Raising Boys Without Men:
Lesbian
Parents Good, Dads Bad
By Glenn Sacks
It’s one thing to be respectful of gays and gay parents. It’s quite another to
engineer a deceptive study and use it to assert that lesbian families are a
better environment in which to raise boys than heterosexual families. That’s
what former Stanford University gender scholar Peggy F. Drexler, Ph.D. does in
her new book Raising Boys Without Men: How Maverick Moms Are Creating the
Next Generation of Exceptional Men. Unfortunately the mainstream media is
helping her promote her claims.
In the book’s opening pages Drexler’s message is one of tolerance for various
family forms, as she notes that lesbian and single mother families “can”
effectively raise boys. But Raising Boys soon devolves into outright
advocacy of lesbian parenting. In Drexler’s world, lesbian families—protected
from fathers and their toxic masculinity--are the best environments in which to
raise boys. Married heterosexual mothers try their best, but the positive
influence these hapless moms try to impart to their children is overwhelmed by
that of the malevolent family patriarch.
Even when the (few) well-intentioned dads interact with their kids, they somehow
always get it wrong, and lesbian moms always seem to have a better way of
handling their sons’ problems than dads do. According to Drexler, dads are too
critical, strict, and demanding, and she applauds as boy after boy blows off his
dad. In fact, boys without dads “often profit from not having someone who
insists they tough something out.”
Drexler asserts that lesbian moms are “more sophisticated about how they teach
their sons right from wrong” than heterosexual couples, and there are “real
advantages for a boy being raised in this new type of family.” Heterosexual
mothers don’t measure up in “moral attitude,” and are less likely than lesbian
moms to “create opportunities for their sons to examine moral and values
issues.” This in turn slows the “moral development in their sons.”
Furthermore, Drexler asserts that boys raised by lesbians “grow up emotionally
stronger,” “have a wider range of interests and friendships,” and “appear more
at ease in situations of conflict” than boys from “traditional” (i.e.,
father-present) households. Fatherless boys “exhibit a high degree of emotional
savvy…an intuitive grasp of people and situations.” Best of all, sons of lesbian
couples are much more willing to discard traditional masculinity than boys
trapped in heterosexual households.
For example, Fiona’s son paints his nails, while both of Maria’s sons dance
ballet. Ursula’s son chose sewing and cooking for his electives in 7th
grade. Kathy's son has rejected playing baseball as being “too competitive”—no
surprise, because in their local, father-led baseball league, “the better
players get more playing time.”
Drexler’s research has obvious flaws. For one, the families she studied
were middle to upper class, older women who volunteered to have their lives
intimately scrutinized over a multiyear period--an unrepresentative,
self-selected sample.
More importantly, her research suffers from confirmatory bias—Drexler saw what
she wanted to see. Drexler is not an objective social scientist, but instead a
passionate advocate for lesbian mothers. She calls the “maverick mothers”
raising sons without men “avatars of a new social movement,” and says her book’s
“stories, voices, data, and findings will reassure, hearten, and empower” them.
Her research did not measure objective indices of child well-being, such as
rates of juvenile crime, drop-outs or teen pregnancy. Instead Drexler personally
conducted interviews of mothers and their sons and made subjective judgments
about their family lives. It is not surprising that Drexler found lesbian
families to her liking. In fact, her dogged determination to see only good in
lesbian couples and problems in heterosexual ones at times reaches absurd
proportions.
For example, though Drexler doesn’t seem to notice, her lesbian moms,
particularly the “social” (i.e., nonbiological moms), cheerfully endure insults
and disrespect that no parent should ever tolerate. Carol’s son calls her
“stupid.” Bianca’s son calls her “lazy.” Martha’s son hops into her bed and
effectively tells Martha tough luck, sucker--go sleep somewhere else.
Thankfully, in each case progressive lesbian mom dealt with the problem through
patience and talking. By contrast, dad would probably have had junior pull weeds
in the yard for a few hours as he waves goodbye to his PlayStation. He is (sigh)
sadly unenlightened.
