Vive
la Difference!
By
Allan Carlson, the
National Review, July
12, 2004 (Volume 56;
Issue 13)
SHORTLY after the
Lewinsky scandal broke,
Time White House
reporter Nina Burleigh
confessed in Mirabella
magazine that she, too,
had once caught the
president admiring her
legs. The episode was
"seductive" and
"flattering," Burleigh
later said, and she
admitted that she would
gladly have performed
for him as Monica had
done, if only asked. A
chorus of other
prominent female writers
quickly volunteered
their services, as well.
This led New York Times
columnist Maureen Dowd
to fume about "feminist
erotic journalism," a
field in which
presumably independent
women "pant for power.
They crave droit du
seigneur. Take me! Take
me!"
It's the way to attract
beautiful women, Henry
Kissinger is said to
have replied when asked
why he sought high
public office. Indeed,
"power [in men] is an
aphrodisiac" for the
female sex, reports
Steven Rhoads in this
new book. He points to
other cases of feminist
icons surrendering to
powerful men: Jane Fonda
submitting to the
"strong, domineering"
Ted Turner; Simone de
Beauvoir, author of The
Second Sex, serving as
mistress, cook, manager,
nurse,
and-eventually-pimp for
the insufferable
Jean-Paul Sartre. So
does human nature trump
ideology. However, the
phenomenon does not work
the other way. As the
author notes, "power
does not increase the
sex appeal of former
attorney general Janet
Reno or of Senator
Dianne Feinstein."
Rhoads explores
thousands of comparable
examples of sex
differences in this
provocative, compelling,
entertaining book. A
professor of public
policy at the University
of Virginia, Rhoads
weaves together the
findings of hundreds of
new research studies
with personal anecdotes
in a lively refutation
of 40 years of feminist
cant. While polite, even
generous, toward his
intellectual opponents,
Rhoads still reveals
"the androgynous
project" to be nothing
less than "misogynist."
Relying heavily on the
insights of social
biology and evolutionary
psychology, he shows the
differences between men
and women to be natural,
"hard wired," and
fundamental to the
survival and progress of
the human race.
"The culture wars,"
Rhoads notes with some
justice, "are really
about the role of
women." He shows that
while men are all about
the same when it comes
to the masculine traits
of competitiveness,
aggression, and
dominance (even
"computer nerds" enjoy
the frenzied clashes of
"BattleBots"), women are
divided into two camps:
a majority who are
traditionally feminine
with a yearning for
nest-building and
children; and a
minority, exposed to
higher levels of
testosterone, who show
more male attributes.
The tension between
these two kinds of women
becomes a recurring
theme in the book.
All the same, the
profound differences
between the two sexes
are the author's primary
story. For example, the
human hormone, oxytocin,
is "the kindest of
natural opiates," but it
operates differently on
the sexes. Men
experience it at the
moment of sexual
release. Women, though,
feel the same euphoric
exhilaration while
breastfeeding. Indeed,
some of the oxytocin
reaches the child
through the breast milk.
This creates a special
bond between mother and
child in which they
become "one continually
interacting, merged
organism" with "a
pleasant fog descend[ing]
upon the brain."
No "Mr. Mom" can
replicate this
experience. Indeed,
Rhoads shows that
despite the media hype,
there are actually few
such men around. In
candid surveys, even the
best-earning,
highest-status women
reject role reversal in
favor of a partner who
is superior in power,
earnings, and status. So
too among female
academics. Homemaking
men are simply not
sexually attractive to
women.
A return to traditional
"breadwinner"/"homemaker"
homes, the author
implies, would be of
benefit to children.
Fewer work hours by
mothers increase student
achievement; fewer work
hours by fathers
decrease it. Similarly,
high maternal job
satisfaction is linked
to lower psychological
well-being of daughters,
while a higher level of
job satisfaction among
fathers is tied to the
psychological health of
daughters.
Psychological
differences between the
sexes, Rhoads argues,
reach back to the origin
of the species, in the
"environment of
evolutionary
adaptation." During the
"hunter/gatherer"
period, women did the
foraging and became
better at spatial memory
and the _expression of
emotion. Women's brains
have more neurons
connecting the left and
right hemispheres;
positron emission
topography shows women
to use more neurons for
every activity
undertaken. Men's
brains, meanwhile, are
more compartmentalized,
designed for
single-minded tasks such
as "the hunt," or the
hostile corporate
takeover. Even eyesight
shows important
differences: Women have
better night vision, to
feed and care for "teary
infants in the moonless
grass," it appears. For
their part, men have
superior day vision,
essential to success in
battle and the
acquisition of game.
Still, some feminists
would acknowledge all
this and respond: "So
what? Such differences
no longer have relevance
in the modern world and
pale alongside the
imperative for
democratic equality."
Rhoads disagrees. He
points to numerous areas
where wise public policy
would recognize and
build on sex
differences. Regarding
day care, for example,
Rhoads reports that
"two-career families who
put children in
subsidized day care
apparently produce a
near tripling of the
odds that these children
will be disobedient and
aggressive-hardly a
trend the government
should support
financially." Instead,
he urges a generous tax
benefit for the parents
of young children if one
parent (predictably the
mother) stays home.
Regarding Title IX and
athletics, the author
skewers those
bureaucrats who deny
"sport" status to
cheerleading (which
involved 64,000 willing
high-school girls in
1994) while pushing
girls into NCAA
"emerging sports" such
as ice hockey (only 200
high-school girls
nationwide). More
broadly, Title IX has
become "a pernicious
form of social
engineering," assaulting
the nature of young
women and subverting
male sports programs
such as wrestling. New
research shows that it
is through sports that
men, much more than
women, gain friends and
channel potentially
destructive energy
toward positive ends.
Rhoads concludes: "Only
when we begin to take
sex differences
seriously enough to see
that men are
intrinsically more
attracted to sports-and
need sports competition
more than women do-will
we be able to design
public policies that are
just, functional, and
sensible."
The feminist cause is
floundering. Recent
polls show that most
women believe that
feminism has made it
harder, not easier, to
combine jobs and
families. A 1998 survey
reports that five times
as many men and women
believe that "changing
gender roles" have made
it more difficult for
marriages to succeed as
believe these changes
have made it easier.
Says Rhoads: Today, just
as 40 years ago, truly
"happy women usually
rule
indirectly"-allowing
their husbands to
believe they are the
"head of household."
After all the commotion,
not much has really
changed.
Rhoads shows that men
bound to homes as
husbands and fathers are
vital to the healthy
development of children.
Female power is of
another, subtler order,
the force that crafts
relationships, forges
family bonds, and
creates societies.
Grounded in these
truths, Taking Sex
Differences Seriously
should help to restore
social sanity to a
nation still disoriented
by extended exposure to
feminist ideology.
Mr. Carlson is
president of the Howard
Center in Illinois and
distinguished fellow in
family policy studies at
the Family Research
Council. His books
include The 'American
Way': Family and
Community in the Shaping
of the American Identity
(ISI).
© 2004
National Review, Inc.
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