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LYNCHED BY THE SISTERHOOD
By Jeffrey Asher
Professor of "Men's Lives"
Emeritus
Dawson College - Montreal, Quebec
In autumn 1994, I offered students at Dawson College
in Montreal the only course in Canada on Men's Lives. One young
woman asked me, "Is this another man-hating course?" I
assured her that we would examine men's and women's lives objectively
and treat them with equal respect. She smiled and chirped, "I'm
in."
Father taught me to respect ladies and that human
rights were indivisible. In the 1970s, I lectured on sexual equality
of opportunity and equality before the law. Like most men, my naïveté
about feminine politics was sustained by raging hormones.
By 1980, the woman's movement was increasingly
co-opted by the Lunatic fringe. Germaine Greer pontificated, "Women
have very little idea of how much men hate them
men do not
themselves know the depth of their hatred." Marilyn French
announced, "All men are rapists, and that's all they are ...
all men are the enemy." Further incitements to anti-male hatred
and violence exuded from Dworkin, McKinnon and their cohort of vicious
bigots. They remain required reading in feminist courses, which
exclude male faculty or authors, brainwash young women and ostracize
young men. This paranoia remains unchallenged by human rights commissions.
I proposed "Men's Lives," because the
three largest departments (Humanities, English and the Social Sciences)
offered over 83 courses with feminist titles and content, but nothing
objective about men. The Sisterhood attempted to neuter the contents
and then stalled registration for "Men's Lives." I threatened
to appeal to the Ministry of Education and the media. The few colleagues
who still dared to speak to me (off campus) warned me that my career
was in peril. I responded with righteous indignation about equality,
fairness and academic freedom. Such naïveté.
Two-thirds of "Men's Lives" students
were women, and like the men, typically open-minded, morally brave
and delightfully quick-witted. They welcomed my course as deliverance
from years of classroom male-bashing. Young men were condemned before
their classmates as stupid, patriarchal exploiters, batters and
rapists.
From the course outline: "We will examine
men's values and experiences, and the cultural meanings for men
of courage, duty, fidelity, success, family protection, career and
sexuality. The intellectual, political, scientific and cultural
achievements of men will be surveyed throughout history. Reasoned
and compassionate analysis will be used to search for reconciliation
away from sexual confrontation, so that men, women and families
may live in harmony." Four universities regularly welcomed
me as a guest lecturer. The Matriarchy went apoplectic.
Students warned me about agents provocateurs incited
by teachers to disrupt my classes. One accused me of being paid
by Playboy magazine (I wish) and my answering machine recorded anonymous
accusations of sexual abuse and death treats. One night the Chair
of Women's Studies vandalized by bulletin board, in front of a surveillance
camera! On the front page of the Montreal Gazette, she and
my department chair defended her bullying. I requested management
to terminate her supervision over my courses. A year later, she
ordered that my course exclude the term "anti-male hysteria."
Management suspended me from teaching until I removed the politically-incorrect
insight. I appealed and lost.
A "Men's Lives" assignment on sex bias
in the media required students to search the periodical indexes
for article titles with the word "men" and "women."
They were astounded to discover that the ratio of female to male
articles if 10:1, and often 20:1. Students scoured Statistics Canada
data to rebut hysteria over 'relationship,' 'domestic' and sexual
assault propaganda. From my published research, they learned that
men comprised 685 of homicide victims, 80% of suicides, 92% of AIDS
deaths, 97% of deaths on the job, double the female rate of heart
diseases and die six years prematurely. They learned about sex differences
in the brain, hormones, abilities, perception and behaviour. My
students delighted in the power of statistical research.
The Sisterhood denounced scientific methodology
and slandered by reputation. Every semester, management incited
the worst of students to complain they "felt uncomfortable"
and failed my excessively high standards. They even passed a confessed
cheater. Truthfully, I was not demanding enough. Students failed
who should never have graduated from high school. To management
complaints of excessive dropouts, I requested their retention requirements.
They indignantly denied quotas, and reprimanded me yet again. According
to union grievance officers and lawyers, never before had a teacher
been so relentlessly persecuted.
Feminist courses impel polarization and 'dumbing
down' of the curriculum, to maintain their enrolment. Evidence is
plentiful in their course outlines, typically ungrammatical, illogical,
filled with jargon and often incoherent. Since the mid-1990s, women
students and competent professors increasingly abandoned the Sisterhood
for the search for useful knowledge and successful careers.
In May of 2000, the Chair of Women studies, in
collaboration with management convened a committee which announced
"a significant number of students" in my class felt "belittled
and marginalized if they voiced their opinions or try to substantiate
any interpretation of data that may be different." (sic)
They again refused to show me the complaints. They cancelled "Men's
Lives" and ordered me prepare - within 12 days - three new
courses on "critical thinking," technology and business
ethics, for which they knew I had no training. I protested this
injustice and demanded that "Men's Lives" be reinstated.
They threatened to fire me.
Their timing was shrewd. My students were dispersed
and unavailable for protest. Of all colleagues who postured in their
classes on freedom of speech, only the president of the union rallied
to my defense (thanks, Peter). I refused to capitulate and retire
early.
In six years of evaluations, students praised "Men's
Lives" as among the best course s in the college. Over 85%
of students reported that I treated them fairly with content and
teaching that was "superior" and "outstanding."
100% agreed I treated them with "courtesy and respect."
For 30 years of evaluations, I ranked as one of the most popular,
fair, and interesting teachers. I rated highest in "enthusiasm,
approachability, tolerance, responsibility, availability, treating
students with courtesy and respect and in a fair and non-discriminatory
manner," and "motivating students to do their best."
How I miss my students' intellectual energy and curiosity. Teaching
was my life.
The termination of "Men's Lives" eliminated
the only rational opposition to political correctness and feminist
domination at Dawson College. Half of the human race remains unexamined,
except for condemnation. In 2000, Canadian universities listed two
courses on men, neither taught that year, and more than 1,617 feminist
courses, offered in programs from undergraduate to Ph.D. degrees.
Throughout higher education, The Matriarchy rules.
Radical feminists continue to win their government-subsidized
war against men, heterosexuality, the family, religion, merit, objectivity,
justice and reality. Long after the defeat of totalitarianism, radical
feminism indoctrinates students to discriminate by sex and race
and enforces censorship and repression on what is acceptable to
think and feel.
Citizens must demand reconstruction of the foundations
of objective education and liberty. Freedom of speech is essential
to maintain the ability to search for the truth. Students' minds
must be trained to challenge dogmas if democracy is to survive.
The time is long overdue for universities and colleges to eradicate
feminist intolerance and return to reason and objectivity. Dedicated
teachers are eager to reconstruct an educated and tolerant society.
Give us the call.
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