Men Are from Caves, Women Are
from Venus
When research uncovers women having
a biological superiority, The New York Times publicizes it,
praises it, and uses it as a springboard for attacking men. Many
of these pieces are written by Natalie Angier, The New York Times’
expert on female biology, male biology, female health, and male
health. One article begins “Women may not find this surprising,
but one of the most persistent and frustrating problems in evolutionary
biology is the male. Specifically, ... why doesn’t he just go away?”[1] I spotted this article reprinted, as “Report Finds Males Weak
Link in the Evolution of Species.”[2] No alternative perspective is offered
within the article. Nor are alternative perspectives – praising
research on men being biologically superior – printed elsewhere
in The Times., at any time. Wasn’t there another group that
believed this about Jews?
What happens when research discovers
unflattering tendencies about women? The New York Times shoots
it down. In an article by Angier titled “Men, Women, Sex, And Darwin”
and featured on the front cover of the The New York Times Magazine,[3] every biological observation about women that
might be construed as negative is reduced to an explanation of how
men have manipulated the society to make women turn out that way.
Example: When research finds that wealthy women worldwide
marry up or don’t marry at all, she blames men for preventing women
from making as much and claims women will never make as much
(italics hers). By missing the point that the wealthy woman has
already made more than 99% of men she is able to dismiss
wealthy women marrying for money or not marrying at all as men’s
fault.
From the perspective of The
New York Times, even watching the Super Bowl actually causes
men to return to this cave past and smash their wives. When feminists
reported that violence against women increased after the Super Bowl,
reporters like The New York Times’ Robert Lipsyte branded
the Super Bowl the “Abuse Bowl.”[4]
More precisely, he states that “If Super Bowl tradition holds, more
women than usual will be battered today in their homes by the men
in their lives. It seems an inevitable part of the post-game
show. A big football game on television invariably becomes
the Abuse Bowl for men conditioned by the sports culture to act
out their rage on someone smaller.” (emphases mine)
“Facts” stated as “inevitable”
and “invariable” call for statistical evidence. While Lipsyte claimed
to have statistical evidence, he didn’t present a shred of it, but
stopped instead at anecdotes. He even ignores the admonition of
a shelter worker who tells him, “the Super Bowl doesn’t cause abuse.”
As it turns out, the shelter worker
was right. When Christina Hoff Sommers checked it out, she discovered
the feminist circulated “research” was false.[5] I explain why in the endnote, but the point
here is that no editor of The New York Times would have published
as fact that man-bashing “invariably” and “inevitably” cause violence
against men without the support of statistical evidence.
The contempt for men is palpable
in The New York Times. The New York Times does not
hesitate to translate that contempt into the disposal of dads....
Motherhood,
Victimhood, Childhood?
Look at the small print.
It tells us this special Sunday The New York Times Magazine
issue is supposed to be on the joy and guilt of modern motherhood,
but every large print word on the cover is about motherhood
as victimhood – about “Mothers Can’t Win.”[6]....

Note that there is no father in
the picture. Yet this is not a special issue on single mothers.
Why no dad? Is it that a picture of dad would diminish the impact
of mother-as-victim? Think about it. A picture of dad would
create the possibility of a mom and dad as victims...two
victims would cancel out “Mother Can’t Win.”
In contrast, there is no comparable
The New York Times Magazine section called “Fathers Can’t
Win.” With a headline reading, “The Catch 22’s of Fatherhood: How
the Obligation to Work Full-time Leads Dads to Loving Their Family
by Being Away from the Family They Love.” Read that hypothetical
dad “headline” again. It’s a whole article in one sentence. (It
also tells you why I don’t write headlines!)
There’s another story missing from
The New York Times Magazine. It’s a story not about deadbeat
dads, but the 15% of single parents who are dads. About how these
dads “do it all,” loving their children in their own style. No victims
here. No story either.
And yet another missing story...
about how every fathers’ rights group wants the right for fathers
to be more involved with their children, not less involved.
Or a story about these fathers’ struggle to take the burden off
mothers. Or about their struggle to love. And be loved.
