8 Apr 2016

The Father Love That Dare Not Speak Its Name

Angelo Agathangelou: Originally known by the title I presented above and more recently as 'The Real Love That Dare Not Speak Its Name', it has been too long since our fellow father's rights activist Sir Bob Geldof's attempt to begin to dissect the quagmire that is modern society with regards to the family and the misandric path taken by the now secret kangaroo UK family courts. Too long because after years of campaigning the situation is even worse for fathers today and it seems that all we [the global award winning fathers' rights campaign for several consecutive years 'F4J' and the wider movement that has carried the torch forward] have achieved is the solidification of the gynocentric feminist position. Therefore please find once again a copy of the abridged version below of an historic document, a damning marker of how very far it still remains for us to climb and must read for any in the movement.
***
A Sometimes Coherent Rant
BOB GELDOF
PROLOGUE
BECAUSE OF STATEMENTS I have made on TV and elsewhere, I was invited by the editors to participate in the seminars convened by the Cambridge Socio-Legal Group, and to write what can clearly only be a lay view for this book. If my contribution is of any use, it will be, I suppose, in the shape of the amateur absolutist and iconoclast. The kicking up of an impassioned, but informed, fuss is the role Nature seems to have assigned me. Family law is not my field of expertise but it is certainly my field of experience and like many, many men in this country, it left me feeling criminalised, belittled, worthless, powerless and irrelevant. I wrote this chapter very quickly, allowing those emotions to determine the outcome.
I had no idea, and did not even care, whether it made sense or had any basis in fact but it was all true, and was what I and thousands more had experienced and found wanting. I assumed that my eminent collaborators in this work would be embarrassed by me and unwittingly patronising. They were not. They were in fact hugely tolerant, sympathetic and often, to my dismay, in agreement with my inchoate groping towards the dark heart of this matter. I learned much from them.
They sent me papers which put solid, researched fact behind my assumptions and observations. They argued amongst themselves, and with me, over parts of the piece. In the end, however, I have changed nothing because I believe still that what I wrote is true and just. Its emotional tone is what is required to change this hugely destructive assault on our personal lives, which in turn endangers this society through an onerous and disgraceful Family Law and the system that must implement it.
I have tried incorporating supportive texts and arguments into the body of the piece to lend a greater credibility or weight—texts which my colleagues sent me, arguments which were thrashed out in the seminar—but it seemed presumptuous. I do not want to give the impression that I am an expert or
pseudo-professional. I am not. But maybe, unlike them, I am someone lacerated by this law, which contributed massively to the misery of my family. That is expert enough. Instead, claiming, and being allowed privileged, non-academic and profoundly unprofessional behaviour by my weary editors, I have included in an addendum the relevant texts, quotes, arguments and statistics (referring to them in the main text by number, with the references I have come across). I hope they serve three functions: firstly, they give credence to my uninformed thought; secondly, they make me appear a little less extreme or idiotic; and finally they may help force the sure and soon day that these baleful diktats will be scornfully shoved aside.
* * *
Family Law as it currently stands does not work. It is rarely of benefit to the child, and promotes injustice, conflict and unhappiness on a massive scale.
29,43,45
This law will not work for the reason that society itself and society’s expec-tations have changed utterly. Law must constantly evolve in order to keep pace with the dynamics of the society within which it is framed. Social law, specifically that governing human relationships, will need to evolve ever faster particularly in an age of unprecedented and confusing change. Deeply cherished nostrums of the ages are as nothing when confronted with a different moral structure to that in which those beliefs took root. The endless proposed adjustments with Family Law will not do. They do not eliminate the injustices or aid the intended beneficiaries. An unthink- ing tinkering with Family Law becomes unjustified tampering with peoples lives. Adjustments imply satisfaction with the core structure, but in the case of Family Law, my view is that this is inappropriate on the basis that this same law promotes pain, hurt and broken families in direct and unintended contradiction to its purpose.
33,43,44,45
It serves merely to compound the self-inflicted damage done to the individuals who come before it. Therefore, just as society appears to be in a state of fundamental and perhaps revolutionary change, the professionals of the law must be prepared to think afresh, and act boldly.
38,44
This would mean new basic law. I understand few believe this is necessary, and that it is too drastic or danger-ously radical or just silly but I will try to give my, no doubt, poorly conceived notions a rationale. Sometimes my attempt at being dispassionate will fail and I will be seized by the actual deep rage I feel at what the system has done to my family, myself and many others I know personally or from the over 70 plastic bin liners of letters I have received from individuals unknown to me. This amounts to thousands of letters. Many more than I ever received during Live Aid or the Boomtown Rats or at any other period of my ‘public life’. As Bob Dylan might have said ‘Something’s going on and you don’t know what it is. Do you Lord Chief Justice Whatever-your-name-is?’ We’d better find out. I will try and break down the factors that I believe have changed and which, as a result, require a change of law. Beyond that this is the story of those 70 bin liners—the love of fathers for their children.
