TED Talks Daily - Why US laws must expand beyond the nuclear family | Diana Adams
Episode Date: June 22, 2024The nuclear family model may no longer be the norm in the US, but it's still the basis for social and economic benefits like health care, tax breaks and citizenship. Lawyer and LBGTQIA advoca...te Diana Adams believes that all families, regardless of biological relationship or legal marriage, are deserving of equal legal rights and recognition. They present a vision for how US laws can benefit all families -- from same-sex bonds to multi-parent partnerships -- and explain how a more inclusive definition of family could strengthen your relationships and community.
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I'm your host, Elise Hu.
Family comes in so many shapes and sizes,
but American policy is still designed for one specific family format,
the nuclear family with a married couple and kids.
This isn't even the most common family form in the United States.
So in their 2021 archive talk, lawyer Diana Adams pushes for a far more expansive view of family,
one that doesn't leave out single people, families who co-parent without a romantic relationship at the center,
and many other forms beyond marriage. After the break.
Support for this show comes from Airbnb. If you know me, you know I love staying in Airbnbs when
I travel. They make my family feel most at home when we're away from home. As we settled down at
our Airbnb during a recent vacation to Palm Springs,
I pictured my own home sitting empty.
Wouldn't it be smart and better put to use
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And now, our TED Talk of the day.
Growing up in a working-class town in upstate New York,
I was taught to hope for a future with a husband and two kids.
How about you?
I saw women in my community marry as a path to economic security, but often end up with
discontent and even abuse instead. As I got older, I came to wonder, and I ask you now, now. What is family? What do we want family to be? The nuclear family has been the basis for our
cultural stories and our laws. But only about half of U.S. adults are married, fewer every year.
Forty percent of U.S. adults don't live with a romantic partner at all.
As of 2013, less than half of U.S. children
had two married heterosexual parents in their first marriage.
The majority of us are not in a nuclear family with a spouse and kids.
Yet somehow, we treat this majority of people like social failures.
What's worse,
our laws treat unmarried people as lesser citizens.
Marriage comes with over 1,000 rights and benefits under federal law.
These include the ability to get your spouse citizenship,
share health insurance, get better tax rates,
and inherit tax-free at death, and more.
Part of the winning argument for same-sex marriage
was that we shouldn't deprive gay couples of all of these essential benefits.
But I ask you, why should anyone be denied benefits
because they're in a romantic relationship of
which some people disapprove. Or because they're single. Thank you. Or because they're basing
family on something other than a romantic relationship, like co-parenting a child.
Our laws should move away from the idea that there's one ideal family form and value all
families as they exist. Thank you. That's what I've dedicated my career to, and today I'll share
some of my visions for how we can change U.S. laws to benefit all families, but also how an
expansive view of family will strengthen all of your own relationships.
For nearly 15 years,
with my law firm for LGBTQ and non-nuclear families,
I've supported same-sex couples,
but also the many family forms beyond marriage,
like platonic partners who are raising a child together
or sharing finances without a romantic relationship, or grandparents who are raising a child together or sharing finances without a romantic relationship.
Or grandparents who are raising their grandchildren. Or a lesbian couple co-parenting
with a male friend. Or polyamorous partners who might be in a committed relationship of three or
four. Within that legal advocacy, I facilitate discussions to make sure that everyone's
intentions are aligned and then help them design their own family agreements.
With the nonprofit organization I founded, Chosen Family Law Center,
I advocate for changes in U.S. laws
to benefit this whole beautiful spectrum of family constellations.
And it is my core belief that no matter how you form family,
actively discussing how we intend to live together
is the best thing we can do to strengthen our own personal relationships.
So how did we end up with this current US emphasis on nuclear family?
Most of us throughout history have lived in large, extended family networks,
and 38 percent of the world population does today.
The nuclear family is actually a relatively new development.
It emerged in the Industrial Revolution
to support a working dad and a homemaker mom.
It peaked in the 1950s and 60s,
but it hasn't been the most common family form before or since.
Still, somehow, it's the basis for our health insurance system.
How well is that working out?
And a reason for our lack of affordable childcare in this country.
We still build and zone suburban homes with this fictional family in mind.
In Western Europe, where I live, and in many other countries,
states provide support for citizens in need,
including parents who are home with young children,
such as paid maternity leave and financial support
throughout the childhood if needed.
But in U.S. law,
we make sure that financial safety net happens between spouses
rather than between citizen and state.
U.S. marriage is a social welfare state of two. I'd rather a different social
welfare state, personally. This leaves many people, especially women, stuck in unhealthy
relationships. So at this point, we can evaluate how same-sex partnership, when we moved into that movement for same-sex marriage,
there was really an emphasis on whether we should be pushing for gay marriage
so that gay people could get the benefits of marriage,
or whether we should be working to protect the rights of the unmarried.
And we can do both.
It's time now to protect the rights of unmarried people
and other kinds of family constellations.