In a world in which love is needed
even more than money, why don’ t we read about these dads? Because
these dads are encountering fierce resistance from feminists. Why?
Weren’t feminists the pioneers of asking men to share women’s traditional
role? Yes. They were. But when that meant mothers not receiving
money from dads for child support, the politics shifted quickly.
It was exactly this issue – the greater concern of my feminist friends
that dads give money to mom than love to children – that led to
my deviance from what feminism was becoming.
The New York Times, in what
it neglects, is neglecting children. The Times has a choice.
Motherhood as victimhood. Or parenthood and childhood.
The
Man Behind The Times
What’s going on at The New York
Times ? The man behind The Times, if you will, is Arthur
Sulzberger, Jr., the publisher. (The reader will smile at the irony
of my representing the Board of NOW in New York City to “educate”
his dad on biases against women in The New York Times in
the early seventies!)
We gain some insight into Sulzberger,
Jr., and therefore the Times’ inner workings from Nan Robertson,
the feminist author of The Girls in the Balcony: Women, Men and
The New York Times.[7]
She explains that Sulzberger, Jr. “considers himself a feminist...is
an ardent fan of the writer Marilyn French” and keeps in his desk
a typed page of excerpts by French.[8] Marilyn French is the author of
The War Against Women in which she concurs with women who
believe “men are well on their way to exterminating women from the
world,”[9]and also
the author of The Women’s Room, in which French states that
“All men are rapists and that’s all they are.”[10]
When a paper is run by someone
who is a fan of people who believe men are just rapists who are
conducting a War Against Women, people will be hired who
believe the enemy must be defeated, the means justifies the end.
Thus Marilyn French’s books are given multiple reviews and special
interviews and The New York Times Censorship List becomes
almost as clearly defined as The New York Times Best Seller
List.
The
New York Times Censorship List
The New York Times Book
Review, a section that depends on objectivity, has instead an “attitude”
toward men that is perhaps best reflected in this Book Review headline:[11]

This “attitude” is reflected in
man-haters like Marilyn French and Andrea Dworkin having every
book they write reviewed while books written by men
who articulate the issues of adult men with compassion and criticize
the feminist perspective have none of those books reviewed.
I’ll document this in a second,
but first the significance of this breach of the core journalistic
ethic of fairness and balance. When The New York Times
Book Review ignores a book it sends a message: “You are not
one of the players.” Other media take the cue. When it systematically
ignores books on a topic with one point of view and gives double
reviews to books with the opposite perspective, the violation is
not just one of journalistic ethics, but of the responsibility of
power.
Now to the documentation. A review
of The New York Times Index from 1971 through 1998 reveals
that Marilyn French, the woman loved by publisher Sulzberger, and
her book, The Women’s Room – the one that states that “All
men are rapists and that’s all they are” – was misandrist enough
to be given not one, but two reviews by The New York Times.
The first review was by another feminist who is a The New York
Times favorite, Ann Tyler.[12]
To make sure no opinion leader missed the book, it was given a second
review within two weeks, and this time by one of The New York
Times’ most respected reviewers, Christopher Lehmann-Haupt.[13]
The corollary of The New York
Times’ message “you are not one of the players” when it ignores
a book is that when The New York Times does review you, especially
positively, and especially twice, and particularly by its favorite
and most respected reviewers, it makes you one of the players.
Soon other things start a-happening. In Marilyn French’s case, The
Women’s Room was made into a motion picture.
To this day The New York Times
has not dropped its promotion of French, giving multiple reviews
to each of three more of her books, including The War Against
Women. When The War Against Women is given to feminist
reviewer Isabelle de Courtivron, French is made to sound like a
major thinker rather than a sexist man-hater.[14]
In a similar manner, Andrea Dworkin,
whose hatred toward men is expressed in her novels via certain characters
who, as she openly explains, represent her personal perspectives,[15]
also has each of her five books between 1981 and 1991 reviewed.
