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What Men’s Rights guru Warren Farrell actually said about the allegedly positive aspects of incest. (Note: it’s even more repugnant than that sounds.)

So there has been a great deal of controversy surrounding the recent talk that old school Men’s Rights guru Warren Farrell gave at the University of Toronto. Protesters troubled by Farrell’s repugnant views on incest and date rape, among other things, blocked the entrance to the building holding the talk; police broke up the blockade. You can find various videos of what went down on YouTube. I’m not going to try to sort out all the various claims and counterclaims about what happened.

I personally don’t approve of blocking people from giving talks, even if their ideas are repugnant. But I certainly do approve of holding people responsible for what they say, and Farrell – in addition to being wrong about nearly every aspect of relations between men and women – has said some truly awful things over the years.

Exhibit A: A notorious interview he gave Penthouse magazine in the 1970s in which he discussed a book he was researching about incest, tetatively titled The Last Taboo: The Three Faces of Incest.

Let me put a giant TRIGGER WARNING here for disturbing discussion of incest and child sexual abuse.

In the interview, he argued that incest could be a good thing for everyone involved. Indeed, he waxed poetic about the possible positive effects:

“Incest is like a magnifying glass,” he told interviewer Philip Nobile. “In some circumstances it magnifies the beauty of the relationship, and in others it magnifies the trauma.”

The book Farrell was working on never appeared, and Farrell would apparently prefer it if what he said in that interview simply vanished into the memory hole, but a radical feminist site called the Liz Library has a copy of the original 1977 magazine in which it appeared, and has put high quality scans of it online. You can find them here.

Here are some of the things Farrell said in that interview. I’ve put the direct quotes from Farrell in bold; the rest is Nobile’s summary of what Farrell told him.

The article summarized the “findings” of Farrell’s (at that time incomplete) incest research, starting with his take on mother-son incest:

Mother-son incest represents 10 percent of the incidence and is 70 percent positive, 20 percent mixed, and 10 percent negative for the son. For the mother it is mostly positive. Farrell points out that boys don’t seem to suffer, not even from the negative experience. “Girls are much more influenced by the dictates of society and are more willing to take on sexual guilt.”

Apparently, in his view, girls feel bad about the abuse not so much because abuse is inherently bad, but because “society” tells them it’s bad; he returns to this theme repeatedly.

Apparently Farrell’s “findings” about father-daughter incest were not quite as cheery:

The father-daughter scene, ineluctably complicated by feelings of dominance and control, is not nearly so sanguine. Despite some advertisements, calling explicitly for positive female experiences, Farrell discovered that 85 percent of the daughters admitted to having negative attitudes toward their incest. Only 15 percent felt positive about the experience. On the other hand, statistics from the vantage of the fathers involved were almost the reverse — 60 percent positive 10 percent mixed, and 20 percent negative. “Either men see these relationships differently,” comments Farrell, “or I am getting selective reporting from women.”

Yea, that’s right. He’s saying that the overwhelming majority of the abusive men he interviewed enjoyed sexually abusing their daughters, but for some baffling reason their daughters generally didn’t enjoy the abuse. And the explanation for this is that perhaps the daughters are lying – er, sorry, “selectively reporting?”

The bit about advertisements seems to suggest that Farrell went out of his way to try to find and interview women who felt positively about being sexually abused, but still was unable to find more than a small percentage who did.

The article continues. (This is Nobile summarzing Farrell, not Farrell’s direct words.)

In a typical traumatic case, an authoritarian father, unhappily married in a sexually repressed household and probably unemployed, drunkenly imposes himself on his young daughter. Genital petting may have started as early as age eight with first intercourse occurring around twelve. Since the father otherwise extends very little attention to his daughter, his sexual advances may be one of the few pleasant experiences she has with him.

Let’s just repeat that last sentence for emphasis:

Since the father otherwise extends very little attention to his daughter, his sexual advances may be one of the few pleasant experiences she has with him.

The article continues:

If she is unaware of society’s taboo and if the mother does not intervene, she has no reason to suspect the enormity of the aberration. But when she grows up and learns of the taboo, she feels cheapened.

So the incest “taboo” is the main problem, not the abuse itself?

And here is a doozy of a quote from Farrell directly:

“When I get my most glowing positive cases, 6 out of 200,” says Farrell, “the incest is part of the family’s open, sensual style of life, wherein sex is an outgrowth of warmth and affection. It is more likely that the father has good sex with his wife, and his wife is likely to know and approve — and in one or two cases to join in.”

(Note: I’m relying on the Liz Library’s transcription of this quote; some of the text in their scan of this page is blurry.)

Farrell told Nobile that he was feeling hesitant about publishing his book, because it might encourage exploitation of daughters, but that he felt compelled to continue researching it for two main reasons:

“First, because millions of people who are now refraining from touching, holding, and genitally caressing their children, when that is really a part of a caring, loving expression, are repressing the sexuality of a lot of children and themselves. Maybe this needs repressing, and maybe it doesn’t. My book should at least begin the exploration.”

“Second, I’m finding that thousands of people in therapy for incest are being told, in essence , that their lives have been ruined by incest. In fact, their lives have not generally been affected as much by the incest as by the overall atmosphere.