SOCIETY
Given that the birth of children through the institution of marriage and the desired end result of Family as the basic block of society is of cardinal import-ance to our stability and social coherence we must start here.
60,61
All of the assumptions in the above sentence however are now up for grabs.
50,63
Today, Government tries to deal with differing views of what is Family, and each view insists upon equal validity. This is perhaps inevitable in an age of moral relativism, itself an adjunct to our secular times. This alone is a massive change and something some members of the judiciary seem to be unable to grasp. The real and significant change that occurred however, the paradigm shift as an American might say, was of course, the ‘emancipation’ of women.
1,34,36,38
Financial freedom, and the end of biological determinism, produced an overdue and welcome balance in society. Its disruptive consequences to the status quo however, could not be predicted but it has been massive and it has not stopped yet.
Economics determine social arrangements. It has affected all areas of society but most profoundly and inevitably in the relationship between the sexes and, as a result, Family. There have been other exogenous factors contributing to societal shifts but the effect of women free to enter the workplace has given rise to consumerism, altered production, home ownership and house building models, and whole areas of law and sentiment within society itself. Very little has been left unchanged by this huge and positive social movement and most of those changes have strained the old glues that bound the family into the breadwinner/nurturer/children model.
38
This model worked well enough for centuries and where it can still be sustained works well today. The cardinal and excellent difference between now and the past is that it is not clear until it is determined by the couples in question who will do the breadwinning and who the nurturing or whether it will be both simultaneously.
And yet while individuals struggle with these difficult new conundrums the law governing the, if you will, ‘intimate’ parts of society, the ‘personal’ laws, remain (though some are fairly recently drafted) resolutely unaltered in their presumptions, save for the pathetic pretence that they are gender neutral. This is a grotesque lie that all Family Law professionals have tacitly agreed to be The Real Love that Dare Not Speak its Name
3
party to, as willingly acknowledged by nearly all the lawyers I have talked to on
this issue.
26,28
And regardless of whether the professionals acknowledge it to be or not, the vast majority of my correspondents, friends and others regard it to be so. If this is the commonly held view then the law will change. It is simply a question of when.
The law appears unwilling or unable to accept the change in the way we now barter our relationships. The altered state of women has of course produced the altered state of men. Men cannot be the same because women are not.
5
The law will not acknowledge this and it must.
4
It appears bewildered, as indeed famously do the men in question. What is their new role? What is expected of them? How do they now define themselves in this more fluid brave new world?
And if the world is more fluid, if it now flexes, bends and warps like morality itself, why is the law so rigid, so inflexible and fixed that its application to individuals binds them to an overweening and restrictive State of Orwellian proportions—the common experience of those who find themselves as victims of the secret world of Family Law.
Divorcees are not criminals, women are not angels, men are not ogres. Recent rulings have produced two classic examples of the bewildering and blinkered confusion at the inflexible heart of the law. One ruling was given against the man who had successfully raised his children at home for 5 years while his wife went to work. She got the children??? She got them because she was a woman. The eminent male judge in question said so.
4
Two weeks later, another ruling by the same judge was given against a woman who sought potential lovers on the Internet. The children were given to the man??? These rulings show no understanding of contemporary society, the appear flagrantly prejudiced and discriminatory in clear breach of any ‘gender neutral’ guidelines or law, and per-fectly illustrate the law’s inability to come to terms with the modern age. The law must now root itself in reality and not social work theorising or emotive or traditional notions of men and women’s roles. I am not the first to call for this:
a recent report published by the Work Foundation, which argues for father-friendly workplaces, notes that:
Older fathers—the dinosaur dads—are currently the ones in the most senior positions and so have a disproportionate influence. Most continue to see the world through the lens of their own generation’s experience i.e. a world of bread winning men and child-rearing women. (Reeves, 2002).
Something like 51 per cent of the workforce are women. The implication of this figure is staggering and yet does not appear to be considered in relation to family law. In addition men now hold a completely different view of the par-enting role than before. Again this is a huge philosophical shift which has enor-mous implications.
11,16,28
There are no studies which suggest that a child brought up by a man (as I was) display any marked psychological or emotional characteristics different to one raised by a woman.
3
The contention that women are inherently better nurturers is wrong.