I will look a bit more closely at her later, but the relevant issue
here is that her career was also jump-started by The New York
Times assigning her book, Pornography, to a feminist
(Ellen Willis) to review.[16]
In both cases, when a feminist
can virtually lock-in a book review by The New York Times,
she or he can guarantee a publisher no matter how man-hating the
book. When in addition the Times sets the author up with
an ideological ally as a reviewer the book is virtually guaranteed
mainstream credibility. Then The New York Times is no longer
reviewing a book, it is making an author. It is not covering news,
it is creating news.
In contrast is books written by
men who articulate the issues of adult men with compassion and criticize
the feminist perspective. I promised documentation for The New
York Times reviewing none of those books. Specifically,
books fitting that category have been written by Asa Baber, Sanford
Braver, Phil Cook, Richard Driscoll, Herb Goldberg, Jack Kammer,
Andrew Kimbrell, Aaron Kipnis, Jeffrey Leving, Neil Lyndon, David
Thomas, and myself. None has been reviewed.
It is also rare for authors
of books on gender from any of the two traditional gender
perspectives to be reviewed as well, but exceptional circumstances
do allow an occasional review of those books.
Perhaps, though, there are legitimate
reasons for this? Let’s check it out...
First possibility: these are authors
who are not worth reviewing. That can’t be said: Andrew Kimbrell
writes The Human Body Shop[17] in 1993. Nothing to do with feminism. The
New York Times gives it a rave review. Two years later he writes
the Masculine Mystique,[18]
critical of the distortions of academic feminism. The New York
Times ignores it. Herb Goldberg wrote the first book critical
of feminism by a man who questions traditional roles, The Hazards
of Being Male. The New York Times ignored it. He later
wrote The New Male, which was not critical of feminism.
The New York Times reviewed it.
When I wrote The Liberated Man,[19] I had never published a book.
But it was written from a feminist perspective. The New
York Times reviewed it twice. Both times in the best
place in the world: the Sunday Book Review. My next two books were
more male positive and questioned feminism. The New York Times
ignored them both.
Is it possible The New York
Times just ignores books on gender issues? No. They reviewed,
I would estimate, between nine hundred and a thousand pro-feminist
books between the mid-seventies and 1999.
Is it possible they just ignore
books on men’s issues? Not quite. When Michael Kimmel, an ardent
pro-feminist, wrote his pro-feminist attack on men’s issues,
The New York Times reviewed it. That is, they reviewed a
book attacking what they had themselves refused to cover: books
positive about adult men’s issues that were critical of any portion
of feminism. And of course they reviewed those particular books
by Herb Goldberg and me on men’s issues when we were not critical
of feminism.
The New York Times does
do an occasional review of two other types of books on males: books
on boys, and books on male spirituality. Why? Boys’ vulnerabilities
trigger women’s protective instinct. Boys have not rejected women,
men have. Boys do not threaten the feminist political or legal agenda.
Similarly, male spiritual issues
also do not threaten core feminist doctrine on political issues,
so if one becomes a best seller, like Robert Bly’s Iron John,
The New York Times can review it. And as for authors like
Rush Limbaugh, from the political right, they are far enough away
from The New York Times Book Review readers’ thinking
they can occasionally be reviewed (usually panned) without feminists
being threatened. Second, they deal only tangentially with gender
issues.
And finally, The New York Times
does review books critical of feminism if they are written
by women. But...they then assign feminists to tear them apart.
When Christina Hoff Sommers wrote Who Stole Feminism, The
New York Times assigned the review to Nina Auerbach (a feminist).
A bit like asking Phyllis Schlaffly to review Gloria Steinem’s next
book. The exception here is Katie Roiphe’s book critical of feminism.
But then again, her mother wrote for The New York Times!
What the The New York Times
Book Review censors, then, is books written by men who criticize
the feminist perspective and articulate adult men’s issues with
compassion.
In the sense that books critical
of feminism go through a markedly different screening process prior
to being reviewed, The New York Times can be said to censor
all feminist-critical books.
