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"The Effect of Feminism on Canadian Society" by Barbara Kay
Speech REAL Women Conference
Ottawa-Sept 20/08
http://www.realwomenca.com/page/confprogram.html
An attendee at an academic conference a few years ago was in
conversation with a woman who happened to mention a book called Fat is
a Feminist Issue. He starts to say, “Can you give me an
example...” and the woman eagerly breaks in, “...of why fat
is a feminist issue?” “No,” he says, “I
was going to ask for an example of something that is NOT a feminist
issue.”
I know just how he feels. Some days it seems everything I read or see
offers fresh evidence of society’s obsession with the health and
self-realization of women. There seems to be no public issue that
isn’t linked to concern over its impact on girls and women.
Concern for men and boys? Not so much...
This is the second time in a space of five months that I have been
privileged to share a conference platform with Gwen. In May we both
attended an ideas forum of which we are members, and sat on a panel
entitled “Men: The new Second Sex?”
The question was rhetorical. We share the belief that the pendulum of
feminism, which began as a reform movement to redress iniquities in our
social and legal environments, passed the centre long ago and has swung
way too far in the wrong direction. We also share the belief that many
of our present social ills can be traced not only to the breakdown of
the traditional family, but to a methodical breakdown of respect for
the idea of the traditional family – which in turn can be traced
back to the feminist revolution.
My talk today will be critical of feminism as an ideology, so I had
better begin by saying the obvious. The patriarchy existed, and from
the standpoint of political and legal rights, yes, it was unfair to
women. But let’s keep a sense of perspective. In 1963 when Betty
Friedan’s The Feminine Mystique lit the fuse of the feminist
revolution, the measures usually cited to establish a group’s
well-being – freedom, income, status, family situation –
would have ranked the women of that decade one standard deviation above
any female population in all of previous human history. I was there. I
had young children and stayed home to care for them. My life was not a
“comfortable concentration camp” as Friedan described it.
This isn’t the forum to examine the sociology of the patriarchy,
but one thing it is important to say is that the patriarchy was not
about men’s hatred or contempt for women. Men never considered
women to be their enemy. At least not in our Judeo-Christian culture.
The Taliban are a product of their culture, not their DNA.
Conversely, in feminists’ zeal to redress past imbalances,
men became the collective enemy in a gender war individual men have no
wish to engage in, and never really fought. As a result, their sex as a
whole – heterosexual men, that is - has become the target of
free-floating suspicion and resentment, a phenomenon that has called
forth a new word to describe it: misandry.
I would not define misandry as a hatred of men, although it is true
that some radical feminists do hate men, and it is true that the
effects of misandry sometimes seem inspired by hatred. But in the
general population misandry is a more nuanced prejudice, which is why
most women are unaware they they have absorbed it by osmosis.
I would describe misandry as a gendered worldview, a kind of
photographic negative of feminist philo-gyny, in which the positive
aspects of manliness vis a vis women - man as devoted father,
responsible provider and risk-taking protector, the traits displayed by
most men – will be acknowledged in individual men – my
husband treats me with respect, ours was a good father, those
firefighters are brave, your son looks out for his sister.
But negative aspects of manliness vis a vis women exhibited by a
minority of individual men – sexual aggression, brutality and
territoriality – are portrayed as the masculine default:
genetically inherent, resistant to modification, and culturally
significant in a negative way.
In this misandric worldview, the reverse holds true for women. Positive
womanly traits – nurturance, empathy, peace-making – are
assumed to be the rule, while discordant behaviours – say, child
abuse (70% of child abuse is perpetrated by women) intimate partner
violence or indeed any brutal behaviour exhibited by women at all - are
treated as exceptional or excusable (post-partum depression,
“legacy of the patriarchy”) and culturally insignificant.
And I would add one other characteristic of misandry: a penchant for
many half-truths about men’s lives that amount in the end to a
lie. How many times have we heard the expression the “glass
ceiling”? Why do we never hear about the dirt floor, on which
most men’s working lives take place.
