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In every boy
there’s a girl waiting to break free. If boys were only encouraged to
get in touch with their Inner Whiner, the problems plaguing them in
schools and society at large would likely dissipate.
Distilled to its essence, this is the position
some in the women’s movement are advancing. Feminists once aimed to
unseat men, now they are actively engaged in queering them.
The new friendlier feminism is oddly
attractive to men, who’ve been snarled at for so long by these attack
dogs. One such dog in disguise is Carol Gilligan. At the risk of
engaging in what liberals call “lookism” (I note that the anti-ageism
bigots have taken to deriding Ann Coulter for being in her 40s),
here’s a photo of her.
The tumbleweed hair and the ghoulish grimace
ought to be enough to make all men head for the hills. But Gilligan
gulls the gents because hers is a slightly more evolved feminism.
Most feminists have dedicated their careers to
denying the facts of nature, namely that men and women are different.
Not Gilligan. On discovering the genders have “differing moral and
psychological tendencies,” she devoted herself to elevating the sillier
sex’s proclivities.
You see, before they were so thoroughly
feminized, “males and masculine persons” settled moral and ethical
dilemmas differently to “females and feminine persons”—they were
inclined to draw on individual rights and justice. Ladies, conversely,
generally like collectivist considerations such as what is best for the
group.
On observing this, Gilligan morphed
psychologist Lawrence Kohlberg’s theory of moral development from a
theory of absolute morality to a theory of relative morality: She
decreed that reasoning rooted in collectivism was every bit as evolved
and just as that based on individualism.
It recently dawned on Gilligan that boys had
fallen far behind girls in almost all walks of life. Did this elicit
introspection? Did she reflect on the crimes caused by codifying
feminism into law? Did she finally confess to what privileging women and
“women’s way of knowing” has wrought?
Affirmative action, the equal representation
of women everywhere (including in sports), progressive teaching
paradigms emphasizing group think; the banishing of competition (for
which boys are hardwired) and moral instruction (which they generally
crave); the demonization of the greatest writers, scientists, and
explorers because they were men, the chemical castration of boys via
Ritalin—was Gilligan driven to atone for these transgressions against
boys and change direction? Did she even make the connection between
men’s problems and the “Girls Gone Wild” gains of the women’s movement?
Not on your life.
In a recent column for Newsweek, Gilligan
writes: “That boys are having trouble with school is not news. But
images of rough-and-tumble boys not fit for the classroom now may blind
us to a problem that has less to do with how boys seem and more with who
they actually are—but are not allowed to show.”
That men have practically been made over in
the image of woman is not enough for Gilligan. Their final “recovery,”
as she sees it, lies in embracing the
alleged
woman within with complete abandon. Or in
Gilligan speak, getting in touch with one’s "emotional intelligence,"
"relational self," and "feeling brain."
Gilligan’s credentials for “fixing” problems
“scholars” like her have created include “having read ‘Tom Sawyer’ and
‘Catcher in the Rye,’” and thus knowing “that boys and school don't
mix.” Her scientific data are as compelling—they’re drawn from a
one-case study of a badly abused little boy.
As Gilligan tells it, “Four-year-old Sam asked
his mother one day, ‘Mommy, why are you sad?’ Wanting to shield him from
her sadness, [mom] replied, ‘I'm not sad.’ Then, according to Gilligan,
poor Sam sprung his Inner Girl. “Mommy, I know you. I was inside you,”
he told his long-suffering mother.
No tyke will spontaneously refer to his
mother’s uterus unless he has been taught to. This boy sounds as normal
as Alexander Portnoy, the antihero of Philip Roth’s eponymous
Portnoy's Complaint.
But for Gilligan, there’s nothing creepy about
a toddler’s reference to his mother’s entrails. Au contraire. She
casts the clearly contrived and inculcated womb talk as natural—as just
the “kind of emotional openness, sensitivity and connectedness” men
are forced to suppress for fear of appearing unmanly. “[B]oys often
repudiate these human qualities,” she laments. If they “can be
encouraged to embrace them, these qualities will develop, expanding
their capacity for relationships and also their sense of themselves.”
Vagina monologues or uterus prattle—feminists
believe that as long as their insides are being discussed, humanity’s
progress is guaranteed.
Remember the cult, 1967 British
television series, The Prisoner
("I am not a number—I am a free man!")? Whenever “Number 6” (the
individual) attempted to escape from “The Village” (the collective), a
giant balloon called “Rover” gave chase and subdued him. Little Sam’s
metaphoric “Rover,” you can be sure, is his mother’s suffocating monster
womb.
Unless the men’s movement is more concerned
with claiming victimhood than reclaiming manhood, its advocates ought
not to go along with feminism’s new, kinder castration.
© 2006 By Ilana Mercer
WorldNetDaily.com
(July 14) &
The Ottawa Citizen
(August 4), where it was titled "The Feminists have Unmanned Our Men")
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