Opinion
Polls: Men Need Not Apply
When responsible
polling organizations like The
New York Times supposedly poll both sexes' points of view,
they, in fact, poll women at more than a 2-to-1 ratio to men.
Why? Here’s The New York
Times’ own explanation: “So that there would be enough women
interviewed to provide statistically reliable comparisons among
various subgroups of women."[1]
What did The New York Times just do? They rationalized their discrimination
by telling us how they
discriminate. They avoided the issue of subgroups of men. As if
men, well, men need not apply.
The result? The New York Times devoted eleven
paragraphs to the views of black women. Not
one word on the views of black men.[2] Racist? Yes. Sexist? Even more
so. African-Americans were not undersampled in proportion to the
population. Men were.
When Roper conducted
a study to discover women’s and men’s perspectives on the other,
they too oversampled women – this time by a ratio of 3 to 1.[3] Yet, over 90% of these women were
in favor of marriage. Presumably to men. The headlines, though,
told a different story: “Survey Has Message for Men: Shape Up,
You Oversexed Pigs”[4] and “Women: More Men Are
Pigs.”[5]

The articles following
the headlines not only focus almost exclusively on women’s perspectives,
but on these types of women’s perspectives: “Most men are mean,
manipulative, oversexed, self-centered, and lazy” and women are
“fed up.”[6] Some men silently wonder,
“Exactly what am I being married for?”
Five
Ways of Ignoring What Men Do Say
What’s happening
here? Actually, five methods are used to ignore what men might
say if we asked, or
what they do say when we ask. First, the undersampling
of men leads to our having data on men, feelings on women. Second,
using only women’s perspectives to create the headlines. (Men’s
perspectives were not turned into headlines such as “Sex Up, You
Overweight Pigs.”) Third, funding. The poll was sponsored by Virginia
Slims. Comparable polls are not
sponsored by Marlboro. Fourth, attitude. If Marlboro had paid,
they would never encourage headlines saying “Message for Women:
Shut Up, You Gold-Digging Cows”.....
Fifth, the press
release. When men are polled, the most negative perspectives on
men are also conveyed in the press release. When Gallup did a
worldwide poll in 1996 to discover the characteristics associated
with each sex, the headline in Gallup’s own press release read “Women Seen as Affectionate; Men as
Aggressive.”[7] Gallup took the most positive findings about women and the most
negative findings about men and made those the headline of their
press release. Judge for yourself....
The actual findings
showed the women were seen as more emotional, talkative, patient
and affectionate. Isn’t “affectionate” the best? The men were
seen as more courageous, ambitious and aggressive. Isn’t “aggressive”
the worst? Gallup’s own press release read: “Women Seen as Affectionate;
Men as Aggressive.”
The result of
these five steps is that when feminist perspectives do not define
our view of relationships, women’s perspectives do. And it’s not
just women’s perspectives, but the angriest of women’s perspectives.
From these source
we receive the news....
News
The covers of
news magazines are the only news medium that puts all our focus
on one fixed visual image.
Unlike the front page of a newspaper, there aren’t thousands of
words and a dozen headlines competing for our attention.
See if you notice
a bias common to these four fixed images on the covers of Time
and Newsweek[8]:

When Time apologized for the darkened photo of OJ Simpson it acknowledged
the appearance of racism. When Newsweek
was criticized for the beautifying of the mother no one saw the
sexism. But nothing is common to all four photos other than the
sexism: that is, only a man was doctored to make him look less
appealing and therefore less sympathetic; only a woman was doctored
to make her look more appealing and therefore more sympathetic.
Neither man’s photo was doctored to make him look more appealing.
The real life
result of this blindness? Here’s a consciousness-raiser. Test
yourself. For forty years, the US Public Health Service’s Tuskegee
Syphilis Study did not tell 399 black men that they had syphilis.[9] (When syphilis is not treated in its early stages,
it eats away at bones, the liver, the heart and the brain, and
often leads to paralysis, deafness and blindness.) These 399 black
men were denied penicillin and other treatment so the government
could experiment with them. It was not until newspapers uncovered
the crime that the government stopped the experiment. Years later
President Clinton apologized for the racism.[10] What’s your take – was Clinton’s apology
miss something?
President Clinton
failed to see the sexism: disposing
of 399 black men is blatantly racist and
blatantly sexist. When
we see only the racism we are blind to the African-American man’s
double jeopardy.
Had racism been the only issue, African-American women would also
have been subjected to the Tuskegee experiment. The sexism is
apparent in the fact that not a single African American woman
was. But the deeper sexism is our blindness to it. And the deeper
issue is that we haven’t been using the lessons we learned from
racism to spot dehumanization.
Our blindness
to the way we make women look more sympathetic and men less sympathetic
allows the media to also be blind to the way it gives women special
advantages even as they highlight women’s victimhood.[11] For example, as I write this, Newsweek magazine uses the almost naked appearance of Nicole Kidman
in a Broadway play to catapult her to the front cover of Newsweek.[12] Rather than see this as an unfair advantage
of female beauty power, she is portrayed as a victim fighting
for her privacy. Excuse me. Would we portray a man who strips
on Broadway as fighting for his privacy?! Similarly, instead of saying
her career has taken off since her marriage to Tom Cruise, creating
for her an advantage not available to any man, she is portrayed
as a victim overcoming the barrier
that her Mrs. Tom Cruise status has been to her becoming a
star on her own.

When we offer
our daughters both sex and beauty power and
the compassion accorded a victim, it just encourages our daughters
to use Monica Lewinsky-type power rather than Mother Theresa or
Margaret Thatcher-type power. Why spend a lifetime earning income
when you can seduce a man at age 22 and earn a lifetime’s worth
of income from the spin-off of the seduction?
Newspapers create
these biases more with words, especially front-page, above-the-fold
headlines. In the 1994 election, when men were the disenfranchised
voters, they were condemned as “Angry White Men.” In the 1996
election, when women were the disenfranchised voters, they were
acknowledged as “Worried Women” or Concerned Women.



The impact of
labeling a woman concerned and a man angry? When a woman is worried
or concerned, it catalyzes a man’s desire to be a problem solver,
a savior, her ally. When a man is seen as angry, it stimulates
a woman’s fear, her desire to protect herself against him, to become his enemy. Men want
to listen to a worried woman; no one wants to listen to an angry
man. Notice that the men were not labeled angry before they spoke
(with their vote), but as soon as they did they were labeled so
we could ignore them, and return to our focus on worried and concerned
women.
This is what makes
men afraid of speaking up: men feel no one can hear what men do
say.
The
labeling bias also reveals itself in the double standard of our
treatment of domestic violence. When domestic violence occurs
against men, it is often as a joke. Here is a headline from the
St. Louis Post-Dispatch.[14]

When a colleague
confronted the editor, she responded, “It was supposed to be an
upbeat story.”[15]
Excuse me. Have you ever seen an “upbeat story” about domestic
violence against women? Editor, bite your lip.