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Lament of the Single
Woman
(Also translated into Dutch: click here)
by Carey
Roberts
Eligible
women are finding it harder these days to find a man who is willing to
commit for the long haul.
And it isn't for lack of social commentary. I was walking out of my local
Borders bookstore the other day, and there were two books by the check-out
stand promising to help desperate women find that someone special.
Women's magazines are replete with advice columns to help readers find
their Prince Charming. But alas, these columns are generally clueless when
it comes to getting the male perspective on the issue, as if the woman's
point of view is all that matters.
Case in point is Susan Reimer's recent diatribe, Young Men are Running
from Marriage.
Her column, like most in the genre, offers little in the way of
compassion, wit, or wisdom.
This is how she describes young men: "Other than a 29-inch waist and
a full head of hair, there isn't much to recommend the twentysomething
male... He is living an extended adolescence - an adult-olescence - and
every immature, irresponsible, self-absorbed thing he does is reinforced
by the latest issue of his favorite men's magazine.
If Ms. Reimer's commentary reflects the attitudes most single women, it's
no wonder that men aren't lining up to buy their marriage licenses.
So let's shift our focus back a couple frames to gain a broader
perspective. What would we see?
First, men are well-aware that half of all marriages end in divorce. And
men have heard too many horror stories about spiteful women who have
cleaned out their bank accounts and demanded lifelong alimony. And as far
as the kids, they fear ending up as a parental outcast, permitted by the
divorce decree to "visit" their own children every other
weekend.
Then, there's the feminist-driven Violence Against Women Act. That's the
federal boondoggle which has spawned domestic violence laws around the
country that make a mockery of "innocent until proven guilty."
Research shows that domestic violence is a 50-50 proposition. The wife wallops hubby with a frying
pan, so he retaliates with a jab. The police show up, and the man spends
the night in the slammer.
Or the wife can obtain a restraining order simply on the basis of her
claim that she is "fearful" of harm. She does not have to
provide any proof that danger is imminent - just her word that she is
afraid will generally suffice.
And then, to put it bluntly, too many women have accepted the Great Lie
that women have been eternally oppressed. As columnist Wendy McElroy put
it, the "most damaging effect of the Great Lie is that many women
invest their emotions and energy in rage rather than remedy... Instead of
attacking their problems, they attack people who have caused them no harm
— men as a class, men they've never met." (click here).
As a result, these women approach relationships trying to prove they are
as good as, or better than, their male partner. How many men in their
right mind are interested in that kind of adversarial relationship?
Radical feminists have succeeded in tilting the balance of marital power
strongly in favor of women. And men, fearing that marriage may turn out to
be a raw deal, have simply made other plans.
So by weakening the marriage prospects of millions of women, feminism has
ironically ended up hurting and victimizing the very persons whose
interests it claims to speak for.
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