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Values Voters Summit Promotes 'New Masculinity' of Ignorance and Fury

Wendy Norris's picture

Wendy Norris is an investigative reporter working on special assignment for RH Reality Check.

The Family Research Council wants you to be manly. So the Values Voter Summit, the annual confab of ultra-conservative political and religious leaders that took place this weekend in Washington tried to be hip with a fundamentalist-inspired reenactment of "Mad Men," the popular American television drama that harkens back to the good ol' days when men were in charge and women knew their place.

According to the seminar description on "The New Masculinity," Pat Fagan, senior fellow and director of FRC's Center for Family and Religion, will discuss how "feminism has wreaked havoc on marriage, women, children and men. It is time to redress the disorder it has wrought and that must start with getting the principles and ideals for a new 'masculinism' right."

And you'll never believe what is responsible for the destruction of the male psyche.

A preview of Fagan's remarks can likely be augured from his "monogamy is good, postmodernist polyamorous social welfare state is bad" speech on "Family Diversity and Political Freedom" presented at the 2009 World Congress of Families in Amsterdam.

The three most critical problems facing men are: "Childhood education, sex education and the control of adolescent health programs."

Seriously.

Fagan continues unmasking this scourge of science-based knowledge and self-determination as a direct result of eliminating monogamy money, or abstinence-only education funding:
"By controlling these three areas (education of children, sex education and adolescent health) the culture of polyamory diminishes the influence and dismantles the authority and influence of parents of the culture of monogamy particularly in their ability to form their children as members of their own culture.  In a polemical vein, one could say they “snatch” children away from their parents and from the culture of monogamy in ways analogous to the Ottoman Turks of the 14th century who raided boys from Christian nations to train them as their own elite warriors, the Janissaries."

The last bastion of resistance, argues Fagan, is home schooling and a political movement to divert taxpayer dollars from special interests, like doctors and social workers, which serve the Mammon of safety net programs.

So, now you know where the "death panel" and "abortion on-demand" health care reform hysteria from the political right wing is coming from — doctors are the new boogeyman.

But then Fagan takes a darker and more sinister tone in his Amsterdam speech advising men "to engage in the increasingly hostile state and the polygamy culture whenever it 'raids' the territory of his family's domain." He offers no concrete examples of civilized or effective "engagement" merely vague exhortations to "fight for control over what is his and his family's just due."

After the paranoia-stoked fury that derailed any substantive public discussion at the congressional town halls this summer, it is arrogant and irresponsible to issue a call-to-arms to men using toxic allusions of violence and fear.

And if the discussion couldn't get any more prurient, it gets worse.

Joining Fagan on the dais was Michael Schwartz, chief of staff for Sen. Tom Coburn, the ultra conservative Oklahoma Republican and former obstetrician who was recently in the news as a resident of the "C Street House," a Washington, D.C., compound run by the controversial religious and political organization known as "The Family." The secretive organization promotes marital fidelity along with "biblical capitalism," a laissez-faire global economic scheme where Christian men pretty much control everything.

Coburn's C Street House roomie was none other than the very married Nevada Sen. Jon Ensign who reluctantly admitted in July to a long-standing affair with a campaign staffer. Coburn reportedly urged Ensign to break off the liaison and to pay millions of dollars in hush money to the mistress. Coburn denies the latter allegation by the mistress' husband.

The Center for American Progress notes on its Think Progress.org blog Schwartz' remarks blame the "blight" of pornography and homosexuality for the destruction of masculinity.

In an astonishingly illogical speech, the top-ranking staffer of a prominent senator who serves on key health, judiciary and national intelligence committees, inexplicably correlates the depiction of nude women and sex acts to a nefarious gay plot to recruit young boys.