There is a reason we now call a chairman a chairperson, but never refer
to a manhole cover as a personhole cover. It is because women aspire to
become, and have become, the chairs of any number of committees. But
when was the last time you heard a woman express an interest in sewer
work? It is difficult to take seriously a revolution for equality that
demands air-conditioning and power suits for its “victims,”
but balks not only at assuming the physical risks and unpleasantness
that real equality with men implies, but even balks at expressing
gratitude for the fact that only men volunteer for the high-risk and
physically demanding work upon which society depends to function at the
most basic level. The privileges of manliness are relentlessly
publicized. The sacrifices and hardships remain literally and
figuratively out of sight.
Culturally, misandry is what I would call the most troubling fallout
from the feminist revolution, because it seeks to suppress exactly
those qualities – trust, the instinct for collaboration and
mutual gratitude for the sacrifices and strengths of the other sex
– that a healthy society demands for civility and confidence.
For laws can change where there is a political will to change them, but
a political will for change can only come about in an informed society.
There’s the rub. When irrational prejudice, amounting to contempt
for an identifiable group of people and indifference to their pain,
whether another race, religion, tribe, nation, linguistic group or sex,
is part of the cultural air we breathe, accurate information has a hard
time breaking through.
Once entrenched, prejudice is extremely difficult to uproot. Because it
is not perceived by the population as discrimination or iniquity by
those who practice it. The opposite. The application of the prejudice
is perceived as beneficial to society.
In this case I am speaking of a prejudice that is not only tolerated
but naively, guiltlessly, even proudly consulted: by governments in
assigning public money to women’s groups or for academic research
on women’s issues; by judges in handing down mother-friendly
family law decisions; by school boards in designing men-bashing
domestic violence material in their curricula, illogically based n the
Montreal Massacre, a freak tragedy perpetuated by a lone psychopath
with neither precedent nor sequel, materials that inculcate negative
perceptions of men’s natures in youngsters; by umbrella charities
like the United Way in allocating funds for women’s programs,
never for men; by hospitals in creating outreach programs to discover
past histories of sexual abuse, in which girls are pro-actively
questioned about abuse in order to provide treatment, but boys
(statistically equally abused in childhood) are not; by social services
in providing sympathetic counsel and resources to women, virtually none
to men; by police in automatically ascribing blame to men in cases of
intimate partner violence; and of course by marketing firms and media
in providing advertising and entertainment, in which women are
portrayed as competent, smart and attractive – men as crude,
ineffectual and infantile.
All of these examples reflect topics I have written about. I take
no pride, rather it troubles me to say that I am one of the few opinion
columnists in the mainstream media who are preoccupied with the
marginalization of men’s rights and the denigration of their
character. The disenfranchisement of men in our culture is an orphan
subject in the media. Thus misandry flies beneath most people’s
radar, because with only one side of the story dominating the public
forum, we have become compliant in the acceptance of theories that have
nothing to do with reality, and compliant in the speech codes that
accompany that tendency.
It is fitting that in the anecdote I mentioned the book the woman was
talking about was Fat is a Feminist Issue. The ideology of feminism
– in fact of all reform movements that go on to become utopian
revolutions – can be likened to an overweight woman struggling to
lose weight by conventional methods, who finds herself impatient with
her steady but very slow loss of weight through healthy eating and
exercise. She is suddenly afflicted by extreme anorexia. At first, the
effects are exhilarating. The disease strips away all the weight she
was better off without: legal inequality, the old boy network,
educational and career opportunity obstacles, paternalism, sexual
double standards, etc.
But just when she looks wholesome and attractive, she begins to
distrust the mirror. She still believes she is overweight. Even as
people are averting their eyes from her cadaverous frame and sunken
face, she longs to be thinner.
We have arrived in theory at the moment when the feminist revolution
has become a spent force. All revolutions run a course and peter out as
reason reasserts itself. The population has wearied of feminism in its
revolutionary form, it is true. They see that women are now in the
majority in university classrooms, will soon become the majority of
lawyers and doctors, are already the majority of journalists.
But as with all utopian revolutions, even when the masses are
satisfied, the revolutionaries themselves, for whom on principle the
battle can never be said to be won, won’t take yes for an answer.
So, even though Womens Studies classes are emptying out, the anorexics
have “captured the culture” by means of the “the long
march through the institutions,” as Italian Marxist Antonio
Gramsci recommended for advancing the communist agenda. Primarily
academia.
The anorexics are still teaching that women are victims of a patriarchy
that has in fact become a matriarchy. More important, they still have
the power to hire their ideological clones.
