National Post

THE CRISIS THAT’S RUINING OUR BOYS

AS WOMEN’S ROLES EXPAND, SOCIETY’S NEED FOR MEN IN THEIR TRADITIONA­L ROLES IS SHRINKING

- BARBARA KAY

Father’s Day approaches and with it the opportunit­y to consider the importance of fathers to their children. It is difficult to overstate both the positive effects of growing up with a father and the negative effects of father absence, especially for boys. These myriad benefits and perils are on record, undisputed and easily accessible. But in this gynocentri­c era, what is good or bad for boys does not seem to attract the interest of our cultural elites.

Boys are in crisis everywhere. They are falling behind academical­ly in 60 of the most developed nations. Boys are 50 per cent less likely than girls to meet basic proficienc­y standards in reading, math and science. Rates of ADHD among them are escalating. Since the Great Depression, the gap between male and female suicides has tripled in the U.S.

The common denominato­r behind many of these trends is fatherless­ness. When all other variants of race, socio-economic status, health and other obvious metrics are accounted for, fatherless­ness is the single biggest predictor for many negative outcomes among boys. Male prison inmates are 85 per cent fatherless. Juvenile detention centres are likewise full of dad-deprived boys. Male violence and fatherless­ness are strongly linked, even in violence promoting political movements. Fiyaz Mughal, a radicaliza­tion specialist with the Faith Matters Network, says, “All of these (young ISIL recruits), they have an absent father … the kids fought police, fought at school, rebelled against every power structure at every opportunit­y.”

These are some of the interestin­g, well-annotated facts that arise from a reading of The Boy Crisis: Why Our Boys are Struggling and What We Can Do About It, Warren Farrell’s latest book, written in collaborat­ion with John Gray, author of Men are From Mars, Women are From Venus. For 30 years, Farrell has been the North America doyen of research into the male psyche. Some of his original insights have served as “aha” moments for women who want to understand what makes men tick.

For me, that “aha” moment came while reading Farrell’s 1993 book, The Myth of Male Power, where I encountere­d his theory of “disposabil­ity” as the guiding principle behind men’s self-valuation. The basic idea is that our societies depend for their survival and comfort on male willingnes­s to take on the nastiest jobs — oil rigs, hydro lines, constructi­on, mining — that is, those with the highest risk of injury and death, and in particular to enter into combat to protect society’s vulnerable members: women and children.

Thus, men grow up learning that in order to garner society’s admiration and respect (“social bribes,” as Farrell puts it), they must strive for a heroism that can only be earned by high risk and willingnes­s for self-sacrifice. (I was surprised to learn that over 75 per cent of firefighte­rs in the U.S. are volunteers.) The result is the curious paradox that men can achieve high social valuation only by conceding the pricelessn­ess of women’s and children’s lives, while placing a low value on their own.

As Farrell and Gray explain: “The traditiona­l boy’s journey to self-sacrifice incorporat­ed service to others, and required responsibi­lity, loyalty, honour, and accountabi­lity. It created his mission. And his mission created his character.” This explains why boys tell each other to “man up” when they are in pain. Society can’t afford too much empathy for those who may have to be sacrificed. It also helps to explain why, for every soldier killed in battle, 25 veterans kill themselves.

As women’s roles expand, society’s need for men in their traditiona­l roles as protector, provider and parent is shrinking. As men absorb society’s indifferen­ce or outright hostility to them, they feel increasing loss of “mission.” The news is replete with the bad things some men do, and much of the media tolerant of collective condemnati­on. Last week The Washington Post published a vicious denunciati­on of men by a gender-studies professor, entitled, “Why Can’t We Hate Men?” The content of the piece, replete with falsehoods to boot, bore out the scabrous misandry its title implies.

Farrell and Gray posit a new mission for men: “warrior parenting” — a shift in attitude that puts equal valuation on “hanging out” with kids as previously put on money as the primary male contributi­on to family. Much of The Boy Crisis is prescripti­ve, delivering sage advice on how mothers and fathers can contribute their unique parenting instincts (father roughhousi­ng is crucial to boys’ ability to regulate aggression, for example) in creating a mutually constructi­ve “checks-and-balances” family team.

An appendix lists 55 benefits fathers bring to parenting. Many will surprise you. If the boy crisis were a girl crisis of these proportion­s, a national emergency would be declared. This book should be read without gender prejudice at the highest policy levels.

THE NEWS IS REPLETE WITH THE BAD THINGS SOME MEN DO.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? The common denominato­r among trends that indicate boys are in crisis is fatherless­ness, Barbara Kay writes.
GETTY IMAGES The common denominato­r among trends that indicate boys are in crisis is fatherless­ness, Barbara Kay writes.
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