I recall at age 13 or 14 insulting my father in front of some of my friends. My
dad’s reaction? As soon as we were alone he got very much in my face and
informed me that it had better never happen again. It never did. My father never
once struck me or ever even threatened to, but through his strength and love I
always knew who was in charge. By contrast, Drexler’s moms spend an inordinate
amount of time either being insulted by or apologizing to their children—and
Drexler applauds. It’s not hard to see why so many fatherless boys end up as
juvenile delinquents while so few boys with
fathers do.
For Drexler, boys raised by lesbians are a better breed than those raised by
heterosexual couples. One day when Drexler was struggling to hold on to her briefcase
and her bags, 11 year-old Damien saw “that I needed help and immediately offered
it.” Drexler is taken aback—a boy being helpful and caring? She notes
“when I thought about it later, it clicked in my head: This is a boy being
raised by two moms.”
Lesbian-raised Cody helps clean up the playroom. Lesbian-raised Brad offers
Drexler a stool to sit on when she comes to his room to interview her.
Both considerations are the product, we are assured, of their special
upbringings. Yet if Drexler had been willing to look she could have found many
kind, helpful, empathetic boys raised by heterosexual couples—like my 12
year-old son, who recently told his grandparents “I want you to move next door
to us, even though it will mean more chores for me."
Drexler’s enlightened moms have little
affection for the virtues of
traditional masculinity, such as self-sacrifice, courage, and the desire to
protect and provide. For example, when Helen’s son Mark applies to the Air Force
Academy, Helen “prayed that the fierce competition for Academy slots would knock
Mark out of the running.” When Mark gets in but ends up losing his spot because
of his asthma, Helen is elated.
Drexler refuses to see obvious indications that the boys she interviews need
fathers. When one of Brad’s two moms picks him up from the daycare center after
work, every day she has to pry the six year-old off of the leg of an
after-school worker named Ron to whom Brad is—pun intended—quite attached. A
less determined researcher might see this as evidence of Brad’s need for a dad.
Not Drexler, who instead tells us that, given Ron’s presence, Brad’s mom “knew
she didn’t need to worry about Brad’s lack of an everyday father in his life.”
Julia’s little boy says “I want a daddy.”
Darlene’s little boy tells his mom “we could
find a daddy and he could move in with us.”
Three year-old Ian--fatherless by the decision
of his “single mother by choice” mom
Leslie--watches TV with mom, continually
pointing at male figures on the screen and
saying “there’s my daddy.” Leslie explains “no,
we don’t have a daddy in our family,” but little
Ian doesn’t get it and continues to point and
ask. A problem? Not according to Drexler, who
writes “Will some little boys trail after men
they don’t even know, perk up at lower-decibel
voices, or hang on to the pant legs of the men
who cross their paths? Maybe.” But
whatever it is, she assures us, it isn’t father
hunger.
She enthuses that “sons of lesbians went to great efforts to define the terms of
the bonds and relationships in their lives that the boys from straight families
seemed to take for granted. All terms in their lives were complex.” Is this a
good thing?
Drexler does allow that some male figures can be positive for boys. Who?
“Grandfathers, godfathers, uncles, family friends, coaches”—in short, anybody
but dad. In fact, boys being raised without fathers benefit because they
enjoy “more male figures in their lives than boys from traditional families.”
But more does not mean better, and a group of men with little stake in a boy’s
life are a poor substitute for a father’s love and devotion to his children.
Nor can they provide the modeling that boys need--the best way for a boy to
learn how to become a good husband and father is to watch his father do it.
Drexler believes that boys in heterosexual families are worse off because they
are “stuck with a single male role model”--dad--whereas in lesbian families boys
are free to choose their own. Yet a child does not have the judgment to properly
select his own role models, even with a parent’s input. The fact that fatherless
boys usually choose older, rebellious, thuggish boys as their role models—and
are often led by them to their perdition—eludes Drexler.
