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Men--It's in Their Nature
The American Enterprise ^ | Sept 2003 | Christina Hoff Sommers

Posted on 07/31/2003 6:16:54 AM PDT by Valin

This past spring, my son spent a month in Israel with his senior class. Only one activity disappointed him. While camping in the Negev Desert, special counselors from a progressive-socialist kibbutz paid a visit and led the students through a sensitivity exercise. The students were told to walk out into the desert until they were completely alone. The counselors (mostly American-born) supplied them with a pencil, paper, matches, and a candle and instructed them to absorb the quiet calm of the desert, to record their feelings, and to “find themselves.”

The girls happily complied. Most of the boys did not. They scattered into the desert, quickly became bored, and sought out each other’s company. Then they threw the pencils and paper into a pile, and used the candles and matches to start a little bonfire. The boys loved it; the sensitivity trainers were horrified. They viewed the boys’ behavior as an expression of primitive violence—a lethal masculinity straight from The Lord of the Flies. Later in the evening, the students sat in a circle while the girls read their impassioned reactions to the “haunting loneliness” of the desert; the boys could barely suppress laughter—confirming once again the worst fears of the sensitivity trainers.

Gender equity experts in America’s schools, universities, government agencies, and major women’s groups would share the distress of the kibbutz counselors, having spent more than a decade trying to resocialize boys away from “toxic masculinity.” In a great number of American schools, gender reformers have succeeded in expunging many activities that young boys enjoy: dodge ball, cops and robbers, reading or listening to stories about battles and war heroes. A daycare center in North Carolina was censured by the State Division of Child Development for letting boys play with two-inch green Army men. The division director described the toys as “potentially dangerous if children use them to act out violent themes.”

Activities deemed “safe” by the gender equity experts and the teachers they inspire include quilting, games without scores, and stories about brave girls and boys who learn to cry. The goal is to resocialize boys, freeing them from male stereotypes, and, ultimately, to promote genuine equality between the sexes—which for the reformers means sameness. But decades of research in neuroscience, endocrinology, genetics, and developmental psychology, strongly suggest that masculine traits are hard-wired. There are exceptions, but here are the rules:Males have better spatial reasoning skills, females better verbal skills. Males are greater risk-takers, females are more nurturing. Boys like action, competitive rough-housing, and inanimate objects, and they are the one group of Americans who do not spend a lot of time talking about their feelings.

Try as they may, parents, teachers, and gender facilitators have not been successful in rooting out male behavior they regard as harmful.An “equity facilitator” tried to persuade a group of nine-year-old boys in a Baltimore public school to accept the idea of playing with baby dolls. According to one observer, “Their reaction was so hostile, the teacher had trouble keeping order.” And then there was Jimmy. At age 11, this San Francisco sixth grader was made to contribute a square to a class quilt “celebrating women we admire.” He chose to honor tennis player Monica Seles who, in 1993, was stabbed on the court by a deranged fan of Steffi Graf. Jimmy handed in a muslin square festooned with a tennis racket and a bloody dagger. His square may be unique in the history of quilting, but his teacher did not appreciate its originality and rejected it.

American classrooms are full of Jimmys. Efforts to change boys like Jimmy or my son and his bonfire companions will be difficult if not impossible. Nature is obdurate on some matters.While environment and socialization do play a significant role, scientists are beginning to pinpoint the precise biological correlates to many typical gender differences. A 2001 special issue of Scientific American reviewed the growing

evidence that children’s play preferences are, in large part, hormonally determined. Researchers confirmed what parents experience all the time: Even with counter-conditioning, boys and girls gravitate toward very different toys. (See the article by Iain Murray on pages 34 and 35, which lays out some of the new scientific findings on sex differences.) The entire anthropological record offers not a single example of a society where females have better spatial reasoning skills and males better verbal skills, where females are fixated on objects and men on feelings, or where males are physically docile and females aggressive.

