THE DECLINE OF REASON
Dear reader,
This is the Chinese year of the pig. Many may say that is a
fortunate year because the pig is meant to be calm, artistic, refined,
intuitive, intelligent and well-mannered. Yet, there is another “pig” and that
is the Boar. This one is wild, invasive, aggressive and a predator.
One way we may reflect on the year 2019 is to pay attention
to the two aspects of this astrological pig.
One aspect is its fragility, passivity and close to the human and the
other is the aggressive fighter and predator. This pig metaphor is a good
description of today’s social malaise. We experience it in particular all over
the modern world called the “Western democracies”.
This western culture may be considered to have a history of
aggression and conquering the world for over 400 or so years (read about the
British and Spanish empires) and now it is suffering of a huge surge of an
overriding focus on sensitivity, being nice and a mountain of soft feelings. We
can call this a polar opposite of historical events.
Perhaps it is time we examine and reflect on the “Boar”
character of our culture, if not, we will suffer and become weaker and weaker
as a democratic and free society. The “boar” polar opposite of being aggressive
is not bad and may give us some strength to maintain a balance in face of the
Political Correctness disguising as kindly oppressors.
One example of this trend is a report in the news about the
well-known actor Liam Neeson. He gave an interview to promote the new movie
COLD PURSUIT ( I recommend it). The movie is an amazing story of revenge and
killing of bad guys by the father whose son dies of drug overdose and the
father discovers that the drug was injected by a gang leader. His revenge is
Boar-like.
Liam while at an TV interview, describes his own feelings
about revenge that he experienced many years ago after his friend was raped by
a black man. In all honesty Liam said that he went out at night hoping to find
this “black bastard” so he could kill him in revenge. Although Neeson did not
kill anyone and described his thinking as awful, he was learning that revenge
is our human urge and is universal.
Well, the social media exploded against him. He was called a
“racist” and the movie premier was cancelled. He explained and apologised in
later interviews, but the fury continued unabated.
Reflecting on this story, we can become aware of the two
“pigs” qualities used by the “political correct tribe”. The focus is especially
on men. They are considered as pigs and not human beings. Well known men like
actor Liam Neeson, psychologist Jordan Peterson, or comedian Kevin Heart (who
happens to be black) and who quit as host of the Oscars and so on and on. YES!
They are all men!
This blog is not meant to be a political, cultural or social
argument of who is right or wrong, but a reflection on the PIG VS BOAR
metaphor. For a more detailed reflection (for those interested), I am including
here a report from the Quillette magazine entitled: Scholars Respond to the
APA’s Guidance for Treating Men and Boys. You are free to comment here.
Introduction — John P. Wright, Ph.D.
John Paul Wright is a
professor of criminal justice at the University of Cincinnati. He has published
widely on the causes and correlates of human violence. His current work
examines how ideology affects scholarship.
Thirteen years in the making, the American Psychological
Association (APA) released the newly drafted “Guidelines for Psychological
Practice for Boys and Men.” Backed by 40 years of science, the APA claims, the
guidelines boldly pronounce that “traditional masculinity” is the cause and
consequence of men’s mental health concerns. Masculine stoicism, the APA tells
us, prevents men from seeking treatment when in need, while beliefs rooted in
“masculine ideology” perpetuate men’s worst behaviours—including sexual
harassment and rape. Masculine ideology, itself a by-product of the
“patriarchy,” benefits men and simultaneously victimizes them, the guidelines
explain. Thus, the APA committee advises therapists that men need to become
allies to feminism. “Change men,” an author of the report stated, “and we can
change the world.”
But if the reaction to the APA’s guidelines is any
indication, this change won’t happen anytime soon. Criticism was immediate and
fierce. Few outside of a handful of departments within the academy had ever
heard of “masculine ideology,” and fewer still understood how defining
traditional masculinity by men’s most boorish—even criminal—behaviour would
serve the interests of men or entice them to seek professional help. Instead of
passing quietly into the night, as most academic pronouncements do, the APA’s
guidelines did what few such documents have ever done: They engendered a social
media maelstrom, and likely not only lost professional credibility, but
potentially created new barriers for men who need help.