So in academia the beat goes on, and those whose research leads them
down politically incorrect paths continue at their career peril.
Those the anorexics have been teaching for thirty years are now family
law lawyers, or staffing the Status of Women Council or briefing
premiers on women’s issues, using deliberately falsified
statistics and data, or sitting on the Supreme Court, or chairing
boards of education or running the registered nurses associations or
working as family therapists.
Or writing high school curricula. I learned just the other day that the
secondary school materials for a new compulsory course, ostensibly on
Ethics and Religion, to be taught in all Quebec schools contains six
pages on Catholicism and 40 pages on feminism.
These are the women – and some fellow-travelling men - who
believe in their hearts they are doing women good by perpetuating the
idea that men are inherently violent, but women never are except in
self-defense, who truly believe that mothers, but not fathers, are all
children really need, and that violence against women is a subject of
national urgency, but that unprovoked abuse of men by women is a myth.
Domestic violence is worth lingering over because it is the single most
effective propaganda tool feminists have found for entrenching misandry
in the general population. The truth is that domestic violence affects
perhaps 7% of the population, is initiated in near-equal proportion by
men and women and results in Canada in about 70 intimate partner deaths
a year – yes, more women are killed than men, but the overall
figure is so nugatory in a country of 35 million people that clearly
individual dysfunction accounts for all of it, and no possible
generalization about the nature of one sex or the other can be drawn
from it.
But this is exactly the kind of information that can’t get past
our cultural gatekeepers. Indeed, the foremost authority on domestic
violence in our country, Prof Don Dutton, in 25 years of impeccable
researching and writing peer-reviewed articles on the subject, which
unfortunately arrives at conclusions displeasing to feminists, has
never once been asked by a government agency to consult on a task force
or make recommendations.
Or for that matter to speak at conferences specializing in the subject of domestic violence.
Roma Balzer of New Zealand was one of 800 delegates who attended the
first World Conference of Women's Shelters, held in Edmonton two weeks
ago. In her speech she deplored exactly the kind of research Prof
Dutton does, because his findings point to relationship dysfunction as
the problem. She called for more politicization of the subject, more
insistence that the reason for domestic violence lies in men’s
nature and the patriarchy. She openly warned against allowing any talk
of relationship factors being the cause of DV.
I know this because Roma Balzer was featured on a CBC radio program and
I heard her lies, instead of Prof Dutton, who would have told the truth.
No talk on feminism in September 2008 would be complete without a
reference to the electrifying entry onto the political stage of
Republican V-P candidate, Sarah Palin.
After her galvanizing speech at the Republican convention, Palin
subsequently became the focus of a media frenzy, which included
near-hysterical wrath from clearly threatened feminist observers. I
cannot remember witnessing such intense media obsession with a public
figure since the death of Princess Diana. It was clear in retrospect
that Palin’s convention speech had been more than the sum of its
parts, and that what Sarah Palin represented might result in
significant cultural reverberations.
As I noted in a column the week after the speech, perhaps over-optimistically:
But win or lose the election, Sarah Palin has already altered the
cultural landscape of America, possibly of the Western world. In years
to come, social archaeologists will mark her speech as the official
beginning of an end to the gender wars, and, one hopes, a return to
trust and collaboration between the sexes.
Palin represents what would have happened to American women without a
feminist revolution. For legal and social equity for women was bound to
arise organically through political and cultural reform, as more and
more women entered university and the work force, a process well
underway before feminism became an organized movement.
After all, from 1940 to 1970 the number of female college graduates in
America more than tripled (to about 5 million). With or without a
movement, such education would have created a labour market whose
momentum could not be stopped. And as a significant number of women
entered the market, they would have changed the working environments
they entered in large numbers in a natural way.
And that’s what I find so culturally tantalizing about
Palin’s successful bypass of the feminist movement: She seems to
represent an idea of what might have happened to women if women’s
legal and social rights had been brought into alignment with men
through an organic process and a win-win model rather than through
politically aroused animosity and an adversarial model of ‘if men
win, women lose.’
As an example of the win-win organic process model, I would adduce an
example very close to home. In my own lifetime I have seen Jews go from
being discriminated against in public institutions, in education, in
social life and career opportunities to become fully integrated peers
with non-Jews in every walk of life.