In the face of what we know, it is altogether unreasonable to deny the biological basis for distinctive male and female preferences and abilities. Does this mean biology is destiny? As anthropologist Lionel Tiger (who is part of the male symposium beginning on page 24) says, “biology is not destiny, but it is good statistical probability.” There is still room for equity. A fair and just society offers equality of opportunity to all. But it cannot promise, and should not try to enforce, sameness. The natural differences between men and women suggest there will never be mathematical parity in all fields; far more men than women will choose to be mechanics, engineers, or soldiers. Early childhood education, family medicine, and social work will continue to be dominated by women. Boys will prefer bonfires to diaries and any teacher who requires them to contribute squares to a quilt should brace herself for insensitive images of monsters, dangerous animals, and weaponry. The male tendency to be competitive, risk-loving, more narrowly focused, and less concerned with feelings has consequences in the real world. It could explain why there are more males at the extremes of success and failure: more male CEOs, more males in maximum security prisons.

Of course, boys’ natural masculinity must be tempered. Social theorist Hannah Arendt is believed to have said that every year civilization is invaded by millions of tiny barbarians—they are called children. All societies confront the problem of civilizing their children, particularly the male ones. History teaches that masculinity constrained by morality is powerful and constructive; it also teaches that masculinity without ethics is dangerous and destructive.

We have a set of proven social practices for raising young men. The traditional approach is through character education to develop a young man’s sense of honor and help him become a considerate, conscientious human being. Sociologists make an important distinction between pathological and healthy masculinity. Boys who exhibit aberrational masculinity define their manhood through anti-social and destructive acts; instead of protecting the vulnerable, they exploit them. Healthy masculinity is the opposite. Males who possess it—the vast majority of American boys and men—strive to be helpful and to achieve. They sublimate their natural aggression into sports, hobbies, and work. They build rather than destroy. And they do not exploit women and children, they protect them.

Efforts to civilize boys with honor codes, character education, manners, and rules of good sportsmanship are necessary and effective, and fully consistent with their masculine natures. Efforts to feminize them with dolls, quilts, non-competitive games, girl-centered books, and feelings exercises will fail; though they will succeed in making millions of boys quite unhappy. Dissident feminist Camille Paglia is one of the few scholars who values maleness: “Masculinity is aggressive, unstable, combustible. It is also the most creative cultural force in history. When I cross…any of America’s great bridges, I think—men have done this. Construction is a sublime male poetry.”

This sublime poetry has been unappreciated in American society for more than a quarter of a century. But that appears to be changing. The awesome display of masculine courage shown by the firefighters and policemen at Ground Zero, the heroic soldiers fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq, the focused determination and exemplary leadership of President Bush,Vice President Cheney, Defense Secretary Rumsfeld, and General Tommy Franks, have rekindled in Americans an appreciation for masculine virtues. Many courageous and even heroic women took part in all these endeavors. But fighting enemies and protecting the nation are overwhelmingly male projects.

The gender activists who fill our schools and government agencies will continue with their efforts to make boys more docile and emotional. But fewer and fewer Americans will support them. Maleness is back in fashion. And one reason is that Americans are increasingly aware that traditional male traits such as aggression, competitiveness, risk-taking and stoicism—constrained by virtues of valor, honor and self-sacrifice—are essential to the well-being and safety of our society.

Christina Hoff Sommers is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute and the author of Who Stole Feminism? and The War Against Boys.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News
KEYWORDS: christinahoffsommers; genderequity; waragainstboys
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To: mtbopfuyn
Y'all obviously haven't hung around a juvenile detention center much. Give me the boys any day. The girls are horrible little monsters who'd just as soon viciously attack anyone as to look at them.

It's our maternal instinct...

101 posted on 07/31/2003 9:11:26 AM PDT by TheSpottedOwl (You bring tar, I'll bring feathers....recall Davis in 03!!!)
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To: Valin
Dissident feminist Camille Paglia is one of the few scholars who values maleness: “Masculinity is aggressive, unstable, combustible. It is also the most creative cultural force in history. When I cross…any of America’s great bridges, I think—men have done this. Construction is a sublime male poetry.”

