Dads Against the Divorce IndustryDA*DI is devoted to reinstating the societal valuation of Marriage and the traditional, nuclear American Family, with particular emphasis on the essential role of FATHERS. DA*DI offers contemporary reports and commentary on culture; its aberrations and its heroes. |
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by Cathy Young
June 23, 1999
Fathers’ rights advocates often complain that
Father’s Day has become, more often than not, an occasion for
father-bashing. One might think they’re being paranoid. But this
past Sunday, the New York Times Week in Review chose to run a
cartoon by Ted Rall titled “Dadbert” (a spoof of “Dilbert”) in which
a young man asks his father if he loves him. “No,” Dad replies.
“Son, like most fathers over the past 30 years, I dumped you and
your mom, ran off with my administrative assistant and saw you only
because I was under court order. I was rich, but I paid child
support late or not at all. ... Can’t you take a hint?”
I’m all for having a sense of humor. We don’t need
more hypersensitivity. But there’s humor and there’s bigotry. No
respectable paper would ever run a cartoon depicting Jews as greedy
on Passover — or any other day. “Dadbert” comes pretty close.
It bears repeating that most fathers do not abandon
their children. Two-thirds of all children under 18 still live with
both biological parents, and 15 percent of parents raising children
alone are fathers. The typical divorced noncustodial father did not
run off with anyone but was sent packing by his wife usually not
because he was unfaithful or abusive but because she felt that they
had grown emotionally distant. This is what divorcing women
themselves say in surveys.
It’s also worth noting that according to virtually
every study, fathers who are steadily employed and are allowed
access to their children rarely default on child support. According
to the Institute for Research on Poverty at the University of
Wisconsin, more than half of nonpaying fathers make less than $6,155
a year.
Of course, no father is forced to see his children
under court order. Many fathers, however, are kept from seeing their
children often despite a court order.
Women’s advocates like child support enforcement
activist Geraldine Jensen dismiss claims of visitation denial as a
ploy by fathers to cover up their neglect of children. Ironically,
in 1981, an Ohio court found that Jensen herself “severely limited
[her ex-husband’s] opportunities to maintain a relationship with his
children.”
Some people seem to think that anyone who speaks up
in defense of fathers has to be anti-woman. After my last column on
the subject, I received a lengthy e-mail accusing me of “Fathers’
Rights propaganda” from a nameless woman who said she worked with
“mothers’ groups.” It was full of male-bashing rhetoric about
“teaching irresponsible, immature, misogynistic curmudgeons that
children need money, food, shelter, attention and not to be abused
or watch daddy beat mommy” and mind-boggling claims about how soft
the system supposedly is on abusive fathers.
According to the writer, when fathers who molest
their children file for custody, “they win 84 percent of the time.”
I have no idea where this preposterous figure comes from and whether
it’s supposed to refer to actual abuse or charges made as a custody
tactic. The fact is that even when accused fathers have been
vindicated, the system often does little to help them.
One father with whom I have corresponded, former
Wayne County resident Jim Rourke, has not seen his three children in
more than two years. In 1997, his former wife filed abuse charges
against him which were quickly rejected as unsubstantiated. Yet the
authorities decided that the custody evaluation process had to start
all over again, with the costs to be split between Rourke and his
ex-wife costs he says he cannot afford to pay. For two years,
Rourke’s complaints have been bounced back and forth between
different courts while he continues to be denied visitation.
I’m not suggesting that all divorced dads are
blameless martyrs. Yes, there are selfish men who desert their
children just as there are spiteful women who keep fathers away from
children. But no newspaper would ever celebrate Mother’s Day with a
cartoon about malicious and vindictive mothers. As long the
stereotypes about fathers persist, we can use some “fathers’ rights
propaganda.”
Cathy Young is co-founder and vice-president of the Women’s
Freedom Network. Her column is published on Wednesday. Write letters
to The Detroit News, Editorial Page, 615 W. Lafayette, Detroit,
Mich. 48226 or fax to (313) 222-6417 or send an e-mail message to
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Dads Against the Divorce Industry