It is tempting to excuse the APA’s guidelines as the by-product
of a select group of scholars whose intentions were good but whose delivery was
tone-deaf. In today’s hyper-politicized environment, good intentions are often
converted into the currency of ill-will. Yet the APA was forewarned by at least
one psychologist that the guidelines would not be well received; that the
document’s overtly partisan language and politically progressive narratives
would not encourage men to receive services, but to keep them away.
When it became clear that those warnings should have been
heeded, the APA found itself in an untenable position. Unfortunately, instead
of calming the storm by acknowledging the validity of at least some criticism,
the APA doubled-down, releasing a public statement asserting that the APA
supports men, and the guidelines had been misunderstood and mischaracterized.
In the same statement, they explained, “When a man believes that he must be
successful no matter who is harmed or his masculinity is expressed by being sexually
abusive, disrespectful, and harmful to others, that man is conforming to the
negative aspects associated with traditional masculinity.” In other words,
according to the APA, these selfish, violent, and abusive behaviours are not an
issue of a person’s character, nor are they related to a person’s individual
pathology. They are about “masculinity”—especially “traditional masculinity.”
For added authority, the statement was signed by three presidents of the APA.
What should we make of not only the guidelines, but the
APA’s inept handling of the criticism?
To better understand these dynamics, three of us, Quillette columnist
and psychology professor Clay Routledge, along with criminology professor John
Paul Wright, and Psychology Today contributor Pamela Paresky, sought commentary
from a diverse range of voices, including therapists who focus on men’s issues,
researchers whose work examines the complexity of men’s lives, and writers with
diverse viewpoints. While we make no claim that the comments below are
representative of the full range of views, we gave authors full editorial
control over the content of their commentary and encouraged them to feel free
to address both the positives and the negatives within the guidelines. Since we
solicited many responses, we asked each contributor to limit her or his
response to around 300 words.
We are heartened by the criticism that emerged from the
APA’s guidelines. Why? Because we don’t believe that most of the backlash
resulted from crass political motives. Instead, much of it was rooted in a deep
concern about men and boys. The culture wars have not been kind to men, and
data from an assortment of surveys tell us that boys and men are not thriving.
Documents can be edited, but goodwill is a commodity no one should erase. If
the APA is truly concerned about the mental and emotional health of men, it
will recognize the goodwill and constructive intent underpinning much of the
criticism and consider the feedback as a starting point for a broader and more
productive discussion of how to most effectively provide successful treatment
for boys and men.
Flipping the APA on its Head — W. Keith Campbell, Ph.D.
W. Keith Campbell is a
professor of psychology at the University of Georgia. He has authored and
co-authored several books including The Narcissism Epidemic.
I ran a little thought experiment with the APA traditional
masculinity model: What kind of society do you get when masculine values are centred
on emotional self-focus rather than stoicism; cooperativeness rather than
competitiveness; submissiveness rather than dominance; and kindness rather than
aggression? Would men be happier and healthier in such a society? Well, given
how bad traditional masculinity is, reversed masculinity should be flourishing
in other cultures. Oddly, the APA doesn’t offer any examples. The closest
example I found was this hot take on Asian men (birthplace of Genghis
Khan—literally the most badass male ancestor of all time). The APA notes that
“at least among white college students, Asian-American men are viewed as less
manly than white or black American men.” We aren’t told if that is good or bad.
If you look at the massively underpowered and poorly sampled study, it turns
out that 250 psych undergrads think masculinity lines up with physical strength
and athleticism, and place men’s masculinity in the order of black men being
most masculine, Asian men the least, and white men in the middle. The closest
you find to the flipped masculinity script are peace-focused masculine cultures
that exist as protected subcultures in larger liberal cultures (e.g., India
currently protects Tibetan spiritual culture—explicitly nonviolent groups like
the Jains, etc.). Without this protection, peaceful groups get killed off. When
there isn’t war, cultural aggression is celebrated in ceremony and sport, like
this proud masculine display at the India-Pakistan border. No traditionally
masculine men at the border means no men of peace in the nation.
