Despite that fine beginning, a movement called women's liberation--an attempt by women to break free from male domination--began in the early 1960's in the United States. At that time, some 300 husbands abandoned their families to every 1 wife who did. By the end of the 1960's, the ratio changed to about 100 to 1.
100:1 is equal to 300:3. So in the beginning of the 1960s, 1 woman for every 300 men were abandoning their families(300:1). At the end of the 1960s that ratio had changed to 3 women for every 300 men(300:3)...or an increase of only 2 women for every 300 men!!!!!
IF Womens' Liberation was to blame for this slight increase, why didn't they use figures from the 1970s since the movement was even stronger then? Because the number of abandoments plummeted in the 70s for both men and women.
In 1970, California adopted the "no-fault" divorce, and it spread quickly across the US. Before that time, there were only a limited number of reasons for divorce, such as adultery and ABANDONMENT. In order to obtain a divorce, people would falsely admit to abandoning their families, which means the 1960 numbers are unreliable.
Regards,
Justitia