Driving
Down Unknown Roads
The
Feminization of America
by Fred Reed
In the United States women
are, I think for the first time in history, gaining real power. Often
nations have had queens, heiresses, and female aristocrats. These do
not amount to much. Today women occupy positions of genuine authority
in fields that matter, as for example publishing, journalism, and
academia. They control education through high school. Politicians
scramble for their votes. They control the divorce courts and usually
get their way with things that matter to them.
If this is not unprecedented,
I do not know of the precedent. What will be the consequences?
Men have controlled the world
through most of history so we know what they do: build things, break
things, invent things, compete with each other fiercely and often
pointlessly, and fight endless wars that seem to them justifiable at
the time but that, seen from afar, are just what males do. The
unanswered question is what women would, or will, do. How will their
increasing influence reshape the polity?
Women and men want very
different things and therefore very different worlds. Men want sex,
freedom, and adventure; women want security, pleasantness, and someone
to care about (or for) them. Both like power. Men use it to conquer
their neighbors whether in business or war, women to impose security
and pleasantness.
I do not suggest that the
instinctive behavior of women is necessarily bad, nor that of men
necessarily good. I do suggest that the effects will be profound,
probably irreversible, and not necessarily entirely to the liking of
either sex. The question may be whether one fears most being conquered
or being nicened to death.
Consider what is called the
Nanny State by men, who feel smothered by it, but is accepted if not
supported by women, who see it as protective and caring. (Yes, I know
that there are exceptions and degrees in all of this, and no, I
don’t have polling data.) Note that women are much more concerned
than are men about health and well-being. Women worry about
second-hand smoke, outlawing guns, lowering the allowable
blood-alcohol levels for drivers, making little boys wear helmets
while riding bicycles, and outlawing such forms of violence as dodge
ball or the use of plastic ray guns. Much of this is demonstrably
irrational, but that is the nature of instincts. (Neither is the male
tendency to form armed bands and attack anyone within reach a pinnacle
of reason.)
The implications of female
influence for freedom, at least as men understand the word, are not
good. Women will accept restrictions on their behavior if in doing so
they feel more secure. They have less need of freedom, which is not
particularly important in living a secure, orderly, routine, and
comfortable life. They tend not to see political correctness as
irritating, but as keeping people from saying unpleasant things.
The growing feminization
accounts for much of the decline in the schools. The hostility to
competition of any sort is an expression of the female desire for
pleasantness; competition is a mild form of combat, by which men are
attracted and women repelled. The emphasis on how children feel about
each other instead of on what they learn is profoundly female (as for
that matter is the associated fascination with psychotherapy). The
drugging of male schoolchildren into passivity is the imposition of
pleasantness by chemical means. Little boys are not nice, but fidgety
wild men writ small who, bored out of their skulls, tend to rowdiness.
They are also hard for the average woman to control and, since male
teachers are absent, gelded, or terrified of litigious parents,
expulsion and resort to the police fill the void. The oft-repeated
suspension of boys for drawing soldiers or playing space war is,
methinks, a quietly hysterical attempt to assuage formless insecurity.
The change in marriage and the
deterioration of the family are likewise the results of the growth of
political power of women. Whether this is good or bad remains to be
seen, but it is assuredly happening. Divorce became common because
women wanted to get out of unsatisfactory marriages. In divorce women
usually want the children, and have the clout to get them. But someone
has to feed the young. Thus the vindictive pursuit of divorced fathers
who won’t or can’t pay child support. And thus the rise of the
government as de facto father to provide welfare, tax breaks, daycare,
and otherwise behave as a virtual husband.
When women entered a male
workplace, they found that they didn’t much like it. Men told
off-color jokes, looked at protuberant body parts, engaged in rough
verbal sparring as a form of social interaction, and behaved in accord
with rules that women didn’t and don’t understand. Women had the
influence to change things, and did. Laws grew like kudzu to ban
sexual harassment, whether real or imagined. Affirmative action, in
addition to being a naked power grab, avoids competition and therefore
making the losers feel bad. It degrades the performance of
organizations, sometimes seriously, but performance is a preoccupation
of males.
Men are capable of malignant
government, whether authoritarian or totalitarian, as witness North
Korea or the Russia of Stalin. I don’t know whether women would
behave as badly if they had the power. (I’d guess not.) But women
have their own totalitarian tendencies. They will if allowed impose a
seamless tyranny of suffocating safety, social control, and political
propriety. Men are happy for men to be men and women to be women;
women want us all to be women.
The United States becomes
daily more a woman’s world: comfortable, safe, with few outlets for
a man’s desire for risk. The America of wild empty country, of guns
and fishing and hunting, of physical labor and hot rods and schoolyard
fights, has turned gradually into a land of shopping malls and
sensible cars and bureaucracy. Risk is now mostly artificial and not
very risky. There is skydiving and scuba and you can still find places
to go fast on motorcycles, but it gets harder. Jobs increasingly
require the feminine virtues of patience, accommodation to routine,
and subordination of performance to civility. Just about everything
that once defined masculinity is now denounced as “macho,” a
hostile word embodying the female incomprehension of men.
A case can be made that a
feminized world would (or will) be preferable to a masculine. Perhaps.
It is males who bomb cities and shoot people in Seven-Elevens. Yet the
experiment has not been made. I suspect we will have the worst of both
worlds: a nation in which men at the top engage in the usual wars and,
a step below, women impose inutterable boredom.