Drexler informs us that the best role model for a boy is sometimes a sports
figure he’s never even met. Of an interaction with Quentin, one of the
lesbian-raised boys she’s studying, she tells us she gave him “a present, a
videotape called Yankee Sluggers…a gift I gave to all the boys I had come
to know.” After Quentin says “I’m going to know more about Babe Ruth [than my
friends] and I’m going to teach them about Babe Ruth,” Drexler enthuses “This is
a boy finding his own role model.”
In other words, a sports figure who’s been dead for over 50 years can provide a
good role model and male influence, but having a dad wouldn’t help. What would
our opinion be of a father who abandoned his boy as a baby, leaving in his stead
Yankee Sluggers?
In case a family consisting of two lesbian moms and a long-dead, drinking and
womanizing sports figure is somehow insufficient, Drexler holds up a variety of
other family forms and “nonofficial parenting figures” as solutions, including
Hillary Clinton’s village, “communal living,” and “seed daddies.” She
approvingly quotes a columnist who writes “with so many single mothers around,
and double mothers becoming less of a novelty, it is the children of traditional
couples who are going to be asked ‘who is that man in your house?’”
Drexler’s anti-father, anti-heterosexual bias manifests itself in several other
ways. For one, Drexler, like many feminists, has a double standard about
divorce. When men divorce women, they’re rats and deserters. When women divorce
men, they’re independent and liberated. Raising Boys makes numerous
critical references to fathers who’ve divorced their wives: Martha’s husband
“left her high and dry”; Beverly’s husband abandoned her “abruptly” when their
children were small; and Pam’s marriage ended because of her ex-husband’s
alleged “lack of family commitment.” In fact, the only father who departed from
his family against the mother’s wishes and isn’t vilified for it is a guy who
died.
Yet not one of the many divorced mothers and divorced-turned-lesbian mothers in
Raising Boys is ever criticized or even chided for breaking up her family
by divorcing her children’s father. The vast majority of divorces involving
children are initiated by women, and research shows that the primary reason is
not abuse or adultery, but instead emotional reasons such as a perceived lack of
closeness or of not feeling loved and appreciated. Legitimate concerns, but were
they proffered by a man who had broken up his family they would engender little
sympathy.
The devastation these unnecessary divorces visit upon children—formerly used to
having a father and now having only a “visitor” in their lives a few days a
month—draws no comment from Drexler. Nor does she once mention the enormous
emotional pain some of these mothers have caused these loving dads. Also ignored
is the fact that the newly fatherless homes she extols are often
subsidized—sometimes at great expense—by the fathers who are no longer allowed
to regularly parent their own children.
Like most feminists, Drexler
believes that heterosexual family life is a raw
deal for women. Drexler claims that fathers do almost no parenting, and
laments “mothers who expected a partnership” and “wound up carrying most of the
load.” One married mother admires the lesbian couple raising one of her son’s
friends, saying “In some ways I’m jealous of your relationship because you
tackle this thing [raising children] 50-50.”
Yet according to the Families and Work Institute in New York City, fathers now
provide three-fourths of the child care mothers do, up from one-half 30 years
ago. Only 40% of married mothers with children work full-time, and over a
quarter do not hold a job outside the home. By contrast, according to the
International Labor Organization, the average American father works a 51 hour
work week. Given this burden, the fact that fathers still manage to still do 75%
as much child care as mothers do is quite an accomplishment.
According to a 2002 survey conducted by the University of Michigan Institute for
Social Research (ISR), the world's largest academic survey and research
organization, men are doing at least as much overall household work as women.
Women do an average of 27 hours of housework a week, compared to 16 hours a week
for men. Balanced against this, however, is the study's less-publicized finding
that the average man spends 14 hours a week more on the job than the average
woman. Thus men's overall contribution to the household is actually slightly
higher than women's. But for Drexler it’s not enough.