My Warning to the APA About the Draft Guidelines — Chris Ferguson,
Ph.D.
Chris J. Ferguson is a
professor of psychology at Stetson University. He has published one book on
video game science, Moral Combat: Why the War on Violent Video Games is Wrong
as well as a murder mystery, Suicide Kings.
In August, 2018 before the APA’s Council of Representatives
(of which I am a member) voted on the controversial practice guidelines for
boys and men, I shared with them a review I conducted of the proposed
guidelines. Unfortunately, I was unsuccessful in interesting the Council in
discussing the scientific merits and shortcomings of the guidelines. The
version finally announced publicly has some superficial changes, but
fundamental problems remain. Specifically, the guidelines lack a broad
scientific base, particularly an understanding of biological contributors to
gender identity, tend to use terms such as “traditional masculinity” in ways
that lack conceptual integrity and are often stereotyped, and tend to read too
often as a socio-political ideology than a balanced and nuanced scientific
review.
I don’t doubt the need for practice guidelines for men. Men
do struggle with many issues, such as lower school success, higher suicide and
violence. A data-based, objective and compassionate document could have been
useful. However, the APA’s practice guidelines’ obsession with “traditional
masculinity” ultimately failed to help practitioners find compassion and
understanding of those with values different from their own and have probably
offended and turned away many men who might most have benefited from
psychotherapy.
Unfortunately, from my view the APA has a poor track record
of biased and scientifically misleading policy statements including practice
guidelines. Usually such statements exaggerate the consistency, quality, and
policy applications of a field of study. The APA’s statement on violent video
games, my own field, does not resemble the actual science, which has not
provided good evidence for links with aggression. Other statements on issues
ranging from abortion to a divisional review of spanking have, likewise, stoked
scientific controversy. In many cases, statements are developed by scholars
reviewing their own work and declaring it beyond debate, a clear conflict of
interest. At present, the APA’s policy statements often read like marketing
tools rather than objective reviews. Fixing this will require significant
change in how APA policy statements and practice guidelines are developed and
reviewed. Until then, they should be regarded with scepticism.
Who Will Mount Up and Ride to the Sound of the Guns? — B.
Christopher Frueh, Ph.D.
B. Christopher Frueh
is a professor of psychology at the University of Hawaii, Hilo. Under the pen
name “Christopher Bartley,” he is author of They Die Alone and other hardboiled
novels.
The APA’s latest manifesto is an embarrassment to the
discipline of psychology. It is an abdication of scientific responsibility,
denying biological and evolutionary realities in favour of a progressive
fantasy pushed by “social justice” and “feminist” ideologies. It is harmful to
all members of our society and dangerous to our national security. Masculine
qualities like rugged individualism, courage, stoicism, ambition, and a
willingness to protect and sacrifice for others helped secure the freedom and prosperity
that so many now take for granted.
At a time when many academics are virtue-signaling by
whining about “toxic masculinity,” taking offense at every imagined
“microaggression,” and listing their “pronouns” in their email signature
blocks, we should ask where does this line of absurdity end? Perhaps the next
APA manifesto will seek to abolish religion, athletics, heterosexual marriage,
eating meat, etc. Whatever happened to common sense? And where does this take
us? Will we next ban books, movies, and podcasts by people named Ernest
Hemingway, Clint Eastwood, or Jocko Willink?
How will this affect our armed forces, police and fire
departments, and all the other dangerous but important jobs that must be done?
Who will volunteer to mount up and ride to the sound of the guns to protect our
nation and its founding principles when masculinity has been smothered in our
society?
“We make men without
chests and expect from them virtue and enterprise. We laugh at honour and are
shocked to find traitors in our midst.”