3,4,7,22,23,28
Rulings appear to be based on the ‘sugar and spice and all things nice’ school of Biological Determinism rather than on anything more significant. The law to its eternal discredit stands in the way of great and important cultural and social progression and as such will be swept aside despite the legal Luddites who opine secretly from their benches. Kimmell (2002) is entirely correct in asserting that if the later twentieth century saw the transformation of women’s lives then the transformation of the twenty-first century involves the transformation of men’s lives, and by definition the lives of their children.
My complaints are not the moans of the unsuccessful litigant. I, in fact, was ‘successful’. This was someone dismayed by the inappropriateness of the law to the everyday.
Nor is this the complaint of the proto-misogynist, indeed the law is so inept it produces misandrists in equal measure, but rather the irritation and anger of someone who sees exact parallels with women’s struggle against assumptions, bias and prejudice.
2
LANGUAGE
We have indeed been here before. Female emancipationists of the 60s and 70s found, as they set out their agenda for change, that the very language militated against them. The issue of language becomes incredibly potent as attitudes change. Words once used frequently become freshly freighted with meaning, emotion and unintended insult and need to be changed. This of course can escalate to the realms of madness and the thought police (rather like the consequences of Family Law) but in the everyday use and their meaning, and therefore import, they carry whole ideas that when heard afresh from a different perspective need to be adjusted. This is never more true than in the language used in Family Law.
In this new era of ‘Family Liberation’ as it were, where the law itself and its officers, attendants and practitioners are the instruments of reaction and discrimination, the language used to discuss the personal appears to have been deliberately chosen to be as cold, deadening and hopeless as possible in the hope of appearing neutral. In fact it becomes heartbreaking, hurtful, rage inducing and an instrument of absolute harm in the entire process.
I cannot even say the words. A huge emptiness would well in my stomach, a deep loathing for those who would deign to tell me they would ALLOW me ACCESS to my children—those I loved above all, those I created, those who gave meaning to everything I did, those that were the very best of us two and the absolute physical manifestation of our once blinding love. Who the fuck are they that they should ALLOW anything? REASONABLE CONTACT!!!
Is the law mad? Am I a criminal? An ABSENT parent. A RESIDENT NON-RESIDENT parent. This Lawspeak which you all speak so fluently, so unthinkingly, so hurtfully, must go.
Indeed, like the law returning to a wholesale root and branch re-drafting as I believe it must, we should look while we’re here at the two most basic words that permeate this issue: Mother and Father.
If a woman ‘mothers’ a child an entire warm universe of nurturing is conjured. If a man ‘fathers’ a child it implies nothing more than the swift biological function involved in the procreative act. The importance of language is critical.
It expresses whole ideas for us and, in the case of the above loaded examples come with assumptions upon which laws are based and judgments made that can destroy people and their lives.
So society, ideas, language itself has changed but the law has not. This law framed by people, albeit ‘experts’, of other generations and classes have imbued the drafting with their own prejudices, theories and philosophies. Of course it was done with benign intent but so were all laws of previous times which have subsequently been abandoned.
43,44
Laws which no longer apply to society, notoriously become widely ignored and therefore impossible to implement. Punishment is redundant in something not recognised as a breach viz the current debate on drug legalisation upsetting generations of hitherto accepted nostrums.
Some professionals within the law accept this or at least feel an as yet inchoate discontent and anxiety towards the law on the part of huge numbers of people who fall under its intolerable weight. They seek to tinker, modify, add or subtract and adjust but it is pointless. These legalistic tweakings are utterly impotent against this growing tide of ill-feeling and anger against the law itself.
We have all moved on from its assumptions and the law must now be re-appraised and torn open to its heart, for it has no soul.
It is the movement of society that determines law, not its draftees and implementers. Society will always move forward re-inventing the moral parameters in which it needs to operate in order to facilitate its new thinking and consequently different modes of behaviour. The law runs after society—a legal pooper-scooper—sweeping up its unasked for droppings and disposing of them.
The law seeks to put a legal frame around where society has already gone in order to protect it from the often unanticipated consequences of its moral behaviour.
44,46,48,50
MARRIAGE
Marriage has become meaningless. It may retain its romantic ideal connotations but has it any import beyond the dress, the cake, the speech and the drunk uncle?
60
The law gives it no value whatsoever save the occasional and typical denial of a man’s parental rights when he is an unmarried father.
59
Some financial considerations are taken on board but these can be augmented by the courts, generally in favour of the woman, should it be required. And . . . that’s it.
