage should be available to any grouping of individuals, of any size or      combination of genders, of any degree of permanence.   
       But why should libertarians, of all people, accept the      opening premise at face value? Marriage is the socially preferred      institution for sexual activity and childrearing in every known human      society. The modern claim that there need not be and should not be any      social or legal preference among sexual or childrearing contexts is, by      definition, the abolition of marriage as an institution. This will be a      disaster for the cause of limited government. Disputes that could be      settled by custom will have to be settled in court. Support that could be      provided by a stable family must be provided by taxpayers. Standards of      good conduct that could be enforced informally must be enforced by law.   
       Libertarians do not believe that what the government      chooses to bestow or withhold is the essence of any social institution.      When we hear students from Third World countries naively ask, “If the      government doesn’t create jobs, how we will ever have any      jobs?” we know how to respond. Just because the government employs      people and gives away tax money does not mean it “created”      those jobs. Likewise, the fact that the government gives away bundles of      goodies to married couples does not prove that the government created      marriage.   
       
 
      A free society needs marriage  
      
 
      The advocates   of the deconstruction of marriage into a series of      temporary couplings with unspecified numbers and genders of people have      used the language of choice and individual rights to advance their cause.      This rhetoric has a powerful hold over the American mind. It is doubtful      that the deconstruction of the family could have proceeded as far as it has      without the use of this language of personal freedom.  
       But this rhetoric is deceptive. It is simply not      possible to have a minimum government in a society with no social or legal      norms about family structure, sexual behavior, and childrearing. The state      will have to provide support for people with loose or nonexistent ties to      their families. The state will have to sanction truly destructive behavior,      as always. But destructive behavior will be more common because the culture      of impartiality destroys the informal system of enforcing social norms.  
       It is high time libertarians object when their rhetoric      is hijacked by the advocates of big government. Fairness and freedom do not      demand sexual and parental license. Minimum-government libertarianism needs      a robust set of social institutions. If marriage isn’t a necessary      social institution, then nothing is. And if there are no necessary social      institutions, then the individual truly will be left to face the state      alone. A free society needs marriage.   
           
 Jennifer Roback Morse is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution, and the author of Smart Sex: Finding Lifelong Love in a Hook-up World, and Love and Economics: Why the Laissez-Faire Family Doesn’t Work, both from Spence Publishing.    
 
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