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A 'marriage strike' emerges
as men decide not to risk loss
July 5, 2002
by Dianna Thompson and Glenn
Sacks
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Listen
to Thompson & Sacks Tuesday, July 9 at 6PM Pacific Time on MND
Radio as they ask
'Have American Men Declared a Marriage Strike?'
A highly publicized recent
Rutgers study examined the reasons men are increasingly less willing
to get married, and naturally men are receiving a lot of criticism
in major papers for being 'afraid of commitment' and having 'Peter
Pan Syndrome.' Men's issues columnist Glenn Sacks and Dianna Thompson,
the executive director of the American Coalition for Fathers and
Children, rise to men's defense and discuss their recent Philadelphia
Inquirer article "Have
Anti-Father Family Court Policies Led to a Men's Marriage Strike?"
The show can be heard nationwide
on MND Radio every Tuesday night from 6-7PM PST and is immediately
available for archive replay.
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Katherine is attractive, successful, witty,
and educated. She also can't find a husband. Why? Because most of the men
this thirtysomething software analyst dates do not want to get married.
These men have Peter Pan syndrome: They refuse to commit, refuse to settle
down, and refuse to "grow up."
However, given the family court policies
and divorce trends of today, Peter Pan is no naive boy, but instead a
wise man.
"Why should I get married and have kids
when I could lose those kids and most of what I've worked for at a moment's
notice?" asks Dan, a 31-year-old power plant technician who says he will
never marry. "I've seen it happen to many of my friends. I know guys who
came home one day to an empty house or apartment - wife gone, kids gone.
They never saw it coming. Some of them were never able to see their kids
regularly again."
Census figures suggest that the marriage
rate in the United States has dipped 40 percent during the last four decades
to its lowest point since the rate was measured. There are many plausible
explanations for this trend, but one of the least mentioned is that American
men, in the face of a family court system hopelessly stacked against them,
have subconsciously launched a "marriage strike."
It is not difficult to see why. Let's
say that Dan defies Peter Pan, marries Katherine, and has two children.
There is a 50 percent likelihood that this marriage will end in divorce
within eight years, and if it does, the odds are 2-1 it will be Katherine,
not Dan, who initiates the divorce. It may not matter that Dan was a decent
husband. Studies show that few divorces are initiated over abuse or because
the man has already abandoned the family. Nor is adultery cited as a factor
by divorcing women appreciably more than by divorcing men.
While the courts may grant Dan and Katherine
joint legal custody, the odds are overwhelming that it is Katherine, not
Dan, who will win physical custody. Overnight, Dan, accustomed to seeing
his kids every day and being an integral part of their lives, will become
a "14 percent dad" - a father who is allowed to spend only one out of
every seven days with his own children.
Once Katherine and Dan are divorced, odds
are at least even that Katherine will interfere with Dan's visitation
rights. Three-quarters of divorced men surveyed say their ex-wives have
interfered with their visitation, and 40 percent of mothers studied admitted
that they had done so, and that they had generally acted out of spite
or in order to punish their exes.
Katherine will keep the house and most
of the couple's assets. Dan will need to set up a new residence and pay
at least a third of his take-home pay to Katherine in child support.
As bad as all of this is, it would still
make Dan one of the lucky ones. After all, he could be one of those fathers
who cannot see his children at all because his ex has made a false accusation
of domestic violence, child abuse, or child molestation. Or a father who
can only see his own children under supervised visitation or in nightmarish
visitation centers where dads are treated like criminals.
He could be one of those fathers whose
ex has moved their children hundreds or thousands of miles away, in violation
of court orders, which courts often do not enforce. He could be one of
those fathers who tears up his life and career again and again in order
to follow his children, only to have his ex-wife continually move them.
He could be one of the fathers who has
lost his job, seen his income drop, or suffered a disabling injury, only
to have child support arrearages and interest pile up to create a mountain
of debt which he could never hope to pay off. Or a father who is forced
to pay 70 percent or 80 percent of his income in child support because
the court has imputed an unrealistic income to him. Or a dad who suffers
from one of the child support enforcement system's endless and difficult
to correct errors, or who is jailed because he cannot keep up with his
payments. Or a dad who reaches old age impoverished because he lost everything
he had in a divorce when he was middle-aged and did not have the time
and the opportunity to earn it back.
"It's a shame," Dan says. "I always wanted
to be a father and have a family. But unless the laws change and give
fathers the same right to be a part of their children's lives as mothers
have, it just isn't worth the risk."
Dianna
Thompson is the executive director of the American
Coalition for Fathers and Children and is a nationally recognized expert
on families, stepfamilies, divorce, and child custody.
Dianna has made dozens of local and national television appearances, including
the NBC Today Show, CNN, Fox News Live, Montel Williams, and Court TV. She
has also made hundreds of radio appearances, including on National Public
Radio, Radio America, Talk America, the Jim Bohannon Show, the Dennis Prager
Show, the Lionel Show, the Bill Handel Show, the Jason Lewis Show, and the
Tom Leykis Show.
Dianna's work has appeared, or has been quoted in, hundreds of major newspapers
and magazines, including Time Magazine, Redbook, Jane Magazine, the ABA
Journal, Playboy, USA Today, the Chicago Tribune, the Los Angeles Times,
the Washington Times, the Boston Globe, the Philadelphia Inquirer, Insight
magazine, the Washington Post, the Miami Herald, the Minneapolis Star Tribune,
Newark Star Ledger, the Christian Science Monitor, the Arkansas Democrat
Gazette, the Sacramento Bee, the Tulsa World, the Houston Chronicle, the
Orange County Register, the Seattle Times, and the Associated Press.
Her work has also appeared, or has been quoted on, hundreds of websites
including ABCNews.com, CBSnews.com, CNN.com, WorldNetDaily.com, Newsmax.com,
RushLimbaugh.com, Foxnews.com, MSNBC.com, Salon.com, Townhall.com, JewishWorldReview.com,
GOPUSA.com, iFeminists.com, CatholicExchange.com, CybercastNewsService.com,
Yahoo.com, and MensNewsDaily.com.
Glenn
Sacks is the only regularly published male columnist in the US who
writes about gender issues from a perspective unapologetically sympathetic
to men and fathers. Glenn's columns have appeared in the Boston Globe, the
Chicago Tribune, the Los Angeles Times, Newsday, the Houston Chronicle,
the San Francisco Chronicle, the Philadelphia Inquirer, the San Diego Union-Tribune,
the Minneapolis Star Tribune, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, the Sacramento
Bee, the Louisville Courier-Journal, the Los Angeles Daily News, the Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette, the Salt Lake City Tribune, the Memphis Commercial-Appeal,
Insight magazine, the Washington Times, and dozens of others. www.GlennJSacks.com.
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