WAR ON FATHERS
THE WAR ON FATHERS
How the
'feminization of America' destroys boys, men - and women
Posted: June 2, 2006
© 2006 WorldNetDaily.com
In honor of Fathers Day, the June edition of Whistleblower magazine is a
mega-eye-opener exploring one of the most crucial but little-reported phenomena
of modern America - what WND calls "THE WAR ON FATHERS."
The evidence of this almost unthinkable scenario is everywhere:
SCHOOL: In public school classrooms across America, in every category and every
demographic group, boys are falling behind. Girls excel and move on to college,
where three out of five students are female, while young boys - who don't
naturally thrive when forced to sit still at a desk for six hours a day - are
diagnosed by the millions with new diseases that didn't exist a generation ago.
To make their behavior more acceptable, they are compelled to take hazardous
psycho-stimulant drugs like Ritalin.
Boys are more than 50 percent more likely to repeat elementary school grades
than girls, a third more likely to drop out of high school and twice as likely
to have a "learning disability." And the suicide rate among teen boys
is far higher than that of girls.
"What we have done," explains Thomas Mortenson, senior scholar at the
Pell Institute for the Study of Opportunity in Higher Education, "is we
have a K-12 school system that seems to work relatively well for girls and does
not work for a very large share of boys."
HOME: It's well known that roughly half of America's marriages end in divorce,
but not nearly as well known that two out of three of those divorces are
initiated by the wives. Moreover, America's family court system is scandalously
biased in favor of the mother in child custody disputes. Fathers get custody of
children in uncontested cases only 10 percent of the time and 15 percent of the
time in contested cases. Meanwhile, mothers get sole custody 66 percent of the
time in uncontested cases and 75 percent of the time in contested cases.
"Where you have minor children, there's really no such thing as no-fault
divorce for fathers," says Detroit attorney Philip Holman, vice president
of the National Congress for Fathers and Children. "On the practical level,
fathers realize that divorce means they lose their kids."
Unfortunately, this loss by children of their fathers' influence is directly
responsible - far more than any other cause - for the modern national scourges
of gang life, crime and much more.
CULTURE: Fifty years ago, "Father knows best" was a hit TV show, in
which insurance agent Jim Anderson (actor Robert Young) would come home from
work each evening, trade his sport jacket for a nice, comfortable sweater, and
then deal with the everyday growing-up problems of his family. He could always
be counted on to resolve that week's crisis with a combination of kindness,
fatherly strength and common sense.
Today, television virtually always portrays husbands as bumbling losers or
contemptible, self-absorbed egomaniacs. Whether in dramas, comedies or
commercials, the patriarchy is dead, at least on TV where men are fools - unless
of course they're gay. On "Queer Eye for the Straight Guy," the "fab
five" are supremely knowledgeable on all things hip, their life's highest
purpose being to help those less fortunate than themselves - that is, straight
men - to become cool.
As this issue of Whistleblower shows, experts like Ph.D. scholar Christina Hoff
Sommers, author of "The War Against Boys," agree: "It's a bad
time to be a boy in America." Sommers provides example after example of
what can only be called an all-out anti-male campaign:
"The carnage committed by two boys in Littleton, Colorado," declares the Congressional Quarterly Researcher, "has forced the nation to reexamine the nature of boyhood in America." William Pollack, director of the Center for Men at McLean Hospital and author of the best-selling "Real Boys: Rescuing Our Sons from the Myths of Boyhood," tells audiences around the country, "The boys in Littleton are the tip of the iceberg. And the iceberg is all boys."
In fact, Sommers reveals,
it has become fashionable in elitist circles to conspire to change boys' very
identity:
There are now conferences, workshops, and institutes dedicated to transforming
boys. Carol Gilligan, professor of gender studies at Harvard Graduate School of
Education, writes of the problem of "boys' masculinity . in a patriarchal
social order." Barney Brawer, director of the Boys' Project at Tufts
University, told Education Week: "We've deconstructed the old version of
manhood, but we've not [yet] constructed a new version." In the spring of
2000, the Boys' Project at Tufts offered five workshops on "reinventing
Boyhood." The planners promised emotionally exciting sessions: "We'll
laugh and cry, argue and agree, reclaim and sustain the best parts of the
culture of boys and men, while figuring out how to change the terrible
parts."
"Terrible"? As this edition of Whistleblower shows, there is nothing
wrong - and a very great deal right - with boys and masculinity. As maverick
feminist Camille Paglia courageously reminds her men-hating colleagues,
masculinity is "the most creative cultural force in history."
"The problem," said David Kupelian, managing editor of WND and
Whistleblower, "is that misguided feminists, intent on advancing a
radically different worldview than the one on which this nation was founded,
have succeeded in fomenting a revolution. And that revolution amounts to a
powerful and pervasive campaign against masculinity, maleness, boys, men and
patriarchy."