The Other

Stephanie Coontz, in today’s Times, makes a point about marriage that’s worth remembering:

Traditional marriage, with its 5,000-year history, has already been upended. Gays and lesbians, however, didn’t spearhead that revolution: heterosexuals did.

Heterosexuals were the upstarts who turned marriage into a voluntary love relationship rather than a mandatory economic and political institution. Heterosexuals were the ones who made procreation voluntary, so that some couples could choose childlessness, and who adopted assisted reproduction so that even couples who could not conceive could become parents. And heterosexuals subverted the long-standing rule that every marriage had to have a husband who played one role in the family and a wife who played a completely different one. Gays and lesbians simply looked at the revolution heterosexuals had wrought and noticed that with its new norms, marriage could work for them, too.

But it’s easier to blame gays and lesbians for ruining marriage, because we’re The Other. Religious conservatives like James Dobson know that banning gay marriage will play much better than banning birth control, making women stay at home, forcing wives to submit to their husbands, or re-criminalizing adultery. Many people who wouldn’t think of enforcing those rules, because those rules might someday apply to them, have no problem banning gay marriage.

People will never proscribe their own liberty, but they have no problem proscribing that of others.

Cable TV

What kind of cable TV package do you New Yorkers out there have? Matt and I are trying to decide what to get from our provider, Time Warner Cable. We only want TV – we don’t need Internet access, because our DSL is paid for by Matt’s employer.

I’d be fine without digital cable, except that according to the channel lineup, some of my favorite channels are only available on digital, such as Turner Classic Movies and TV Land; so are BBC America, which Matt would love to have, and LOGO, the new gay TV network.

Of course, the TWC website doesn’t make it easy to find any of the cheaper packages; I actually had to call Time Warner Cable to learn that the digital package, without premium channels or any other bells/whistles, is about $56 per month (plus whatever fees they tack on, I guess). There’s a pricing chart online, but it’s rather confusing.

Anyway, what do you get from TWC, and about how much do you pay for it?