We have also begun to see that
the editors at The New York Times employ their feminism to
violate the second biggest ethic (after censorship) in book review
journalism – neutrality: to select book reviewers knowledgeable
enough to understand a book’s goal and the importance of that goal,
and neutral enough to impart to the reader how well the goal is
achieved. Instead, books on gender are most frequently given “Sisterhood
Reviews”....
For example, a Gloria Steinem book
is reviewed by Deidre English, a socialist feminist and former editor
of the socialist feminist Mother Jones magazine.[20] When Mary Daly, the radical feminist religious studies professor
I discuss above[21] wrote a more recent book, Outercourse,
it was reviewed by another radical feminist religious studies professor.
Similarly, Carol Gilligan is reviewed by feminist colleague Carolyn
Heilbrun; Carolyn Heilbrun is reviewed by UCLA feminist Barbara
Packer. So Packer is able to agree with Heilbrun that no sane person
could want the female role. When a book has a feminist orientation,
The New York Times quickly drops the journalistic standard
of a neutral reviewer and often searches out a compatible colleague.
In many cases of feminist authors,
it finds more than a compatible colleague. It finds a good friend.
And this is a practice that has been going on since the early 70’s.
I can remember dining with an early feminist who was telling me
about both her new book and her best friend. I was a bit surprised
to see in the following Sunday’s The New York Times Book
Review her best friend’s review of her book.
The
New York Times: Man-Haters Made Here
“Some of my best friends
are men. It is simply that I think women are superior to men.”
—Anna Quindlen,
Columnist, The New York Times, 1977-1994, in the column titled,
“Why Can’t A Man be More Like a Woman?”[22]
Theoretically, any columnist for
The New York Times that wrote, “Some of my best friends are
blacks. It is simply that I think whites are superior to blacks”
would be fired. I say theoretically, because, practically speaking,
the column would never clear the supervising editor’s desk; it would
never be printed. If it were, the editor would also be fired.
The New York Times does
not exactly make man-haters. It just makes them famous. And credible.
It is the single most responsible source for integrating man-haters
like Marilyn French, Catharine MacKinnon, Andrea Dworkin, and Barbara
Ehrenreich into the mainstream of feminist respectability.
The New York Times Magazine
introduced Catharine MacKinnon on their front cover, with her head
photographed in such a way as to be surrounded by light, creating
a subtle appearance of a halo.[23] The article portrayed her thinking as being pioneering, at the
cutting edge of the feminist legal community. What is her thinking?
MacKinnon claims that women are
forced to say “yes” to sex in order to survive[24] and, therefore, sex – even after a “yes” –
is often rape. I had heard MacKinnon quoted as taking this a step
further, saying all sexual intercourse is rape: the man penetrates
the woman, and therefore invades her. But since I’m more often misquoted
than not, I just assumed it was a misquote. I had an opportunity
to check out my assumption when I did a special with MacKinnon and
Peter Jennings on rape on ABC’s Evening News. During the panel she
did not say that. So, off the air, I asked her if her perspective
was correctly represented by the belief that “all sexual intercourse
is rape.” She not only confirmed, but reiterated it voluntarily
and emphatically.
Back to The New York Times.
Right after MacKinnon appeared on The New York Times Magazine’s
cover, NBC selected her as the only consistent outside co-moderator
(with Tom Brokaw ) of the Clarence Thomas-Anita Hill hearings. The
way much of the press interpreted the hearings was colored at least
in part by MacKinnon’s perspectives on male-female sexuality.
We met Andrea Dworkin in the chapter
on man-bashing – the woman who admits to purposely using certain
fictional characters to represent her perspective. Although a woman,
she claims to understand the male consciousness enough to tell her
readers that “...sex and murder are fused in the male consciousness,
so that one without the imminent possibility of the other is unthinkable
and impossible.”[25]
Dworkin’s comments, if made about
any other group in a business, the government, or an academic setting,
would be a career-ender. For The New York Times, they are
career-makers. Needless to say, The New York Times reviews
Dworkin and helps make her famous.[26]
Fortunately, one reviewer at least made Dworkin’s perspectives clear:
“Ms. Dworkin advocates nothing short of killing men.”[27]
For The New York Times’
staff, with its sensitivity to anti-Semitism, to make credible a
woman equating heterosexual sex with murder; to sponsor for more
than one-and-a-half decades a weekly columnist writing, “I think
women are superior to men” (Quindlen); to celebrate as cutting-edge
legal opinions of all heterosexual sex as rape (MacKinnon); to applaud
and review a woman who says all men are rapists (French) suggests
an inability to extrapolate from anti-Semitism’s deeper lessons.