Not all that long ago, universities had quotas for Jews, hospitals
would not admit Jewish doctors, law firms would not admit Jewish
lawyers and so forth.
Jews lobbied for reform, but there was no demand for affirmative
action, simply for equal opportunity. Jews did not take to the streets
or organize demonstrations or denounce their enemies. Instead, they
opened their own hospitals, started their own law firms, built their
own golf and social clubs. It became clear that if Canadian
universities persisted in quotas, Jews would take their high marks and
ambition elsewhere, if gentile firms didn’t hire Jewish lawyers
they would lose business, that if hospitals didn’t accept Jewish
doctors, they were denying themselves badly-needed talent, and if
social clubs excluded Jews they were missing out on a lot of laughs.
If Jews had followed the revolutionary feminist model, they would have
said, well the legacy of anti-Semitism shows us that Jews have a right
to be bitter and angry, the right to demand special entitlements, and
the right to proclaim our superiority to gentiles. After all, since we
have suffered so much under non-Jewish regimes, it must be true that
all non-Jews are intrinsically racist and hateful people, and that our
battle for equality can never truly be said to be won.
Obviously that didn’t happen, and as a Jew I would be horrified
if it had, which is precisely why I am so embarrassed for my sex when I
see and hear feminist diatribes perpetrated in my name against men
today because of the patriarchy.
In a healthy society in which all citizens may vote, desirable reforms
are worth fighting for in democratic ways, but revolutions are never
necessary. The resolution of past grievances should result in what Jews
do rejoice in and women should rejoice in: a normalization of
relations, in which collaboration and trust are the standard between
the formerly privileged and the formerly disenfranchised group, not, as
happens with revolutions, a reversal of roles, not a situation in which
the previously disadvantaged group seizes the moment of potential
normalization to establish a new imbalance of power, far harsher and
more consciously punitive than what had fomented the push for change,
as we saw in the French, Russian and Chinese communist revolutions.
Nothing is more illustrative of the punitive character of feminist
excesses than family court. Here is where misandry in its most open,
cynical and pernicious form is found. Over 85% of contested custody
suits end with mothers receiving sole custody over children. The
remaining 15% divide children between other family members, agencies
and fathers, so in fact fathers arrive at sole custody about 7% of the
time.
Only an extreme systemic contempt for the value of a father’s
role in the life of a child can explain such a disparity, and only an
extreme prejudice against men in general can explain that contempt, and
nobody pretends otherwise.
Indeed, one of the more chilling statements I have ever read, one that
captures the casual acceptance of democracy’s fall from grace in
family court was this from the National Association of Women and the
Law: "Courts may treat parents unequally and deny them basic civil
liberties and rights, as long as their motives are good."
Here we are truly in George Orwell country. In simple words this
statement means “The end justifies the means” and there is
not a totalitarian regime in the world that does not espouse that exact
excuse for their seizure of entitlements for one group at the expense
of another. In totalitarian societies, some people are more equal than
others, and in the totalitarian world of family court, it is mothers
who are more equal than fathers.
I hear from many fathers whose lives have been ruined by the iniquities
of misandric courts. One wrote me that after awarding sole custody of
his children to the mother, the judge, noting his distress, offered
“solace” with the words, “Don’t feel bad.
You’re still young enough to have children of your own...”
Family Court is the visible shame, the Berlin Wall, erected by
feminism, that stands between men [and children] and their human
rights. It must come down.
Ten years ago, Senator Anne Cools and MP Roger Galloway wrote a
landmark report, For the Sake of the Children, recommending equal
parenting as the post-divorce default for child custody, only to see it
tossed into the oubliette of history. Every healthy individual knows
that children want, and have a right to, the love of both their parents
in equal measure. It is time – past time - to entrench this
principle in law.
For if women continue to privilege their own autonomy more than their
children’s need for a father, sooner or later men will learn to
preserve their sanity by distancing themselves from women. And then, as
journalist Kathleen Parker put it so eloquently in her book,
“Save the Males”: “When women no longer care about
children, and men no longer care about women, we will have accomplished
what millions of radical jihadists could only dream about: cultural
suicide and an unraveling of the civilizing forces that millions of men
perished to preserve.
Barbara Kay - Website: http://www.barbarakay.ca/
Email bkay@videotron.ca
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