In Defense of Men
by
Marty Nemko, Ph.D. © 2005
What do the following people have in
common: Aristotle, Jesus, Leonardo da Vinci, Beethoven, Monet, the
Wright Brothers, Jonas Salk, Steven Spielberg, the key scientists
behind the development of every drug from aspirin to breast cancer
breakthrough Herceptin, from anesthetic to heart bypass surgery,
from refrigeration to heating, from the electric light bulb to the
radio, the car, the television, the computer, and the mapping of
human genome? They’re all men.
And in the five decades since the women’s movement began, 97% of
science, 92% of literature, and 100% of economics Nobel laureates
are still men.
Let’s turn to the lower rungs of the work world. Do you want any of
these jobs: Fumigator? Prison guard? Coal miner? Steelworker? Sewer
maintainer? Neither do most women. 95+ percent of people who do such
grungy, dangerous, life-shortening but essential work are men.
Yet today, men are falsely accused of so much:
ACCUSATION: Catalyst and the National Organization for Women
complain than men have erected a glass ceiling that causes women to
earn just 75 cents for every dollar men earn.
DEFENSE: In an exhaustive analysis in Dr. Warren Farrell’s new book,
Why Men Earn More (Amacom, 2005), when equating for job difficulty,
unpleasantness, hours per week worked, years of experience, etc.,
women earn more than men for the same work. So, the reason, on
average, that women earn less is because they are unwilling to do
the yucky jobs. For example, jobs as computer programmers and
engineers pay well, indeed women earn $1.10 for every dollar a man
earns, but those jobs require never ending training in highly
technical material and long, deadline-driven days cogitating at
maximum in isolation. Few women are willing to do that work, so 75
percent of programmers and engineers are men. Jobs in sweltering,
clanging, carcinogenic iron foundries pay well, but few women are
willing to do that work According to the Jobs Rated Almanac, fewer
than one percent(!) of ironworkers are women. Jobs as CEOs pay very
well but require 60-hour workweeks and, usually, decades of
willingness to move their families and themselves every few years to
places like Birmingham and Bismarck to accept a promotion. Based on
my experience as career coach to 1,500 female and 700 male
professionals, many, many fewer women than men are willing to do
that.
ACCUSATION: Men are too aggressive in the workplace. They’re just
not process-oriented enough. “Men just don’t get it.”
DEFENSE: Women are allowed to make that criticism. Yet imagine if a
man said, “Women are too process-oriented. They need to be more
aggressive.” That man would be immediately censured.
And just imagine if a male employee asserted that a female
coworker’s overemotional behavior is caused by pre-menstrual
syndrome (PMS) even though there’s an entire industry selling
products to women suffering from PMS.
Or even worse, imagine if a feminist overheard a male manager
saying,
“I prefer to hire men because they’re less emotional most of the
month and dramatically so the rest of the time. I also prefer to
hire men because they devote more time to their careers. More women
want to work shorter hours so they can have enough time for family,
friends, and so on. Yet another reason I like to hire men is that
women, on average, are more devious. Guys are more direct; you’re
more likely to know where you stand.” Even though there is
reasonable basis for that manager’s assertions, he would be fired
faster than you could say, “sex discrimination.”
Yet if that same manager were to express bias toward female
employees, for example, “I prefer to hire women because they’re more
interpersonally sensitive and better team builders,” that equally
gender-generalizing statement would likely be met, not by a lawsuit,
but with praise. There is a new double-standard: employers, the
media, and the colleges can be biased against men but not women.
ACCUSATION: We must focus more on women’s health. After all, most
medical research is done on men.
DEFENSE: In decades past, more research was done on men than on
women, but that was not because of sexism. Drug companies didn’t
want to use women during childbearing years for fear of liability if
the woman got pregnant during the study and the drug hurt the unborn
child. Also, men, on average, are bigger risk takers and so are more
likely to take the risk of being a guinea pig in a potentially
dangerous experiment. Nevertheless, in recent years, the situation
has completely changed. Dr. Farrell searched Index Medicus, which
indexes 3,000 medical journals to find that there now are 23
articles on women’s health for every one on men’s! In addition,
there are 15 federal agencies on women’s health. None for men,
despite the fact that men’s health needs are profound: Men die six
years younger than women, leaving four widows for every widower!
When women have a deficit—for example, there are fewer female
engineers than males--there’s a massive effort to encourage math
teachers to call on girls more, and many college engineering
programs have set up reverse discrimination admission criteria to
reject more male applicants so they can accept more females. But
when men suffer even the ultimate deficit—they die younger--it is
ignored.
Worse, a higher percentage of attention than ever is paid to women’s
versus men’s health, which will further increase the male-female
death gap. In addition to the above cited examples, there are
countless walks, runs, and other fundraisers and TV awareness
campaigns for breast cancer. I’ve never seen one for sudden heart
attack, the leading cause of early death among men despite the fact
that men die younger of all 10 of the 10 leading causes of death! I
get my phone bill and the envelope bears a large pink ribbon and,
inside, there’s a donor form for breast cancer. I go to the post
office and there’s a big sign trumpeting that profits from breast
cancer stamps will go toward breast cancer. I go to my Wells Fargo
ATM and am greeted by a screen emblazoned with the pink breast
cancer ribbon. I even go to the Oakland A’s game, a sport
predominantly patronized by men, and they announce Breast Cancer
Day. Where’s the Sudden Heart Attack Day? Men have a right to live
too.
And let’s not forget that we send only men into direct combat.
Maybe Warren Farrell is right: Today, despite all the male
contributions, “men are the disposable sex.”

Dr. Nemko along with Dr. Warren Farrell is creating
the National Organization for Men. Nemko was recently called “The
Bay Area’s Best Career Coach” by the San Francisco Bay Guardian. His
radio show airs Sundays 11 am to noon Pacific Time on KALW 91.7 FM
(NPR- San Francisco) and archived on www.martynemko.com. That site
also contains 400+ of his published writings. The Reader’s Choice
poll rated his book, Cool Careers for Dummies, the #1 most useful
career guide.

Copyright 2005 Marty Nemko, all rights reserved