—C.S. Lewis, The
Abolition of Man (1943)
The APA Guidelines for Working with Male Clients: Ambitious
but Severely Flawed — Roy Wayne Meredith III
Roy Wayne Meredith III
is a graduate student of social work at Columbia University.
Practitioners should treat the new APA guidelines with
caution. For starters, the document itself is poorly written. It frequently
employs passive sentence constructions and modal verbs, such as “may,” “can,”
or “it has been suggested that.” This strongly implies that the authors lack
confidence in the robustness of the research they cite.
In some cases, this hesitation is clearly warranted.
Psychologists such as Scott O. Lilienfeld have demonstrated that
microaggression theory, for example, lacks construct validity. Seeing that its
proponents classify offenses that range from calling on students too often to
outright racist slurs as microaggressions, it is hard to imagine how Lilienfeld
could be wrong. However, the authors fail to mention this and other glaring
problems.
Some statements are so obvious that I wonder why the authors
even bothered to include them, such as “inconsistent and contradictory messages
can make the identity formation process complicated for some populations of
boys and men.” No kidding.
Nevertheless, the APA deserves praise for emphasizing the
importance of fatherhood in childhood development, the gendered bias that
therapists often have against male clients, and the pitfalls boys and men face
in educational settings. Furthermore, the authors correctly assert that racial
disparities in criminal sentencing, health outcomes, and other measures of
welfare are significant enough to compel therapists towards social activism.
That these are still pressing issues, however, is even more reason to ground
our solutions in research that utilizes rigorous methodology.
The APA Guidelines Are Unethical — Pamela Paresky, Ph.D.
Pamela Paresky writes
for Psychology Today and is a senior scholar in human development and
psychology at the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE). Dr.
Paresky’s opinions are her own and should not be considered official positions
of FIRE or any other organization with which she is affiliated.
The APA’s code of professional ethics requires that
psychologists respect clients’ “dignity and worth” and their “rights to
self-determination.” It urges them to “take precautions” about “potential
biases,” to refrain from taking on a clinical role when “other interests” could
impair their objectivity and reminds psychologists that they must “establish
relationships of trust” with clients. The new guidelines violate these ethical
standards. The guidelines’ basic premises are rooted in a set of ideological
biases that are likely to impair psychologists’ objectivity, ability to respect
the dignity and worth of certain clients and make it difficult if not
impossible to establish a therapeutic relationship based on trust.
The guidelines include, “Psychologists understand the impact
of power, privilege, and sexism on the development of boys and men and on their
relationships with others,” and “When working with boys and men, psychologists
can address issues of privilege and power related to sexism.” Regardless of
what a given male client brings to therapy, it appears that “issues of
privilege and power related to sexism” can be addressed.
Some of the guidelines are positive. But psychologist Ryon
McDermott, who was among those who drafted the APA guidelines, admitted in the
APA’s own publication that they contain an overarching ulterior motive: “If we
can change men,” he explained, “we can change the world.”
Changing men starts with the premise that there is something
wrong with men. If these guidelines are followed, how will men who see
themselves as “traditionally masculine” trust that their sessions will be used
for their own goals of psychotherapy rather than to address their masculinity?
Any guidelines issued by the APA should be for more
effectively treating the problems that clients bring to psychotherapy. Ulterior
motives are countertherapeutic and undermine trust. These guidelines subvert
the purpose of clinical psychology and will jeopardize the public’s trust in the
profession.
The Passive War of Attrition on Masculinity — Natalie
Ritchie, M.A.
Natalie Ritchie writes
for Child Magazine and is the author of Roar Like a Woman: How Feminists Think
Women Suck and Men Rock (2018).
For years, feminism has fought a passive war of attrition on
masculinity, starving it of honour. With its 2018 guidelines, the inherently
feminist APA has gone on the offensive. This assault is not as simple as
misandrist pay-back by feminism for a history’s-load of oppression. It has its
roots in the feminist need to be man-identical. When your idea of gender
equality is a 50/50 breakdown of men and women in any given situation—that is,
when you think that 100 percent of women should do what 100 percent of men
do—masculinity poses a threat. Making men less like men (and more like women)
becomes a backdoor route to making women more like men. Such gender denial is
the new Aryanism; unscientific, unprofessional, immoral. Insisting that each
gender is “wrong” and must be more like the other to be “right” cripples both
and shrivels the human footprint to only what the genders have in common.
