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« The Return of the Child Catcher of Vulgaria | Main | The Movement to Attack Fruitful Mothers Grounded in Baby Killing and Perversion »

Talk Show Host Laura Ingraham Identifies Anti-Quiverfull Author's Training In the Incubator of Anti-Marriage Ideology

More on the mother-goddess promoting, Marxist, lesbian feminist movement rallying the media to attack home educating fruitful mothers and defenders of the biblical family....

Conservative talk show host Laura Ingraham — whose daily radio broadcast airs on 340 radio stations nationwide — has identified New York University, alma mater of feminist Kathryn Joyce, as an “incubator” of anti-marriage ideology, specifically naming Joyce’s mentor Ellen Willis as part of her observation:

Judith Stacy, a professor of sociology at New York University, believes redefining marriage is long overdue. In her journal article, “Good Riddance to the Family,” she argues: “If we begin to value the meaning and equality of intimate bonds over the customary forms, there are few limits to the kind of marriage and kinship patterns people might wish to devise.” (Give Professor Stacy her way and we might be seeing “Much Bigger Love” at a Justice of the Peace near you.)

NYU seems to be the incubator of this kind of mushy headed thinking. Ellen Willis, the head of NYU’s Center for Cultural Reporting and Criticism wrote of her hope that the debate over marriage would result in “an implicit revolt against the institution of marriage into the very heart, further promoting the democratization and secularization of personal and sexual life.”[1]

Kathryn Joyce, who authored the recent Quiverfull: Inside the Christian Patriarchy Movement was mentored under Willis at NYU and — since her mentor’s passing — Joyce, an ardent defender of Planned Parenthood founder Margaret Sanger, pays homage to Willis in her book, and has elsewhere referred to Willis as a “greatly-missed feminist writer.”[2]

For more on Ellen Willis and Kathryn Joyce’s efforts to attack marriage and the blessing of the womb, click here


1. Laura Ingraham, Power to the People (Washington, D.C.: Regnery Publishing, 2007), p. 30.

2. April 29, 2009 blog post, kathrynjoyce.com.