by Daniel Darling (@dandarling) In the spring of 1965, a little-known assistant secretary of labor, policy, planning, and research in the administration of Lyndon B. Johnson issued an explosive report that would prove to be both controversial in the moment and unquestionably correct half a century later. The report became a lightning rod. The Left, led by radical feminists and others, decried his emphasis on the two-parent family. Moynihan, who later became a US senator, was hung out to ...