Research has consistently shown
that children need stability of parental figures.
But from what I've consistently found,
it doesn't matter if that stability is mom and dad,
two dads, mom and grandma, or three polyamorous partners.
So this is not only about justice.
This is about what's best for children.
If we really want that stability for kids,
we need to provide support for all the kinds of families that kids are in,
rather than try and fail to push people into a nuclear family model
with government benefits.
It's time to observe what's not working and change course.
My definition of family
is people who are committed to be there for each other no matter what.
This includes chosen family,
regardless of biological relationship or legal marriage.
Many black families in the US
have chosen aunties and uncles
with no blood relation,
but a decision to be family
and a commitment to the children involved.
Countless LGBTQ people create chosen family
when they're rejected by their family of origin
or when wanting to create families that share their values.
I am one of those queer people to find home with chosen family.
I grew up in a Christian family in a small town,
the only child of wonderful older parents.
When I came out as bisexual,
then as polyamorous, then as gender non-binary,
most of my blood relations and over 30 cousins stopped talking to me.
That's pretty standard.
When I was a broke 20-something starting my law practice,
I was diagnosed with cervical cancer
and realized that I had been duped into buying a health insurance
that didn't cover cancer.
I was in a desperate, life-threatening situation.
And while my parents were loving,
they couldn't provide me with material support or problem-solving.
So I broke through my shame and my embarrassment
about asking for help,
and I reached out to my communities of friends.
And I discovered that they were eager to more actively support one another.
They made a schedule,
so there was always someone there to cook, to clean,
to make phone calls about my health coverage,
or just sit with me while I cried in my grief and my fear.
When I won my appeal to receive coverage
by the Cancer Services Medicaid program,
the administrator called and said,
I don't know who you are, but a lot of people love you.
And then she said,
and I'd like them to stop calling my office now, please.
Let them know you got coverage.
It's done. Thank you.
And now, back to the episode.
The chosen family who stepped up for me
probably saved my life.
But they wouldn't necessarily be able to visit me in the
hospital or cross a border in a pandemic to be with me. Because relationships beyond blood and
beyond marriage often don't get those rights. And since then, my life's work has been to change that,
and I will. Thank you. Thank you. When we embrace the idea of chosen family,
our own free will is more important than biological connection.
We can choose to create family relationships with the people who provide us with the meaningful support
that we need and deserve.
Same-sex parenting has also advanced the concept of family beyond biology,
because in a same-sex couple,
only one parent's providing the sperm or the egg.
In my family-building legal work with these families,
I facilitate discussions to make sure that everyone's intentions are aligned
before designing that legal agreement.
For example, I'll often work with a female same-sex couple
who has a male friend who wants to help them become parents.
So I'll facilitate discussions to make sure they're all clear
on whether he's going to be a co-parent or a sperm donor
and design a legal agreement either way.
Without that, I've seen too many situations of ambiguity,
where mom calls him a dad when she needs childcare help,
but a donor when it comes time to make a big decision
she doesn't want his input on.
He calls himself dad when the baby's adorable at the park,
but feels more like a donor when the school bill comes.
You know?
When we're designing our own families,
we need clear, written agreements,
especially if children are involved.
Let's say I have two clients, Sharon and Bill,
best friends who are considering becoming co-parents.
Sharon's turned 40 and hasn't found
the right man with whom to marry and have kids. Neither has her gay bestie Bill, who can't afford
the $100,000 surrogacy process by himself. So they call each other their plan B. I would facilitate
discussions with them about their parenting values, their plans to share finances for the child,
their ideal week of child care split. But the conversation often gets more difficult
when I ask questions like,
are you willing to live in the same city for the next 18 years
to each be near the child?
We're used to the idea of sacrificing for a spouse
and saying no to a dream job in a different city
to stay close to each other.
But it's a shocking idea to do that for your buddy.
But by becoming co-parenting partners,
they need to elevate their level of commitment
from friends to platonic partners.
They need to consciously say goodbye to a Prince Charming fantasy
and welcome and embrace a new reality
of a beautiful partnership grounded in their long-term friendship
and agree that this co-parenting relationship will come first.
I have found in my work that these kinds of discussions
are much more powerful for preventing future disputes
than any written contract can be.
We need to have these conversations.
Legal contracts are sometimes written to avoid looking eye-to-eye
and coming to an agreement. But family contracts should only be written after you've done that.
When I design relationships for polyamorous triads of three or quads of four,
I sometimes use existing legal structures, like trusts or LLCs, that allow you to share
property and finances without a question as to your relationship.
So for example, if I've got a polyamorous triad,
Aisha, Susan and Linda,
I can set up an LLC for them
so that they can co-own real estate properties,
pay taxes together,
purchase a common health insurance
and have clear exit strategies if they wish.
Thank you.
And if people trust each other enough
to pool their financial fortune and want to pay taxes together,
it shouldn't matter whether they're business partners,
siblings or romantic partners.