We the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.

Yup; Created by Men!

102 posted on 07/31/2003 9:16:09 AM PDT by AFreeBird
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To: Life of Brian
Mm, cool of desert night. (sniff sniff). Mm smell fragrant desert rose somewhere. Me look. Ahhh find desert rose lonely and haunted. Have candle. Light candle. Have paper and pencil...write "I want you". She read. She like. What next? What we tell sensitivity trainer now? :o)

What next? Blow out the candle so the sensitivity trainer can't see ya!!

103 posted on 07/31/2003 9:17:57 AM PDT by TheSpottedOwl (You bring tar, I'll bring feathers....recall Davis in 03!!!)
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To: Valin
Then they threw the pencils and paper into a pile, and used the candles and matches to start a little bonfire. The boys loved it; the sensitivity trainers were horrified as the boys selected and roasted the smallest of the sensitivity trainers on a spit...Later in the evening, the students sat in a circle while the girls read their impassioned reactions to the “haunting loneliness” of the desert; the boys could barely suppress laughter—confirming once again the worst fears of the sensitivity trainers. Roasted sensitivty trainers go great with chianti and fava beans..
104 posted on 07/31/2003 9:20:17 AM PDT by MD_Willington_1976
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To: ctlpdad
"Shopping...at the Caterpillar dealer."

LOL! In the early '70s, some hippy-dippy song called 'Our House' or something like that was getting airplay.

I was living in a northern B.C. bush town then, and when I heard the lyric 'with two Cats in the yard, life used to be so hard', I thought it was about some broke down gyppo logger with a D6 and D8, and maybe a Clark skidder.

Sounded like home to me! ;^)
105 posted on 07/31/2003 9:21:33 AM PDT by headsonpikes
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To: Arkie2
(Teacher) A+ -- I really liked this one.

LOL. Me too. I love a story with a happy ending.

106 posted on 07/31/2003 9:24:37 AM PDT by Ranxerox
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To: Valin
Bump
107 posted on 07/31/2003 9:24:49 AM PDT by Blessed
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To: Lancey Howard
I thought that the "evil" kid next door in 'Toy Story' was the hero of the movie. I can't tell you how many toys I tried to blow up with firecrackers.

My friend's dad showed me how to make delayed fuses out of cigarettes. I then attempted to blow up the bathrooms at school with M-80's :) Btw, I'm a girl....

108 posted on 07/31/2003 9:25:09 AM PDT by TheSpottedOwl (You bring tar, I'll bring feathers....recall Davis in 03!!!)
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To: Valin
Once clinicians determine the physiology of the male brain be prepared for research on how to fix it. There is already a well received study on the pathology of conservative thinking, produced by two Berkeley psychologist and presented to the APA recently.
109 posted on 07/31/2003 9:29:21 AM PDT by redangus
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To: RipSawyer
Rock fights are cooler - you get a metal trash can lid for a shield, and a tennis racket for a launcher. You have to be at least 100 feet apart. Nothing over two inches across! (The long way). The sound effects are hilarious. Clang! Clang! Thwop OWW $$@#$!!
110 posted on 07/31/2003 9:29:46 AM PDT by Technocrat
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To: Between the Lines
?Have you ever wondered why they are trying to resocialize the boys instead of the girls. It would seem to me that if you wanted ?sameness? you would start at both ends and get rid of the extremes.?

