Confronting Woman-Bashing in the Men's Movement
by
Glenn Sacks
© 2001

This article originally
appeared on the Glenn J. Sacks
Website
and appears here with the permission of the author.
It is said "choose your enemies carefully, for someday you'll resemble
them." The men's and fathers' movement is gaining in strength and
slowly making progress. However, there is a disturbing fringe element
whose woman-bashing very much resembles the vicious man-bashing which
men and fathers have endured for the past three decades. It is
important that men's and fathers' activists confront this fringe
rather than turn a blind eye to it.
What is the profile of the woman-basher?
Characteristic #1: The woman-basher believes that all women, or
virtually all women, are the problem.
For example, in a recent issue of Transitions, the publication
of the National Coalition of Free Men, a front cover cartoon depicts a
pretty bride (representing a woman on her wedding day), and then a
hideous, multi-headed monster (representing a woman in divorce court,
presumably because she has won custody of the children and driven the
father out of his children's lives). The caption indicates that this
cartoon refers to all women--not some, all--a perfect mirror of the
radical feminist "all men are rapists" position.
Another woman-basher (WB) expressed similar thoughts in a later issue,
writing that for men, bad things "will happen if you engage in risky
behavior such as having sex, having a child, getting married, or
[having] anything resembling a relationship with a woman." The writer
cautions that those who dismiss these inevitabilities are "the future
victims."
Characteristic #2: WBs believe that men don't ever really
oppose woman-bashing or woman-blaming, but oppose it publicly only
because they're forced to do so.
After the Transitions cover cartoon was published, I wrote a
petition of protest and many local activists signed it. Many WBs
assumed that this was done because we were afraid of our wives'
reproach or because we feared offending some by not being politically
correct. The idea that we might have opposed the cartoon out of simple
fairness and decency instead of fear or coercion did not seem to occur
to them. This is similar to the feminist view that any woman who
opposes feminism can't really be against feminism, but is
instead the dupe or the captive of evil, reactionary males.
Characteristic #3: WBs believe that women aren't worth the trouble
In the most recent issue of Transitions, a WB writer relates "a
tale I've heard from a number of friends. F--king women in the
feminist era is so dangerous that it's not worth the effort, and,
anyway, most women are so damned lousy in bed that they aren't worth
the trouble." This writer could perhaps find a soulmate in feminist
bigot Germaine Greer, who recently said "God knows how many women
already have no use for their men, who are all too often idle and
incompetent both as wage-earners and around the house, uninterested in
the children and hopeless in bed."
Characteristic #4: WBs believe that even those females who have helped
us do so out of dubious motives.
When syndicated columnist Kathleen Parker recently launched a
misguided attack on Russell Yates, one men's chatroom participant
derided Parker as a "Giggling ditz-bunny" who is "another Cathy Young,
another Wendy McElroy - one of those women whose image of herself is
so pompously filled with patronizing goodwill towards the poor little
men that she can't even imagine how sexist and anti-male she sounds."
Another noted that male-friendly female writers like McElroy are
simply like the "farmer [who] always fattens up the turkey before
Thanksgiving." The farmer is always "meticulously friendly" but has
"malevolence in her heart." We are also told that McElroy's ideology
is that of "friendly fascist feminism" and that women like this don't
bash men because they instead try to "neuter them politely."
An outside observer would never guess that the WBs are speaking of the
small minority of writers who have actually made a real effort to
discuss men's issues at a time when it hasn't been popular to do so.
Characteristic #5: WBs believe that for 30 years women have won at the
expense of men and that men can only win now at the expense of women.
As Warren Farrell says, when only one sex wins, both sexes lose.
There is no way that men or women can move forward from this point
unless they move forward together and on an equitable basis.
Characteristic #6: WBs dismiss women's contributions to our movement
because "it's often women who speak up for us only because Lace
Curtain censorship doesn't allow men to do it."
Lace Curtain censorship is real, and yes, many men have been silenced,
but this doesn't discredit the efforts of those women who have spoken
out. It is important that we don't mistreat them, as the feminists did
to the many men who helped the cause of women's liberation. Dianna
Thompson, the Executive Director of the American Coalition of Fathers
and Children (ACFC), says:
"I can understand men's frustration. It's unfair that women are
typically able to talk more about gender issues than men can. If I
talk about the way current child support guidelines are excessive and
unfairly burdensome to fathers, people will listen. If a man says the
same thing, people will look at him and say ‘He's just trying to get
out of paying.' It's not fair and I don't like it, but I'm not the
one who made these rules. Women in the fathers' movement didn't make
these rules."
Women who have helped men and fathers often find themselves in an
impossible double-bind--they are labeled traitors by feminist-minded
women, and at same time are disparaged by WBs. Trudy Schuett,
publisher of the Desert Light Journal, has been denounced by
feminists as a "fathers' rights whore," and Susan Faludi has implied
that pro-father women are Uncle Toms. Kim Gandy, the president of the
National Organization for Women, says that the relationship between
men and women in the fathers' movement is similar to the way "a man
charged with rape will hire a woman lawyer to represent him."
