| National Post (Canada)
21 June 2006
Ideology trumps equality
'For Heaven's sake, a man is cheating on you, you
do what every wife in
this country does: You take him to the cleaners. Get his house, car,
kids -
make him wish he was dead."
Those were the words of a female assistant district attorney explaining
to
a Texas jury in 2003 that there was no need for defendant Clara Harris
to
have resorted to murdering her philandering husband (she drove his
new
Cadillac back and forth over his body before horrified onlookers -
when
family law already offered such excellent legal remedies for revenge.
"Make him wish he was dead"? Addressing 12 mainstream men
and women it was
utterly crucial not to offend, the prosecutor took for granted their
complicity in winking at overt anti-male bias in the justice system.
Note also that she ranked "kids" last amongst men's assets,
furthering the
popular myth that separated fathers disengage easily from their children.
In fact, non-custodial fathers' loss of their children causes them
fathomless anguish. Herein lies a paradox: We know that fatherlessness
is
the single biggest predictor of criminality for boys, and low self-esteem
for girls, leading to a variety of social failures. Nevertheless,
no
significant swell of political will has yet materialized to bring
more
balance into post-separation childcare.
Family law in the U.S. and Canada today continues to serve up the "make
him
wish he was dead" option to women, who win sole custody in 90%
of disputed
cases. Non-custodial fathers are perceived as money machines with
occasional babysitting privileges. Mothers can flout court orders
and
block
access with impunity, but fathers are immediately and disproportionately
criminalized by failure to provide often-ruinous "child" support
(mothers
are not accountable for expenditures). Cocaine dealers - half of whom,
ironically, are fatherless - serve 20 days out of 30-day jail sentences;
a
father in support arrears serves the full 30.
Echoing the fate of all political revolutions, reform of the patriarchy
began as a campaign for equality -- then the pendulum swung too far,
ending
in rigid CorrectThink, the suppression of heresies and wholesale blame
of
the Other (men) for the delayed realization of Utopia.
The family law system is now systemically colonized by radical feminists.
Their goal is the complete autonomy of women (except for financial
support), via the incremental legal eclipse of men's influence over
women's
spheres of "identity" interests, which includes children.
Thus the custody
issue has become a front line in the gender wars.
By no means an exhaustive list, radical feminism is supported by
collective
rights-dominated law school curricula; feminism-riddled "cultural
studies"
and the humanities in general; women's studies departments, in reality
feminist recruitment and networking centres/ideological boot camps;
politically powerful, tax-funded feminist groups who extend strategic
mentorship to a wide substratum of women's causes; supine prime ministers
and go-with-the-zeitgeist justice ministers; and a critical mass of
ideologically aggressive judges, whose juridical archives, bristling
with
subjective, gender-biased judgments, discredit their vocation and
call
into
question the whole notion of equality under the law.
To illustrate, just a few examples:
Supreme Court of Canada chief justice Beverley McLachlin: "We
have to be
pro-active in rearranging the Canadian family"
Former justice minister Martin Cauchon: "Men have no rights,
only
responsibilities"
Feminist psychologist Peter Jaffe, a social-context educator of
family
court judges: "[J]oint custody is an attempt of males to continue
dominance
over females"
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"
Their efforts have not gone unnoticed. "Feminists have entrenched
their
ideology in the SCC and have put all contrary views beyond the pale,"
lawyer and civil libertarian Eddie Greenspan has said. Liberal MP
Roger
Galloway, who chaired the 1998 Report of the Special Joint Committee
on
Child Custody and Access, has commented that "Justice, if it
occurs in a
divorce court, is accidental".
It's a trickle-down process. Elites like Status of Women write the
script.
A social services "gofer" reads it, then asks a child in
an assessment
interview (the following was read to me from an actual transcript):
"What's
the best thing and the worst thing about your father no longer living
[at
home]?" The best thing? Why this leading question?
Fortunately children don't read or care about feminist scripts. As
the
"worst thing", that particular pre-adolescent girl responded, "I
don't
have a father." And the "best thing"?
"Nothing."
Next week, I'll continue my series on anti-male bias with a look at
solutions: what children, fathers and 90% of Canadians want, but feminists
are determined they won't get.

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