Drexler warns us about male influence, writing “fathers can be destructive and a
boy may be better off without his father. Sometimes a father can be an aggressor
who berates the mother, is hypercritical of his children or—in less dire
circumstances—is simply not a good role model.” Apparently moms never berate
dads or over-criticize their children, and are always good role models. Yet
according to the US Department of Health and Human Services, the vast majority
of child abuse, parental murder of children, child neglect, and child
endangerment are committed by mothers, not fathers.
It is certainly true that the old, tough dad had his drawbacks, just as all
parents—including mothers--do. The best parent is one who mixes affection and
discipline, who loves and is lovable but at the same time is respected and, when
necessary, feared. But not all parents can do all these things, and while we
might have wished that the old dad were more sensitive, he was very important,
and his virtues much underappreciated.
As a former high school teacher I can assure you that what we need is more, not
less, of the old dad—particularly in the inner cities. The dad who’s not afraid
to be the bad guy. The dad who’s not afraid to take strong measures to help and
protect his children. The dad who tells his son “if you shoplift you’d better
hope the police get you before I do.” A father like my friend's dad,
an African-American South
Central Los Angeles cop who kept a tight curfew and a belt on the wall and who,
before he died at an early age, claimed as his greatest achievement the fact
that all four of his daughters got through college without having a baby.
Many times in the classroom I would tell fatherless boys (who aren’t hard to
recognize) “I wish I was your dad—I would kick your ass.” The boys would
invariably give me a “you can’t catch me” laugh—they knew they were getting away
with things at home that most dads wouldn’t tolerate, and they knew there was
nothing anybody could do about it.
According to Drexler, the boys she studied don’t need their dads, but instead
benefit because their absence helps create what one might call the “maternal
dictatorship.” For Ursula, the single mother of two boys, Drexler enthuses that
there’s “no discussion about parenting methodologies. No crossed signals…no
compromising…the decisions, the choices, the priorities were all hers.” Better
yet, “Lesbian co-parents ‘achieve a particularly high level of parenting
skills…[and] a greater level of agreement than heterosexual couples. A higher
degree of consensus cut down on conflict in the home, enabling a clear message
of love and support to be heard by the kids.”
Drexler
has it exactly wrong—conflict over parenting
methods and strategies is not a negative but a
positive, for two competing and different
viewpoints weed
out bad ideas and help preserve good ones. This is particularly true in
heterosexual couples, where both male and female perspectives are considered in
decision-making. By contrast, in single parent homes ideas and parenting
strategies are implemented without consultation, and the effect can be harmful.
In lesbian homes, parenting strategies are used on boys without input from
anyone who actually knows what it’s like to be a boy.
While
Raising Boys is being promoted as a harmless, feel-good affirmation
for “maverick moms,” it is in fact an attack on the institution that research
shows is the best-suited to raising children—the family. Drexler encourages
women thinking of having fatherless children to make that “leap of faith.” But
the rates of all major youth pathologies, including juvenile crime, teen
pregnancy, teen drug abuse, and school dropouts, are tightly correlated with
fatherlessness. Drexler waxes poetic about the nebulous benefits of fatherless
parenting, but makes little attempt to explain why fatherless families produce
so many troubled and pathological children.
The boys raised by the well-heeled, educated San Francisco lesbian couples
Drexler studied will probably do better than most fatherless boys because their
socioeconomic status is higher. But nothing in Drexler’s research indicates that
an extra mom can replace the strength, tough love and modeling a father gives
his son.
This is an
expanded version of a column which first
appeared in World Net Daily (9/10/05). To
read the World Net Daily version, click
here.
Glenn Sacks taught elementary school and high
school in Los Angeles Unified School District
and others, and was named to "Who's Who
Among America's
Teachers" three times. His columns on men's and
fathers' issues have appeared in dozens of the
largest newspapers in the United States. He
invites readers to visit his website at
www.GlennSacks.com.
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