The rates of the four major youth
pathologies--juvenile crime, teen pregnancy,
teen drug abuse, and school dropouts--are
tightly correlated with fatherlessness, often
more so than with any other socioeconomic
factor. After years of setbacks, the fatherhood
movement made substantial progress from Father’s
Day 2004 to Father’s Day 2005. The movement’s
goal is to reform family law to allow divorced
dads to play a meaningful role in the lives of
the children who love them and need them.
The most spectacular progress has been made in
England, where the group Fathers 4 Justice has
launched daring, highly-publicized, nonviolent
protests which have for the first time brought
the issue of fathers’ rights into mainstream
political discourse. Often dressed as their
children's favorite comic book superheroes,
Fathers 4 Justice activists have scaled
Buckingham Palace, protested atop prominent
bridges and courthouses, handcuffed themselves
to government ministers, and pelted Prime
Minister Tony Blair with flour on the floor of
the House of Commons. The group’s cause is so
popular that juries often refuse to
convict their activists, and Michael Howard, the
leader of the English Conservative Party, has
pledged his party’s support for a strong legal
presumption of equal custody rights for fathers.
In the US, Massachusetts fathers recently
triumphed over a demeaning 1998 law which
prohibits non-custodial parents from having
access to their children’s school records unless
they first go to court and obtain certification
that they are not batterers. Outraged by the
law's "fathers are guilty until proven innocent"
presumption, a member of the group Fathers and
Families filed a complaint with the U.S.
Department of Education, claiming that the law
is discriminatory. The Department agreed and
recently warned Massachusetts that it could lose
federal education funds if the law is not
changed.
In California, the president of the Senate
introduced legislation last summer which would
have granted custodial parents a virtually
unlimited right to move children wherever they
wanted, including out of state or even to a
foreign country. In response, fatherhood
activists deluged Sacramento with calls and
letters protesting the bill. To the surprise of
Sacramento observers long accustomed to the
fathers’ movement’s impotence, the bill was
withdrawn.
In the November elections, Libertarian
presidential candidate Michael Badnarik became
the first presidential candidate ever to include
a noncustodial parents' rights provision in his
campaign platform. In Massachusetts, where
family law is decidedly not father-friendly, a
Shared Parenting ballot question passed by a 6
to 1 margin.
Fatherhood activists were also successful in
getting Michigan Attorney General Mike Cox to
scrap an insulting, anti-father billboard
campaign in October. The campaign urged
custodial parents to encourage their children to
create messages critical of noncustodial parents
who are behind on child support. Since a Michigan
Family Independence Agency study showed that the
vast majority of Michigan child support
arrearages are owed by men earning less than
$10,000 a year, the campaign would have vilified
many men who care about their children but are
poor or have lost their jobs. In some
cases, children would have been asked to
denigrate their own fathers.
Cox cancelled the campaign after its main
corporate sponsor publicly denounced it and
withdrew its support.
In a protest covered by several hundred
newspapers and media outlets, over 2,000 people
called or wrote Verizon Communications over its
“Homework” ad last November. In the ad a
bumbling father tries and fails to help his
little daughter with her homework, and is
treated with contempt both by the girl and his
wife, who orders him to leave his daughter alone
and go wash the dog. Verizon stopped running
the ad a few weeks later, and several media
analysts have suggested that the protests have
helped start a trend away from the “dads as
idiots” theme common in television and
advertising.
In Canada, Fathers 4 Justice Canada recently
launched a series of coordinated stunts and
protests after Prime Minister Paul Martin’s
government refused to discuss the group’s demand
for Shared Parenting. Using actions similar to
the English Fathers 4 Justice, the group has
also gained widespread media attention.
Fathers
matter, and fatherhood’s
advances are children’s advances. The movement’s
success over the past year is definitely
something worth celebrating this Father’s Day.
This column was
first published in the Riverside
Press-Enterprise (6/19/05).
Glenn
Sacks' columns on men's and fathers' issues have appeared in dozens of America's
largest newspapers. Glenn can be reached via his website at
www.GlennSacks.com or
via email at Glenn@GlennSacks.com.
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