minor girls marrying

Chris Powell: Those creepy arranged marriages and Mideast immigrants

Legislation pending in the  Connecticut General Assembly to forbid people under 18 from   marrying shows how times have changed in Connecticut.    Fifty years ago Connecticut probate courts often approved the marriages of men in their 20s or older to girls 16 and younger for a purpose that now seems quaint -- to hold the men to account for the statutory rape by which they had impregnated the girls and to protect the girls and their children themselves

The courts figured that it was better to give a pregnant minor girl a husband  bound by law to support her and their child and to give their child a father in the home than to put the man in jail, opportunistic as he had been.   

Then the U.S. Supreme Court proclaimed the era of abortion, in which older men still impregnate minor girls but can arrange to get rid of the problem without the girls' parents and law enforcement ever finding out. This has been made easier in Connecticut by the state's refusal to enact a parental-notification law, a refusal grounded in the belief that abortion is a high social good, higher even than deterring child rape.   

So today the problem that Connecticut sees with minor girls marrying is the practice  of arranged marriages involvingmen from Middle Eastern cultures who have  emigrated to this state. It doesn't seem to occur to anyone in authority that   this problem results from uncontrolled immigration -- from the failure of government to enforce any immigration law and to analyze immigrants  individually for pernicious cultural and political inclinations.   

Connecticut's political class applauds this failure and wants it made permanent   because requiring immigrants to meet any qualifications is considered "discrimination," and of course it is. But what is wrong with discrimination  against the oppression of women and against the fascism, theocracy and      barbarism that come with it?

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QUID TUA MEA? State Sen. Ted Kennedy Jr. (D.-Branford and the son of the late U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy), would bring the   intrusiveness of government to new heights with his legislation to register   every driver's license holder as an organ donor unless a licensee files an  objection.   

Kennedy means to address the long waiting list of afflicted people needing donation of one organ or another. But the arrogant presumption he proposes to put into law is hardly the only way of increasing organ donations. Publicity campaigns could be attempted, as with leaflets about organ donation inserted into license and auto registration renewal mailings from the state Motor Vehicles Department.   

More or less compelling people to become organ donors will just breed suspicion of and resistance to government instead of encouraging generosity and altruism.  If Kennedy's legislation is enacted, Connecticut might as well change its motto from "Qui transtulit sustinet" ("Who transplanted sustains") to "Quid tua mea"  ("What's yours is mine") -- if the Democratic Party hasn't already copyrighted it.

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VICIOUSNESS IS ENOUGH: That white students from Canton (Conn.) High School taunted black and Latino players from Hartford's Classical Magnet School at a basketball game last month by chanting "Trump! Trump! Trump!" doesn't make the president racist,  as much as his critics pretend it does.   

The chanting doesn't even make the chanters racist, since, while they may be,  they also may have been responding mainly to Connecticut's politically correct atmosphere, which insists that members of racial and ethnic minorities should hate Trump.    What the chanting showed for sure was hardly news at all -- that kids are vicious and hateful brats as often as they are good sports, and that politics can be just another mechanism of their viciousness.

Chris Powell is managing editor of the Journal Inquirer, in Manchester, Conn.