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The Report Magazine - April 24, 2000 -Volume 26 -Number 52
Divorced from reality
By TERRY O’NEILL and GEOFF LEO
A bitterly cold wind swept across the plaza
in front of the Prince George, B.C., courthouse on the afternoon
of March 28. Lawyers and their clients walked briskly to find
shelter and a warm lunch, but a small group of people about a
dozen men, two children and one other lady-stood resolutely in
front of the modern brick and glass building. There, under
leaden skies and in the face of official indifference, they
gathered to remember Darrin White, a 34-year-old Prince George
railway engineer whose suicide two weeks earlier had become a
national symbol for what the protesters say is the Canadian
justice system’s unfair treatment of men in divorce-and
family-maintenance cases.
That White became ensnared in a system that
discriminates against men seems clear, but some observers
maintain that his suicide has a more far-reaching and ominous
meaning. His death, they say, is yet another piece of evidence
showing that society has devalued the institution of marriage to
the point where much of the social cohesion it used to foster
has been lost.
Simply tweaking the system to make the rules
more equitable for men, they say, cannot get at the root of the
problem. “The liberalization of divorce laws was the biggest
disaster to hit Canada, short of common-law marriage,” asserts
Darrel Reid of Vancouver, president of Focus on the Family
Canada.
Even more worrisome to some is the
sympathetic news coverage given to White’s decision to hang
himself rather than try to cope with what was an admittedly
onerous situation (see story below). “It used to be that suicide
was considered anathema,” says Campaign Life Coalition’s John
Hof, of Langley, B.C.
“Now, we’re apparently seeing it as a valid,
albeit tragic, response to horrible circumstances. It’s become
just another ‘option.’ It’s like, you could go get a loan from a
bank or you could always kill yourself.”
Canada adopted liberalized no-fault divorce
laws in the late 1960s. What followed was a dramatic rise in the
divorce rate, to the point where about one out of every two
marriages now ends in divorce. An increasing number of people
are also choosing not to marry in the first place, and many of
those that do are entering into common-law relationships first.
In fact, Statistics Canada reported last month that 52% of women
aged 20 to 29 are now entering into common-law relationships
before marriage.
But such “trial marriages” carry a high risk:
marriages following common-law relationships are almost twice as
likely to end in separation or divorce. “The statistical story
on common-law marriages is very clear,” says Mr. Reid. “They’re
short, they’re dangerous, they don’t promote any kind of social
harmony.”
Divorce often ends up impoverishing both
partners and taking a higher than expected emotional toll, but
children are apt to suffer most. U.S. researchers have found
that children of divorced parents are far more likely to live in
poverty, do poorly in school, use drugs, have premarital sex
and, ultimately, be unable to form lasting, loving relationships
themselves.
In the wake of the publicity over men’s
rights following White’s suicide, Globe and Mail columnist
Heather Mallick took stock of all the social dysfunction that
accompanies divorce and said there’s really only one solution,
“and that is not to divorce.” Mr. Reid agrees and says society
must rid itself of the notion that “designer divorce,” where
child-custody arrangement and family-maintenance agreements are
spelled out in minute detail, can succeed in the long run.
Of the many forces aligned against marriage
(from libertarianism to the homosexual-rights movement),
feminism is the biggest enemy, charges Gus Sleiman, president of
the Men’s Educational Support Association of Calgary. “The
gender feminist movement came in to destroy marriage,” he
states. Mr. Sleiman says further that feminists’ unrelenting
attacks on men and fathers, not only within families but also in
the media and the courts, are to blame for suicides such as
White’s.
But attaching responsibility for a suicide to
an outside influence also serves to remove personal
accountability for what, until recently, was considered a
shameful and sinful act. Mr. Reid points out that, nowadays,
prevailing secular humanist ideology encourages a
live-for-the-moment mentality, so it’s no wonder that, if some
one concludes there is no way his life can get better, he will
commit suicide, “ It’s the ultimate narcissistic act,” the
social conservative activist observes.
“You might as well go out with a bang if there’s nothing to
live for.”
COPYRIGHT © 2000
A fatal escape clause
REPORT
BY TERRY O"NEILL
April 24, 2000
Statistics Canada reports that, with a rate
of 19.6 per 100,000, men were almost four times more likely than
women to commit suicide in 1997. No one can say exactly why
people kill themselves, however. Nevertheless, Todd Eckert,
president of the Prince George-based Parent and Child Advocacy
Coalition, is sure he knows why Darrin White took his own life
after he disappeared March 12: he was driven to it by a justice
system that discriminate against men at times of marital breakup.
"I hate using the gender issue," he says, " but it's a reality".
Typically, he says, courts award custody of
children to women and then force men to pay child and spousal
support. Most men are willing to live up to their
responsibilities but many are unable to, especially if they have
set up house with another women.
In White's case, he was already making
child-support payment on a14-year-old daughter from a previous
relationship when, on March 1, a B.C. Supreme Court master (a
junior judge) ordered him to pay $1,000.00 a month in alimony to
his estranged wife , Madeleine White, who had custody of their
three children. But Darrin was on stress leave and earning only
$950 a month in net income at the time.
Parliament's Special Joint Committee on
Custody and Access has proposed changes to the Divorce Act to
make the system fairer, but the Liberal government does not want
to act on the issue until after the next election.
Canadian Alliance MP Paul Forseth has now
tabled a 2,000-name petition demanding immediate action. Said
the MP, "Canadians have to ask themselves how many other
accident, work-time loses and family tragedies could have been
prevented if the justice minister [Anne McLellan] had heeded
pleas from... countless concerned Canadians to act."
COPYRIGHT © 2000
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