That?s already being done. Girls and boys wear alot of the same clothes nowadays.
111 posted on 07/31/2003 9:29:54 AM PDT by webstersII
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To: TheSpottedOwl
I still have my childhood steel Tonka dump truck. I used to skateboard on it by kneeling in ther bucket- I was 4!
112 posted on 07/31/2003 9:40:52 AM PDT by ffusco (Maecilius Fuscus,Governor of Longovicium , Manchester, England. 238-244 AD)
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To: TheSpottedOwl
I used to love building palstic model ships and planes and blowing them up!
113 posted on 07/31/2003 9:43:07 AM PDT by ffusco (Maecilius Fuscus,Governor of Longovicium , Manchester, England. 238-244 AD)
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To: Valin
Thank God I am raising real boys. They hunt, fish, play ball, are competitve and aggressive as all get out. But they get straight A's in their Private Christian School, have good (not perfect, esp at the dinner table) manners, are respectful to coaches & teaches, have a profound love of the outdoors, and are nice to little girls.

Real Men in the making. Ahem....
The Capt.
114 posted on 07/31/2003 9:48:46 AM PDT by Capt.YankeeMike (get outta my pocket, outta my car, and outta the schools)
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To: Valin
The absolutely stupidest, most clearly #$%!ed-up statement I ever heard in my life (outside of the political area) was on one of those "differences between men and women" shows that periodically infests TLC and the Discovery Channel.

The show high-lighted some differences between male and female behavior and then the host, reading from the script, said:

"These differences, which have served men and women well in the past are, today, a hindrance."

By and large, I've come to believe that people who enter the profession of studying the differences between male and female behavior are uncomfortable with, hostile towards, or incapable of understanding, their own gender.

Like the old saying "Parents are the last people who ought to be allowed to have children", gender scientists are the last people we should be listening to about male and female psychology.  They are maladjusted, spiteful and stupid people.  

They are very clubbable people who should be ignored.

115 posted on 07/31/2003 9:49:41 AM PDT by Psycho_Bunny
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To: Modernman
Or the guys with 2 boats, the SUV and the two cabins in the woods....LOL

The Wily ol Captain. Women SAY they want one thing, but really NEED something else.
116 posted on 07/31/2003 9:50:38 AM PDT by Capt.YankeeMike (get outta my pocket, outta my car, and outta the schools)
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To: Arkie2; .30Carbine
ROTFLMAOPIMP

NUKE THE BLUE ZONES!!!

117 posted on 07/31/2003 9:53:32 AM PDT by TigersEye (Joe McCarthy was right ... so was PT Barnum!)
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To: RonF
"I've had to step in and stop things and get adults involved where in my day we'd have just let the kids duke it out."

Just yesterday I mentioned to a couple of thirty year olds at work that I used to carry a pocket knife in grammar school and when the teacher needed to open a box she would ask one of us boys to loan her a pocket knife. They both looked suspicious and one commented that we must not have used them for what people use them for now. I replied that they were a tool and in those days two guys would get in a fist fight and not pull their knives. One of the young guys accused me of telling fairy stories at that point. I turned to another man who is my age for backup and he looked at them and said slowly and quietly, "yeah, that is how it was".
In those days it was far more of a disgrace to pull a weapon than to lose the fight.
118 posted on 07/31/2003 9:57:05 AM PDT by RipSawyer (Mercy on a pore boy lemme have a dollar bill!)
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To: Valin
A daycare center in North Carolina was censured by the State Division of Child Development for letting boys play with two-inch green Army men.

You know what's really cool? If your mom will let you have matches and lighter fluid you can partially melt some of these guys for more realistic play. It's always best the first time when you have all your tanks and armymen set up and you set parts of the battlefield ablaze. But don't let them totally melt and they will add realism for years to come. It goes without saying that firecrackers add a great effect too.

119 posted on 07/31/2003 10:00:52 AM PDT by TigersEye (Joe McCarthy was right ... so was PT Barnum!)
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To: ffusco
I still have my childhood steel Tonka dump truck. I used to skateboard on it by kneeling in ther bucket- I was 4!

Took my kid 3 years to break his dump truck. With normal kids, Tonka trucks are supposed to be indestructable ;-D

120 posted on 07/31/2003 10:02:11 AM PDT by TheSpottedOwl (You bring tar, I'll bring feathers....recall Davis in 03!!!)
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