Said Schwartz:

"One of the temptations that your sons are going to run into is pornography. Pornography is a blight. It is a disaster. It is...it is one of those silent diseases in our society that we haven’t been able to overcome very well. Now, I may be getting politically incorrect here. But one — It’s been a few years, not that many, since I was closely associated with pre-adolescent boys, boys who are like 10 to 12 years of age. ... After all, homosexuality, we know, studies have been done by the National Institute of Health to try to prove that it’s genetic and all those studies have proved its not genetic. Homosexuality is inflicted on people. ... all pornography is homosexual pornography because all pornography turns your sexual drive inwards. And that in fact is what it does. I know couples now who are struggling with the husband’s addiction to pornography. It’s a terrible thing. And that’s what happens. And, you know, if it doesn’t turn you homosexual, it at least renders you less capable of loving your wife. And it’s something you need to be healed of."

As Think Progress notes "Schwartz is no stranger to extreme rhetoric about the gay community":

"In 2005, he denounced the Supreme Court for giving Americans 'the right to commit buggery.' Later, he told Max Blumenthal, 'I’m a radical! I’m a real extremist. I don’t want to impeach judges. I want to impale them!' In 1987, Schwartz co-wrote 'Gays, AIDS, and You,' which according to Blumenthal, alleged that the gay community was 'using the AIDS crisis to pursue[their] political agenda.'"

Not that I held out hope that the Values Voter Summit would seriously discuss advancing a "new masculinity" of healthy personal development and spiritual worth. But Fagan and Schwartz' remarks are emblematic of a caustic strain of violent theo-fascist anti-modernism politics that has no place in American society.

And one need look no further than this confab to trace where these ignorant, vitriolic beliefs are promoted in order to incite abortion clinic violence, hate crimes against LGBT citizens and daily assaults on reproductive freedom that religious conservatives ever so conveniently denounce when tragedy strikes.


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6 comments
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Is he talking about the FLDS here? I thought a wackjob like this would approve of forcing a 13-year-old girl to marry a 56-year-old man.
Catseye  ( (|) )

Submitted by Catseye71352 on September 22, 2009 - 11:49am.

Most people in this country are against abortion. Most of us believe in monogamy. Most people believe that parents should control what their children are exposed to. Most husbands and wives believe in traditional marriages where both spouses have traditional roles (you know, like it says in the Bible). Most people are against the public option on health care reform. And the greater cause of public unrest is frustration that politicians are not listening to us, Ms. Norris. It has nothing to do with "reform hysteria." So, what is it that you believe in?casino en ligne

Submitted by Samuel on September 24, 2009 - 1:27am.

You, sir, are dead wrong on every single comment you've made here.

 

The SINGLE study that indicated that possibly a "majority" of Americans are "pro-life" was so badly worded and used such flawed methodology as to be scientifically worthless. But then you lot aren't real big on science, are you?

 

If "most of (you)" "believe in monogamy", then WHY are the rates of divorce and infidelity highest in the bible belt?

 

"Traditional roles" (man in charge of every aspect of family life and women subjugated) simply don't work anymore when most families need 2 incomes simply to provide an adequate living for themselves and their kids.

 

If you oppose the public option, you are nothing more than a shill for Big Insurance, and MOST people (85%) actually realize this.

 

Obviously, YOU believe in the Faux Noise "talking points", which are all LIES!

 Catseye  ( (|) )

Submitted by Catseye71352 on September 24, 2009 - 9:44am.

Oh, hey, it may be absolutely true that this is what 'most people believe'.  This isn't what most people actually DO however.  People get abortions, cheat on their spouses, get divorced, ignore their children, tyrannize their families and want free health care to correct the illnesses caused by lifestyles they know are unhealthy.  Maybe the cause of public unrest is actually the spasms caused by everyone choking on their own hypocrisy.

Submitted by crowepps on September 24, 2009 - 4:20pm.

Slow down, Crowepps.  You're taking this much too seriously.  That hypocrisy you see is coming mostly from the "leadership" class.  Don't take the aggravating bastards too seriously.  The rest of us have our problems, but were too busy living our lives--the best we can--on a day-to-day basis.  The world is not as grim as you see it.

Peace and prosperity to you and yours. 

Submitted by DeSoto on September 25, 2009 - 11:49pm.

It wasn't one of the 'leadership class' who protested health care reform with a sign that said "keep the government's hands off my Medicare".

Submitted by crowepps on September 26, 2009 - 3:34pm.