On Father's Day, Americans
should ponder the appalling fact that an estimated 40 percent of our
nation's children are living in homes without their own
father. Most of our social problems are caused by kids who
grow up in homes without their own fathers: drug abuse, illicit
sexual activity, unwed pregnancies, youth suicide, high school
dropouts, runaways, and crime.
Where have all the fathers gone?
Some men are irresponsible slobs, but no
evidence exists that nearly half of American children were
voluntarily abandoned by their own fathers; there must be other
explanations.
For 30 years, feminist organizations and writers have propagated
the myth that women are victims of an oppressive patriarchal society
and that marriage is an inherently abusive institution that makes
wives second-class citizens. Feminists made divorce a major
component of women's liberation and their political freedom.
For three decades, feminists have toyed with the question that
Maureen Dowd chose as the title of her forthcoming book, Are Men Necessary? That's just
the latest version of Gloria Steinem's famous line, "A woman without
a man is like a fish without a
bicycle."
College textbooks portray marriage as especially bleak and
dreary for women. Assigned readings are preoccupied with
domestic violence, battering, abuse, marital rape, and
divorce.
During the Clinton Administration, the feminists parlayed their
hysteria that domestic violence is a national epidemic into the
passage of the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA). This created
a gigantic gravy train of taxpayers' money, known as feminist pork,
that empowers pro-divorce, anti-male
activism.
Not satisfied with several billions from the U.S. Treasury, 67
feminist and liberal organizations supported a lawsuit to try to get
private allegations of domestic abuse heard in federal courts so
they could collect civil damages against men and institutions with
deep pockets. Fortunately, the Supreme Court, in Brzonkala v.
Morrison (2000), declared unconstitutional VAWA's section that might
have permitted that additional
mischief.
However, VAWA's billions of dollars continue to finance the
domestic-violence lobby, and there is a deafening silence from
conservatives who pretend to be guardians against federal takeovers
of problems that are none of the federal government's
business. Local crimes and marital disputes should not be
subjects of federal law or
spending.
Billions of dollars have flowed from VAWA to the states to
finance private victim-advocacy organizations, private
domestic-violence coalitions, and the training of judges,
prosecutors and police. This tax-funded network is, of course,
staffed by radical feminists who teach the presumption of father
guilt.
Legislating a special category of domestic violence is very much
like legislating a special category of hate crimes. Both
create a new level of crimes for which punishment is based on who
you are rather than what acts you commit, and the "who" in the view
of VAWA and the domestic-violence lobby is the husband and
father.
A Justice Department-funded document published by the National
Victim Assistance Academy established a widely accepted definition
of "violence" that includes such non-criminal acts as "degradation
and humiliation" and "name-calling and constant criticizing."
The acts need not be illegal, physical, violent, or threatening;
"domestic violence" becomes whatever the woman says it
is.
The Final Report of the Child Custody and Visitation Focus Group
of the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges admitted
that "usually judges are not required to make a finding of domestic
violence in civil protection order cases." In other words,
judges saddle fathers with restraining orders on the wife's say-so
without any investigation as to whether it is true or
false.
The late Senator Paul Wellstone (D-MN), a big advocate of VAWA,
admitted that "up to 75 percent of all domestic assaults reported to
law enforcement agencies were inflicted after the separation of the
couple." Most allegations of domestic violence are made for
the purpose of taking the custody of children away from their
fathers.
The June issue of the Illinois Bar Journal
explains how women use court-issued restraining orders (which
Illinois calls Orders of Protection) as a tool for the mother to get
sole child custody and even bar the father from visitation. In
big type, the magazine proclaims: "Orders of protection are
designed to prevent domestic violence, but they can also become part
of the gamesmanship of
divorce."
The "game" is that mothers can assert falsehoods or trivial
marital complaints and thereby get sole custody orders that deprive
children of their fathers. This "game" is based on the
presumption (popularized by VAWA and the domestic-violence lobby)
that fathers are inherently guilty and
dangerous.
Congress should not be spending taxpayers' money to deal with
marital disputes, and courts should not deprive children of their
fathers on a presumption that fathers are dangerous. Congress
can help us celebrate Father's Day this year by refusing to
reauthorize the costly VAWA boondoggle.
Mrs. Schlafly is the author of the new book
The Supremacists: The Tyranny of
Judges and How to Stop It (Spence Publishing Co).