All of those families are valid.
Thank you.
We should be able to choose legal partners
beyond a single romantic partner like a spouse.
Some people are doing that now, and it's the trend for the future.
Domestic partnerships have been used for 30 years
by same-sex couples, but also by best friends and siblings.
Doing so as domestic partners allows you to share your health insurance,
to visit each other in the hospital and across borders in a pandemic,
like spouses.
But unlike spouses, you don't become a social welfare state of two,
which can be a good thing.
I had a client who had a severely disabled sister.
By becoming domestic partners,
she was able to put her sister on her excellent health insurance coverage.
Why would a sister be any less worthy of that than a boyfriend? In 2020, my organization helped pass the first laws for multi-partner domestic partnership, which have passed in
several cities and counting. This means that three or four polyamorous partners could become
domestic partners, or two or more platonic co-parents, or any two, three three or four polyamorous partners could become domestic partners,
or two or more platonic co-parents,
or any two, three or four people
who want to become each other's legal partners.
When relationships have legal status like this,
it reduces discrimination
and promotes social acceptance and awareness,
as we saw in the same-sex partnership movement.
Still, we hope this year to pass the first
family status non-discrimination laws
at city levels across the United States,
which means that you can't be discriminated against,
you can't be fired from your job or denied housing
because of your family configuration.
In future, I propose that we move from these city-level domestic partnerships
to state-level multi-partner domestic partnerships
and then federal recognition as we did with same-sex marriage.
And if we really want to value families as they exist
rather than incentivize marriage,
I also suggest that we separate out some of the legal perks of marriage
so that single people and other kinds of families get these benefits
without an evaluation of whether they're in a romantic relationship
that passes muster.
And marriage should not be the gateway
to social and economic privilege anymore.
That time is done.
And marriages will be stronger when we do that.
Do you know anyone who got married faster than they should have
for health insurance or citizenship?
Because I know too many, and I'm a divorce lawyer.
As a divorce lawyer, relationships last longer
when we marry for better reasons than government perks.
So many of you may be married
and may not think that these issues have personal relevance for you.
But I ask you to reflect. Could your relationship be
stronger if you adopted a more expansive view of family? Marriage and partnership are not one-size-fits-all.
Every couple in partnership benefits from actively deciding how they want to co-create together in
terms of co-parenting, shared finances, your household,
and your definition of monogamy.
For example,
is there any hidden expectation that you have of your partner
that would benefit from being spoken out loud and confirmed?
I bet there is.
Or is there any aspect of partnership that you participate in
just because everyone does it,
like sleeping in the same bed or only vacationing together,
that just isn't really working for your partnership?
When we expect any one relationship in our lives
to meet most of our needs,
we may be putting too much pressure on that relationship.
And whether it's your romantic partner,
your parent, your adult child,
your relationship may be stronger
if you also
strengthen other connections in your lives and find other ways to get some of your own needs met.
I think it's worthwhile to question, no matter what kind of family configuration you're in,
whether you could be part of a movement for greater interconnectedness
beyond our romantic relationships and beyond the walls of our home.
Your family and your community will be stronger when you do. Is there a long-term friend that you could reach out to with whom
you'd like to be better in touch and suggest a regular date for special time together?
Could you create a child care cooperative with other parents in your community?
Is there a single parent or elderly
person in your life whose home you could spend more time in? At some point in a long life,
you too will need support. And it benefits you to practice asking for support now
and actively caring for people in community who may one day care for you.
A baby whose diaper you change may one day change yours.
Sorry.
It's the beautiful reciprocity of human relationship.
And in my vision for the future,
while we work together to redefine family and law,
we can all redefine family in our own culture and lives.
There may even be a close friend to whom you get the courage to ask,
do you want to make family with me?
Thank you.
Thank you.
Support for this show comes from Airbnb.
If you know me, you know I love staying in Airbnbs
when I travel.
They make my family feel most at home
when we're away from home.
As we settled down at our Airbnb during a recent vacation to Palm Springs, I pictured my own home
sitting empty. Wouldn't it be smart and better put to use welcoming a family like mine by hosting it
on Airbnb? It feels like the practical thing to do, and with the extra income, I could save up
for renovations to make the space even more inviting for ourselves and for future guests. Your home might be worth more than you think.
Find out how much at airbnb.ca slash host.
That was Diana Adams speaking at TED Women in 2021. If you're curious about TED's curation,
find out more at ted.com slash curation
guidelines. And that's it for today. TED Talks Daily is part of the TED Audio Collective. This
episode was produced and edited by our team, Martha Estefanos, Oliver Friedman, Brian Green,
Autumn Thompson, and Alejandra Salazar. It was mixed by Christopher Fazi-Bogan. Additional
support from Emma Taubner, Daniela Balarezo, and Will Hennessy.
I'm Elise Hugh. I'll be back tomorrow with a fresh idea for your feed. Thanks for listening.
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