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Fathers'
Rights Activists Plan Rally
June 4, 2002
by Wendy McElroy
When the National Organization
for Women holds its annual conference in
St. Paul, Minn., on June 21, the voices silenced by NOW will be across
the street, calling for gender justice.
The rally will include
fathers whose rights have been ignored or maligned by NOW. It will include
women who refuse to tolerate anti-male bias in the family court system.
My sign will read, "Justice
for Fathers." It will be a late Father's Day gift to my dad's memory.
For
years, NOW has courted confrontation with advocates of father's rights.
At NOW's 1996 national conference, it resolved to "challenge such groups."
The '96 resolutions included an "Action
Alert on 'Father's Rights'."
The resolution caricatured
such fathers as men attempting to escape support payments through abusing
the courts "in order to control in the same fashion as do batterers."
The reality is quite different.
At the core of the movement for father's rights are men who deeply love
their children and want to share their lives. Men so victimized by biased
family courts that the Superior Court in Georgia recently found its own
child support guidelines to be unconstitutional.
Estranged fathers are
becoming desperate. According to a 1999 Surgeon General's report, suicide
is the eighth leading cause of death in America, with men four times more
likely to kill themselves than women.
Studies conducted in North
America, Europe and Australia suggest that one reason for the perilous
increase may be the discrimination fathers encounter in family courts,
especially the denial
of access to their children.
The demands of fathers
include:
— Joint custody of children
upon divorce with sole custody being awarded only with a compelling reason.
— Child support orders
based upon the actual cost of raising a child, with the custodial parent
being accountable for how the support is spent.
— Vigorous enforcement
of visitation rights.
— No support orders against
those proven not to be the biological father.
— The option for an unmarried
father to raise his child if the unmarried mother chooses to put it up
for adoption.
The National Coalition
of Free Men is sponsoring the rally and a conference
later the same day.
"We have become a society
where a loving, caring father, who is not charged with doing anything
wrong, is ordered to stay away from his children — and ordered to pay
child support for the children that he cannot see," said Will Hageman
of the Twin Cities NCFM, explaining one motive behind his activism.
"A society where genetic
tests can prove that a man is not the father of a child, but judges order
him to continue paying child support anyway — to the woman who lied to
him about who the child's father was. A society where adoption agencies
actively coach an unmarried mother to go into hiding and conceal the birth
from the father for 30 days — until the father's legal right to contest
adoption has expired," Hageman said.
You can celebrate Father's
Day this June 16 in a variety of ways. You can convert it into another
platform for women's rights as NOW Action Center does in its Father's
Day message to George
W. Bush, which lectures him on his own daughters.
Or you can express the
true meaning of fatherhood, as my friend Ken Gregg did in an open
letter to the birth fathers of his three adopted children:
"I've never met you, but
without you, my life would never have been blessed with the joys of my
children. My son, now 26, is on his own path and bears many traits, both
physical and psychological, that you have given him. My daughters (full
sisters), 10 and 11, show talents that, in part, must have come from you.
"I do not know how my
life would have turned out without your part, but certainly far poorer
spiritually and far less joyous. You gave my children life, and for that
I will never be able to thank you enough.
"I want to let you know
that my children are happy and healthy. I will continue to give all of
the love and nurturing they deserve — and more! I will protect them and
love them in all the ways that a father can.
"You may have helped to
give your child a new life through adoption. You may not have known that
you gave life to a child. Newspaper ads fulfilling the legal requirements
for terminating your parental rights may have been published and never
seen by you. Perhaps you did not know how to assert your rights to the
child. You may not have decided wisely.
"What choices and what
difficult times you have faced, I may never know. I have read many poems
honoring the birth mother, but little is said of your gift to me. But
man to man, birth fathers will never be forgotten. I will always remember."
On June 16, I intend to
say: "Thank you Dad. I didn't have your arms around me long enough." On
June 21, a group of men and women will speak up for fathers who long to
put their arms around children taken away.
Wendy McElroy
Wendy McElroy is the editor of
ifeminists.com. She is the author
and editor of many books and articles, including her new anthology Liberty
for Women: Freedom and Feminism in the 21st Century
(Ivan R. Dee/Independent Institute, 2002). She lives with her husband in
Canada.
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