Conversely, some women in the fathers' movement report that there are
men who contact fathers' groups and are displeased when a woman
answers the phone or when a female activist is chosen to help them.
Since some men apparently have forgotten those many women to whom we
owe a debt of gratitude, I have begun to compile a list of
male-friendly women activists and writers who deserve recognition. To
view the list,
click here.
Characteristic #7: WBs believe that when male-friendly women writers
or activists show support for the mainstream feminist view of a
gender issue, it is indicative of their bad intentions.
Young, McElroy, and Parker have together tackled a laundry list of
men's issues, yet when they've disagreed with men's activists (such as
Young and Parker's recent attacks on Russell Yates), some WBs have
been quick to accuse them of selling-out or of double-dealing. In
reality, when these women have disagreed with men's activists they've
sometimes been right. More importantly, disagreement and independence
(as well as concern about legitimate women's issues) don't indicate
betrayal or malevolence. And while I disagree with Young on the
culpability of Russell Yates, her central point--that fathers'
activists should not defend fathers simply because they are
fathers--is a valid one.
Characteristic #8: WBs use personal experience (having children stolen
in a divorce, being the victim of false accusations or of domestic
violence, etc.) to justify anti-female bigotry.
This is a dangerous practice, because it parallels the despicable way
feminists have used victimhood to justify man-hate. One need only to
look at the hate-filled feminist head case Andrea Dworkin, reputedly
the victim of sexual abuse, to see where this leads. Pain and
victimization need to be channeled into reasonable and dedicated
political action, not woman-bashing.
A healthy response to victimization is to emulate McElroy, a former
victim of severe domestic violence. Rather than turning her personal
victimization into anti-male bigotry, she has used it to gain insight
into the lives of all victims of domestic violence, male and female.
Characteristic #9: WBs believe that feminism has caused all of men's
and fathers' current problems.
WBs blame feminism but ignore an equally destructive force--men's
chivalrous tendency to blame men first and women last. It is this
attitude which has created what Farrell calls "the machinery of male
protection," whose victims are almost always male.
For example, in a discussion of the Texas District Attorney who is
considering filing charges against Russell Yates "because of all the
e-mails she received" a WB wrote "Who do you think sent those mails?
Women."
I can say from my experiences defending Russell Yates in the
Houston Chronicle and on radio talk show programs throughout the
Southwest that this is a misguided assumption. The most vociferous
attacks on Russell (and on me) came not from women, but from men, most
of whom have deeply imbibed the "always blame the man" ethic of our
time. Russell ought to hope for an all-female jury.
Characteristic #10: The WBs believe that their "radical" rhetoric and
posture helps the men's movement achieve its goals, just as the
radicalism of Malcolm X helped Martin Luther King achieve his moderate
civil rights goals.
Some WBs justify or even celebrate woman-bashing by referring to the
Civil Rights Movement model, whereby white racists knew that if they
didn't give the moderate King what he wanted, they'd have to deal with
the radical Malcolm.
Setting aside the fact that the above assumptions about King and
Malcolm aren't actually historically accurate, there is one fatal flaw
with this model. At the time of the Civil Rights movement, most
Americans acknowledged that blacks had been mistreated and oppressed.
Thus, while Malcolm X could be criticized for his radical views,
nobody could deny that the source of his rage was legitimate.
WBs do not, and in many ways should not, enjoy the same legitimacy.
Men, as a whole, are still often viewed as oppressors or at least as
advantaged. In practical terms, woman-bashing from our quarter often
doesn't sound like the noble defiance of the oppressed, but instead
like the unjust rage of the "privileged" whose privileges are under
attack. Thus woman-bashing marginalizes and delegitimizes all wings of
our movement.
To be fair to the WBs, with a few exceptions, their woman-bashing is
not the product of genuine misogyny, but is instead reflective of the
frustration of a generation of men who have grown up in a relentlessly
misandrist popular culture, and who have had almost no forum within
which to oppose it. It is also true that over the past three decades
we have become so unaccustomed to hearing criticism of women, that
legitimate criticism is often labeled "woman-bashing" or "misogyny."
But there's a important difference between criticizing certain female
behaviors or demanding fairness from women, and the "all women are out
to destroy men" attitude of some WBs.
Besides being unjust, woman-bashing could be disastrous for our
movement. After 30 years of being on the receiving end of gender
abuse, the time is ripe for gender reconciliation and a serious
attempt to address men's concerns. The injustices committed again men
(particularly fathers) by our courts and our media are so outrageous
that most people will support us if we can get the truth out to them.
Even many feminist dissidents are tired of man-bashing and victimology,
and have rejected anti-male feminism. The special courage--the male
courage--of the heroes of September 11 has helped remind us of the
many unique and critical contributions that men make to our society.
We will change society, as long as we are reasonable and fair.
Late in his life Malcolm X said "the enemy is not whites. The enemy
is racism." The men's and fathers' movement needs to make sure it
never sees females as the enemy, but only misandry--whether from
females or from males. If not, we'll become like the bigoted
feminists that this movement was formed to oppose.

Copyright 2001 Glenn
Sacks, all rights reserved