Is America Still Making Men?
Dennis Prager
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
Every society has to answer a
few basic questions in order to succeed and even in order to
survive. One of them is, "How do we make good men?"
The reason for the importance
of this question is simple: Males untutored about how to control
their natures will likely do much harm. Conversely, males who are
taught to how to control themselves and to channel their drives in
positive directions make the world a much better place. The good
man is a glory of civilization; the bad man ruins it.
Throughout American history,
American society asked, "How do we make men?" (It was
understood that "man" meant a good man.) Anyone who
thought about the subject knew that boys who are not transformed
into men remain boys. And when too many boys do not grow up into
men, women suffer and society suffers.
What is a man (as opposed to
a boy)? The traditional understanding was that a man is he who
takes responsibility for others -- for his family, his community
and his country -- and, of course, for himself. A man stood for
ideals and values higher than himself. He conducted himself with
dignity. And he was strong.
For much of American history,
making boys into men was understood to be of supreme importance,
and society was usually successful. When I was a boy in the 1950s,
without anyone expressly defining it, I knew what a man was
supposed to be. And I knew that society, not to mention my
parents, expected me to be one. It went without explicitly saying
so that I would have to make a living, support myself as soon as
possible and support a family thereafter.
When I acted immaturely, I
was told to be or act like a man. I wonder how many boys are told
to "be a man" today; and if they were, would they have a
clue as to what that meant? It would appear that for millions of
American boys, this has not been the reality for decades. Many
families and society as a whole seem to have forgotten boys need
to be made into men.
There are numerous reasons:
1. The distinction between
men and boys has been largely obliterated. The older males that
many American boys encounter are essentially older boys, not men.
They speak, dress, and act similarly (think of men who
"high-five" young boys instead of shaking their hands).
And they are almost all called by their first names. Even when a
boy (or girl) addresses an adult male as "Mr.," many men
will correct the young boy or girl -- "Call me" and then
give the young person his first name. This is often true even with
regard to teachers, physicians and members of the clergy. When a
young person calls an adult by his first name, the status of the
two individuals has been essentially equated. Boys need men to
respect. It's not impossible to do so when they call men by their
first names, but it makes it much harder.
2. Boys today have fewer
adult men in their lives than ever before. Many boys are not
raised by any father. More are not raised by a father who lives in
the home full time. Nearly every teacher and principal American
boys have in elementary and high school is a female. The boy's
clergy person and physician may well be women. And few male
figures in contemporary film radiate manhood as defined above.
3. The ideals of masculinity
and femininity have been largely rendered extinct. Feminism,
arguably the most influential American movement of the 20th
century, declared war on the concepts of femininity and
masculinity. And for much of the population, it was victorious.
Indeed, thanks to the feminist teaching that male and female human
beings are essentially the same (note, incidentally, that no one
argues that male and female animals are the same, only human
beings are), untold numbers of boys have been raised as if they
were like girls. They were denied masculine toys such as play guns
and toy soldiers, and their male forms of play -- e.g.,
roughhousing -- were banned.
4. America has become a
rights-centered rather than a responsibility-centered society.
Aside from helping to produce a pandemic of narcissism, the
rights-centered mindset is the opposite of the
obligation/responsibility-centered mindset that makes a boy into a
man. It is not good for either sex to be rights-preoccupied; but
it is particularly devastating to developing men, as men are
supposed to be obligation-directed. The baby boomer generation
helped destroy manhood in most of the ways described here. One
additional example was its widespread slogan, "Make love, not
war." One cannot come up with a more unmanly piece of advice:
"Don't fight for your country, <fornicate with>
girls." If the greatest generation had adopted that motto,
Hitler and Tojo would have won. A few years ago, the city of
Chicago named a street after Hugh Hefner, a man who has played
games much of the day and night, lived in pajamas and devoted his
life to sex -- quite a model of manhood for American boys.
5. There are few places where
men can bond with other men. One major way men become men is by
associating with other good men. The only places left where this
normally takes place are sports teams and the military. The same
holds true for boys. And much of society is now working on
breaking the most significant all-boys institution, the Boy
Scouts.
6. Males no longer have
distinctive roles. Men do best when they are relied upon, when
needed; and they feel most needed when they do something distinct
from women. This exists today in sports and the military. It is
symbolic -- significantly so -- that there are no more "men
at work" signs on highways. Now "people" are at
work. "Men" have disappeared.
7. Many churches and
synagogues have been feminized. This has occurred in at least
three important ways: Clergy are increasingly female (and
touchy-feely males) -- for the first time in Christian and Jewish
history; God is often depicted as androgynous and no longer either
demanding or judging (He just loves all the time); and religion
has been changed from morally and theologically demanding to a
therapeutic model. So religion, too, has become yet another place
where boys encounter few men, and few masculine models (even in
God, as noted, is no longer masculine).
8. Instead of the traditional
American model of masculinity, which was a rare combination of
masculine toughness and stoicism with doing good (e.g., Superman),
boys are now taught to be preoccupied with their feelings and with
(unearned) self-esteem. They are not even allowed to lose; all
boys playing a sport are given trophies, not just winners.
9. Increasingly, marriage is
regarded as optional. The most obvious expression of men assuming
responsibility -- marrying a woman and taking care of her and
their children -- is no longer a male ideal. Vast numbers of men
quite openly admit to having problems with the C-word (commitment)
and responsibility of being a family's sole breadwinner.
When boys do not become men,
women assume their roles. But they are not happy doing so. There
are any number of reasons American women suffer from depression
more than ever before and more than men. It is difficult to
believe that one of those reasons is not the very emasculation of
men that the movement working in their name helped to bring about.
And so, a vicious cycle has commenced -- men stop being men; women
become man-like; men retreat even further from their manly role;
and women get sadder.