“Traditional masculinity” is a sorry litany of criminality,
suicide, violence, and “sexism,” the APA claims. Yet it seems that the APA’s
real target is the core male trait of taking responsibility. It was
responsibility that channelled the male spirit of efficiency into the
industrial and digital revolutions’ sensational wealth; that deployed the male
instinct for combat to highlight both sides’ viewpoints to the max in the
superb Western legal system; that kick-started democracy when the nobles
heavied bad King John into signing the Magna Carta; that met Messerschmitts
with Mustangs and Spitfires; that turned up to work (or risked livelihood and
life to strike for the 40-hour week); that made good fathers.
Many of the male problems the APA laments vanish with taking
responsibility. Yet “responsibility” only appears twice in the guidelines’ 36
pages, “responsibilities” once.
A Case Study of Traditional Masculinity — Clay Routledge,
Ph.D.
Clay Routledge is a
professor of psychology at North Dakota State University. He authored the 2018
book Supernatural: Death, Meaning, and the Power of the Invisible World.
Instead of focusing on the cherry-picked research, over-reliance
on blank slate thinking, or the general progressive ideological bias observable
throughout the guidelines, I would like to share a personal, but I hope
helpful, anecdote.
The rule in our house when I was a kid was we had to
participate in at least one sport or related physical activity. I wasn’t very
interested in typical sports, so I decided to give martial arts a shot. I was
just a scrawny kid with glasses who was regularly picked on by bigger boys so
learning how to fight seemed like a good idea. I learned so much more.
For the first few years of training, I was still just a
skinny kid, but I was developing a variety of psychological, social, and
physical skills that would prove very helpful as I got older. Our martial arts
gym was old-school, run with military-like structure. Workouts and sparring
were intense. The training disciplined my mind and body, gave me the
opportunity to work my way through a hierarchical system that rewarded hard
work and dedication, and helped me become a strong and focused young man.
The training involved a healthy dose of traditional
masculinity—aggression, stoicism, confidence, and competitiveness. Critically,
using a traditional martial arts philosophy and traditional military-style
teaching methods, this training took advantage of traditional masculinity to
build positive characteristics such as dignity, restraint, personal
responsibility, and a sense of duty to others.
Mental illness is a real problem that haunts even some of
the strongest of men. And all of us, men and women alike, grapple with
psychological vulnerabilities and life stressors. But I would argue that
traditional masculinity is not the problem. Instead, it can be part of the
solution to the problems that plague many modern boys and men. With proper guidance
from positive male role models and institutions that give males a code to live
by and connect them to a purpose-providing moral system, traditional
masculinity plays a vital role in creating healthy men as well as building and
preserving safe and prosperous societies.
Psychotherapy Is Meant to Be Personalized Medicine — Sally
Satel, M.D.
Sally Satel is a
practicing psychiatrist, a lecturer at the Yale University School of Medicine,
and a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute.
The APA guidelines risk subverting the therapeutic
enterprise altogether because they emphasize group identity over the
individuality of the patient.
Psychotherapy is the ultimate personalized medicine. The
meanings patients assign to events are a thoroughly unique product of their
histories, anxieties, desires, frustrations, losses, and traumatic experiences.
“Gender-sensitive” psychological practice, as the APA calls
it, is questionable because it encourages clinicians to assume, before a
patient even walks in the door, that gender is a cause or a major determinant
of the patient’s troubles.
To be fair, the APA does emphasize that it does not intend
to mandate changes in practice. But therapy is a delicate business not readily
amenable to guidelines tailored to gender—or to any group affiliation, for that
matter. So when the APA encourages practitioners to engage in vaguely defined
activities— “address issues of privilege and power related to sexism” or “help
boys and men, and those who have contact with them become aware of how
masculinity is defined in the context of their life circumstances”—it seems
more focused on a political agenda than on the patient.
