http://www.iSteve.com/04DecA.htm#shotdown
Here's a new Census Bureau graph         on the increasing median age of first marriages. Graphs like this are         misleading because by         starting in 1950, they don't show that the immediate post-War decades         were anomalous. Before WWII, the average age of first marriages had been         higher, but after the War, the abundance of union jobs paying a living         wage to very young men allowed the age of first marriage to hit an         all-time low. In general, Europe has been a fairly late marriage         civilization (compared to the Chinese or Indians) since pre-Christian         times.
       
        The age of first marriage for women crept upward after 1960, perhaps due         to increasing levels of higher education for women. But the marriage age         for men had stayed right at 23 until about 1973, after which it shot         upwards for about two decades before stabilizing at around 27. Indeed,         if I had to guess the very day the average age of marriage for men         started to rise, I'd put my money on Jan. 22, 1973, the day the Supreme         Court legalized abortion in Roe v. Wade.
       
        There's a lot of other evidence that what we think of as The Sexual         Revolution of the Sixties didn't actually happen on a mass scale until         about 1973. And the likeliest single reason it happened then is Roe v.         Wade.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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