Men’s
vs. Women’s Internal Stories: The Anatomy of the Front Page
When I took a break from writing
this morning, I sneaked out to my driveway in my bathrobe and mussed
up hair and ran back in with The New York Times (which I
still love!). I woke up my womanfriend, gave it to her, and, while
I was making breakfast, she pointed to this page one headline with
the comment, “Remember last night...”
“Yes....”
“No, I mean when you mentioned
how the newspapers tell the internal stories of unknown women more
than unknown men’s? Look at The New York Times front page[28]….

The lace curtain’s impact on The
New York Times is so pervasive, it is apparent almost daily.
A story of women-as-victim, usually accompanied by a poignant picture
of a woman victim, is almost de rigeur for Sunday’s front
page, perhaps the most influential single page of newsprint published
weekly anywhere in the world. But whether during the week or on
Sunday, there are patterns to the biases. Compare the above front
page with this one, also January of 1999[29]....

Both front pages headline women’s
tragedies. In both, women’s tragedies are personalized (so much
so, that in the top story, about Kendra, I felt considerable sadness
and anger at the tragedy of a lovely woman’s life being randomly
robbed in her twenties). In both, men are highlighted as the cause
of the female victimization.
In both, the type of tragedies
experienced by the women are, in fact, much more common to men (men
are murdered three times more frequently than women; men now commit
suicide in the US four and a half times more frequently than women).
China is the only country in the world that has more females committing
suicide than males.[30]
Why aren’t we seeing front page The New York Times headlines
about each of the countries in which men commit suicide more – and
why the men are doing it – men’s internal stories? Why are we not
seeing stories about why men over 85 commit suicide 1350% more frequently
than women over 85[31]?
But let’s go beyond the surface
– to why the China story does not justify the woman-as-victim headline.
In China suicide is a two-sex problem. For every quarter million
Chinese, only five fewer men commit suicide than women.[32] Nothing in the article helps
us understand men’s reasons for suicide. Yet female suicide is blamed
on male patriarchy and female isolation. But when one sex is isolated,
isn’t the other? When a spouse dies, men – the widowers – are ten
times more likely than widows to commit suicide.[33]
Perhaps that has something to do with isolation?
All this is part of a principal
central to the lace curtain: when the problem is worse for American
men, find a country in which it is as bad for women and headline
it as worse for women. Then portray this woman’s problem as caused
by men or patriarchy. The result? The American reader now knows
how to detect suicide’s warnings for a woman living in rural China,
but not for our teenage son or aging dad.
Do men who commit suicide make
the front page of The New York Times? If they are
famous, yes. If they are “just a man,” no. Women make it for being
women.
And unknown women make it for being
victims in almost every conceivable manner. Here are three examples
on just one front page of the Sunday The New York Times,
March 7, 1999. (There is not a single story focused on a man as
a victim of any type.) Top of the page is a picture of a woman near
Algiers mourning.[34]
Her grandchildren were killed in the war. We don’t see stories of
the personal misery her grandchildren are enduring in war – that
might have included the misery of men.
Directly underneath is the story
of a female health worker allergic to latex gloves. Turns out that
ten percent of health workers have such allergies,[35] but the only story personalized
on the front page is that of a female health worker.
Still on the same front page is
the story of a woman who sued her coach for sexual harassment.

When women are benefiting from
women’s sports going from 300,000 student-athletes in 1972 with
the passage of Title IX, to 3 million student-athletes currently,[36]
what makes the front page is the picture and personal story of a
female victim.