Leading with an ideological agenda risks alienating the
patient and thereby compromises a critically important phenomenon called the
therapeutic alliance. In his classic book Persuasion and Healing (1961),
psychiatrist Jerome D. Frank describes the alliance as “the therapist’s
acceptance of the sufferer, if not for what he or she is, then for what he or
she can become.”
Through that therapeutic relationship, the patient gains
insight, a degree of mastery over himself and alternative ways of thinking
about his problems. Frank believed, as do many therapists today, that the power
of a clinician’s dedication to the patient is not only essential but may also
be the most active ingredient in the therapy itself.
People seeking help are in a state of suggestibility.
Therapists need to be careful about imposing their “gender-sensitive” worldview
on them.
The New APA Guidelines Are Predatory — Shawn T. Smith,
Psy.D.
Shawn T. Smith is a
licensed, clinical psychologist. He is the author of several books, including
The Practical Guide to Men: How to Spot the Hidden Traits of Good Men and Great
Relationships.
The APA, not known for its high testosterone level, seems to
view masculinity with the same distaste a Disney princess has for manual labour.
They speak of masculine traits with deep suspicion, even though their safe
world rests on the backs of men who possess those traits.
I won’t spend these few paragraphs repeating the efforts of
those defending masculinity. Instead, I hope to persuade other clinicians to
take a stand against the APA’s ideologically-driven guidelines for working with
men and boys.
If the APA were truly concerned about males, they would
strive to help those who are suffering by building on the time-tested virtues
of masculinity. Instead, they frame the “patriarchy”—that nebulous bĂȘte noire
of radical feminism—as the root of all suffering. Seeing the world through that
tainted lens, their response to men and boys can only be that of the radical
feminist: tear men down. Denigrate noble traits. Advance feminist ideology at
all costs.
Under this APA policy, any man unwise enough to trust a
psychologist is to be chastised for his alleged privilege and sexism, and he is
to be re-educated into something far more docile and apologetic than a
full-blooded man.
If the predatory nature of the APA’s new guidelines isn’t
immediately apparent, consider the inverse:
psychologists organizing ‘en masse’ to dismantle femininity, treating each
female patient as an opportunity to reshape women as the APA sees fit.
People generally seek psychologists in moments of
vulnerability. It is plain vicious to seize on that vulnerability for the sake
of advancing an ideology. Ironically, the APA’s mercenary approach to the
culture war—a war in which they have no business taking sides—exemplifies the
destructive and ruthless qualities they wrongly attribute to honourable men
everywhere.
Professional Best Practices Are Not Ideological — Debra W.
Soh, Ph.D.
Debra W. Soh is a
Canadian science columnist, political commentator, and the co-host of
Wrongspeak.
I have several concerns regarding the APA guidelines for
practice with men and boys. Perhaps a good starting point would be the belief
that masculinity is an “ideology,” “socially constructed,” and “learned during
socialization,” as opposed to biological and the result of hormonal influence.
Secondly, the guidelines portray abusive behaviour as a natural extension of
being male-typical, as opposed to being due to anti-sociality and negative
views about women.
If we were to follow this suggested line of thinking,
masculinity should be something that can be corrected and unlearned. As someone
who has worked clinically with incarcerated male sexual offenders and violent
offenders, I can tell you that therapeutic interventions informed by
intersectional feminism and its ideas about “power and privilege” will have
zero effect when working with these populations.
Progressive talking points, like calling gender a
“non-binary construct” and openly advocating for “participation in social
justice activities,” have no place in a document detailing professional best
practices. They foreshadow a future in which psychologists must alter their
therapeutic approach, not in the best interest of their client, but because
this new orthodoxy is trendy, and they are afraid of having their licenses
revoked. Psychological services should be scientifically-informed and cater to
an individual’s needs and history, instead of being based on sweeping,
politically motivated assumptions about their sex.