41,46,60
But if the law has devalued its view of marriage to be as nothing, what does it mean outside of that view. When during a long-term relationship your girlfriend annoyingly and inevitably raises the issue of ‘commitment’ she means it. She means the commitment that couple will make to bring children into the world and raise them as useful members of society. It is this that gives the man pause for thought. If he decides to ‘commit’ it must be that, inherent in this compact, is the real, desired expectation that he, like the mother, will have the privilege of raising that child to adulthood. She in turn desires the ‘commitment’. Simply having a child isn’t a problem; but the commitment gives the sure and probably innate knowledge that the child will have better chances of survival with the two parents and their respective roles than the one. This is the real weight behind marriage which the law seems to have opted out from. How odd that we should have to repeat the obvious and the commonplace. Except that this too can no longer be assumed. Single parent families become a more frequent option.
61
With economic freedom some women feel they can now raise the child singlehandedly. But so can men.
3,8
What’s sauce for the goose as they say is sauce for the gander (except of course in the eyes of Family Law). However if these assumptions are correct, then this removes the absolute rationale behind marriage.
Nonetheless society accepts that the ideal of the two parents is more beneficial and we therefore try to encourage the continuation of the institution of marriage while doing nothing legally or economically to support it.
41
An act of grotesque moral hypocrisy.
44,48–50,54,61
While we appear to encourage our young to get married we rarely explain to them what its consequences will be. This has disastrous results. Bombarded as we are with all sorts of cultural messages, we have learned, through TV, the main cultural arbiter, and its populist programmes, a childlike and naive view of marriage with extremely high and unsustainable levels of expectation.
The happiness of the wedding day will be assumed to continue unaltered through life, as we fondly imagine it once did. And still today most of us long for and strive for a lifelong relationship with the one partner. We view this with moral approval and we’re probably right. Unfortunately today with a near 50 per cent divorce rate, it is increasingly unlikely to be the case.
We should support this institution and educate people again to the true meaning and nature of marriage. That which our parents had explained to them, those examples of a ‘normal’ marriage which were all around and clearly visible to the participants in another age, has dissolved in our more fractured society.
46,60
Equally the law must stop pretending and insisting that the dissolution of a relationship is fault-free—it never is.
17,42,58
This again is convenient but it is another disastrous moral failure on the part of the law. One understands what the law is trying to do, but in pretending it is non-judgemental (ie morally neutral) it lessens the importance of the institution and allows its dissolution to be that much easier, which is not, as I’ve argued, in society’s interest and by extension, not in the interest of the child.
44,50,54
This failure becomes full-blown when divorce is embarked upon, which I will discuss shortly. The nullity of marriage becomes a Potemkin Village of the heart upon signature of the marriage contract and the utterance of the oath.
This is the great act of State betrayal. The moment the great pantomime or charade begins. At this point the man ceases to be an equal partner in anything but name. And he’d better hang in there or risk losing everything he’s had and be forced under pain of pursuit, prosecution and imprisonment, using the full panoply of the State, to be sometimes in effect nothing better than a wage slave for life.
For both the oath and the contract are void and meaningless. What are they for? In life when one signs a contract one reasonably expects the other person to uphold their end of the deal. That is the contract’s purpose. A legal thrashing-out of obligations between the parties, failure of which to uphold results in sanctions. Certainly in business, should one fail in one’s contractual obligation, one would face dire consequences.
49,54,58,59,62
And there’s the cardinal mistake—marriage has obligations and responsibilities. It’s a grown-up’s game. But if the consequences of marriage become tiresome why not escape them? Divorce for a large number of women, but not for the man and children, is consequence free.
42,62
So what of obligation and responsibility? What of the oath, the contract? What of sanction? The law is silent.
59
At this point the initial moral failure of the law is compounded into a freefall of hypocrisy, gender- biased assumptions, discrimination, suspension of rights and all the other baleful results of a morally neutral law.
58
How can such a thing exist? It is impossible to have judgement with neutral consequence. Family Law is a sophist’s delight. No law is morally neutral and when it pretends to be, and behaves as though it were, it has, by definition, become a travesty of justice.
43
What may be done? The contract must have weight and meaning and it should spell out what is expected of the parties in the case of children and also the terms under which a marriage may be dissolved.
53
At the point of misgivings in a relationship there should be mandatory discussions with an authority who cannot recommend the dissolution of the contract.
48,51,52,57
It should spell out the consequences, which are null should it simply be two individuals who are involved, but if there are young children involved, the matter should be thoroughly dwelt upon, all help given to the participants and the consequences of divorce spelt out and they must be equally onerous to both parties. It would be helpful were this to be spelt out in pre-marriage meetings also.
49,52,53
It makes clear that this marriage is a serious thing, society takes it seriously. It is not to be entered into and dissolved on whim, making light of it is a profound mistake, this contract says so and this contract will be upheld.
49,58,59          

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