Tuesday, November 12, 2002 By Wendy
McElroy
Advocacy research refers to studies and
reports produced by people with a vested interest in reaching
a foregone conclusion. Politically correct feminism is
notorious for its advocacy research and for the shoddy methodology that often accompanies
political bias.
Theory
is paraded as fact, anecdotal accounts as hard data. Those who
raise contradicting evidence are slandered in ad hominem
attacks.
Such "research" could be dismissed as
worthless and irrelevant if it did not form the basis of so
much public policy. Feminist smears could be written off as
bad manners if it did not damage people's lives. As it stands,
PC feminism and the urban legends it creates hurt innocent
people. And that can never be ignored.
In 1994, Christina Hoff Sommers exposed the
urban legends feminism has perpetrated on the North American
public in her book Who Stole Feminism? How Women Have Betrayed
Women. Examples of feminist urban legends include:
-- 150,000 American women die of anorexia
nervosa each year. Sommers went to the figure's source and
found that 150,000 people have anorexia, with yearly deaths
ranging around 100.
-- domestic violence soars by 40 percent on
Super Bowl Sunday. When the source was tracked
down, the "researcher" refused to verify the data, claiming
that the study was not "for public consumption."
-- a March of Dimes study found that
battery during pregnancy was the leading cause of birth
defects. But the March of Dimes did no such study and was misquoted.
Such urban legends are used as scare
tactics to support demands for laws and increased funding to
benefit women. Meanwhile, anyone who challenges the PC
findings of flawed or non-existent "studies" is likely to
be slandered or worse. Three pioneering researchers on
domestic violence -- Murray Straus, Richard Gelles and Suzanne
Steinmetz -- encountered this PC gambit for silencing
dissent.
In 1980, the three researchers conducted a
now classic study, Behind Closed Doors: Violence in
American Families, that indicated men and women initiate
domestic violence at about the same rate, although men receive
fewer injuries. As a result of this study and continuing
research, Straus' career was injured by bitter personal
attacks, including a false rumor that he was a wife-beater. As
Gelles commented, almost every male researcher or writer who
counters feminist urban legends is branded as
a batterer.
Female researchers fare no better.
Steinmetz's family -- including her children -- were
threatened with physical violence and a conference at which
she was to speak received a bomb threat.
To this day, most of the people I know who
speak out with any effectiveness against PC feminism are
slandered and targeted for intimidation.
Certainly, I receive my share of strange
libels and threats. Yet it is essential that thug-like
strategies not be allowed to silence valid research and
dissenting opinion.
It is important for people to regain
confidence in the objective research that is fundamental to
establishing facts. Scare tactics have been so overused by PC
advocates that a "Peter and the Wolf Syndrome" is starting to
set in. Inaccurate and shoddy "research" has been used to
sound alarm bells so often that a cynical public is starting
to ignore valid data. Who can blame them for this
reaction?
But honest research is possible, and the
media must cease being complicit in ringing false alarms and
spreading inaccuracies. Even cursory attention to common-sense
guidelines would allow journalists and reporters to filter out
the worst of the legends that pose as fact instead of passing
them on to listeners as "news."
What are some of these common-sense
guidelines? The media should ignore, or severely question, any
report:
-- with highly emotive language;
-- with specific policy recommendations or
funding demands;
-- with a "snapshot" approach rather than
data over time;
-- with internal and unexplained anomalies
or contradictions;
-- without collaborating empirical
evidence;
-- without a statement of parameters, e.g.
margin for error;
-- without disclosure of researchers'
relevant affiliations;
-- which has an unrepresentative or small
sampling;
-- which does not attempt to verify the
accounts;
-- which stresses anecdotal accounts
-- which does not independently verify
accounts from subjects
Moreover, the media should stop treating
slander as though it was a counter-argument. When men who
question feminist data are bashed as batterers, reporters
should demand hard evidence for this criminal charge. When
women who speak out are threatened and slandered, journalists
should expose the feminist preference to destroy lives instead
of dealing with arguments.
If the media took that first step, perhaps
then the public would regain confidence in another essential
aspect of public debate. The idea of an honest disagreement is
possible between people who respect each other instead of the
mud-slinging matches that pass for dialogue on "hardball" talk
shows.
I learned that respectful disagreement was
possible from Queen Silver, a woman who was my best friend
and inspiration up until her death a few years ago. We
disagreed on almost everything political. From Queen, I
discovered that someone who diametrically opposes me on
important issues could have a good heart and care every bit as
much as I do about justice.
A generation has been raised to believe
that shouting is debate, defamation of character is argument
and valid research does not exist. This PC legacy must not be
allowed to stand.
Wendy McElroy is the editor of ifeminists.com and a research fellow for The
Independent Institute in Oakland, Calif. She is the author and
editor of many books and articles, including the new book,
Liberty for Women: Freedom and Feminism in the 21st Century
(Ivan R. Dee/Independent Institute, 2002). She lives with her
husband in Canada.
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