Farrell also hopes to change public attitudes so that participants in incest will no longer be automatically perceived as victims. “The average incest participant can’t evaluate his or her experience for what it was. As soon as society gets into the picture, they have to tell themselves it was bad. It’s a self-fulfilling prophecy. “

According to The Liz Library, Farrell now claims that the bit about “genitally caressing” children is a misquote, and that what he really said was “generally caressing.” You can see the scan of the page here; Penthouse clearly has him saying “genitally.”

But let’s assume that Farrell is telling the truth and Nobile misheard the word. Here’s the quote again, with that one word changed.

First, because millions of people who are now refraining from touching, holding, and generally caressing their children, when that is really a part of a caring, loving expression, are repressing the sexuality of a lot of children and themselves.

I’m not sure that’s much better; he’s still talking about “touching, holding, and … caressing” children in a sexual context.

Farrell has not, to my knowledge, challenged any of the other quotes in this interview besides that one. Nor, again to the best of my knowledge, has he forthrightly repudiated the substance of what he said. If he wishes to clarify or challenge any of this I will happily give him space here on this blog to do so.

I should note that in the interview Farrell stopped short of actually advocating incest. But his reasoning here is curious, to say the least:

“I’m not recommending incest between parent and child, and especially not between father and daughter. The great majority of fathers can grasp the dynamics of positive incest intellectually. But in a society that encourages looking at women in almost purely sexual terms, I don’t believe they can translate this understanding into practice.”

So apparently father-daughter incest – ie, sexual abuse – isn’t a good idea because in a sexist society fathers are likely to do it wrong?

I encourage everyone with the stomach for it to read the entire Penthouse piece, which also discusses the incredibly creepy views of some other incest “researchers” at the time.

I will highlight more of Farrell’s problematic views in future posts.

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themisanthropicmuse
11 years ago

http://judgybitch.com/2012/11/28/things-are-not-always-what-they-seem-a-divorce-story/

Interesting reading. Apparently in FeMRA land when a man is too immature to be able to communicate martial issues with his wife and passive-aggressively decides to end the marriage by cheating on her so much that she’s left little other options but to pull the trigger, this makes the man a selfless knight in shinning armor. I kid you not.

I have come to the conclusion that there is simply NOTHING a man can do wrong in FeMRA land, well, other than being an icky feminist.

Myoo
Myoo
11 years ago

@themisanthropicmuse
But, if he hadtold his wife he was unhappy, he would have devastated her. He only cheated to give her a chance to end the marriage and feel like she was in the right. Truly he was the purest of… BARF!

Yeah, the guy was a giant asshole. If it had been the wife doing that I seriously doubt she’d be afforded the same praise.

pecunium
11 years ago

I like the “don’t be so sure he’ll cheat” followed very closely by, “JA is not easily kept”.

A small glimmer of truth managed to slip out.

reginaldgriswold
reginaldgriswold
11 years ago

I can’t stand the way JudgyBitch writes. Her writing is so cloying and smug, it just makes me ill. I can sit around and read MRAs and FeMRAs all day, but she just hits the resonating frequency of my skull for some reason.

Alan
Alan
11 years ago

And what do you think with the genders reversed?

cloudiah
11 years ago

What does who think of what with the genders reversed?

hellkell
hellkell
11 years ago

Hi Alan, what the fuck are you talking about?

reginaldgriswold: JB trips my rage centers too. Anyone that smug about their lives is just courting disaster.

Alan
Alan
11 years ago
Reply to  cloudiah

“Interesting reading. Apparently in FeMRA land when a man is too immature to be able to communicate martial issues with his wife and passive-aggressively decides to end the marriage by cheating on her so much that she’s left little other options but to pull the trigger, this makes the man a selfless knight in shinning armor. I kid you not. “

hellkell
hellkell
11 years ago

Cut the shit, Alan. The MRM regenders and regurgitates that bit all the time.

Weaksauce.

cloudiah
11 years ago

Do you have a point, Alan?

Alan
Alan
11 years ago
Reply to  hellkell

My point is that Feminism frequently trots out the same pony, but with gender on the opposite feet, and, would themisanthropicmuse still feel it was as ridiculous to put the woman on a pedestal if she had been the victim of long-term spousal abuse.

Ugh
Ugh
11 years ago

Alan, you have come no closer to describing what the fuck you are talking about.

cloudiah
11 years ago

Alan, did you even read what themisanthropicmuse linked to? It was about a dude who knew his marriage was over but didn’t want to tell his wife so instead he had a bunch of affairs to force her to divorce him.

So which pony are YOU talking about? Twilight Sparkle?

hellkell
hellkell
11 years ago

Alan, you’re going to have to do better than this.

cloudiah
11 years ago

Ponies with gender-feet. You have to admit, it’s an interesting idea, hellkell.

CassandraSays
CassandraSays
11 years ago

If you have a love for high heels does that count as having gender(ed) feet?

The Kittehs' Unpaid Help
The Kittehs' Unpaid Help
11 years ago

Depends. If it’s seventeenth-century court shoes, it’d be men’s and women’s.

hellkell
hellkell
11 years ago

Hmmm, ponies with gender-feet. Are all feet the same gender?

ALAN, I NEED ANSWERS NOW.

cloudiah
11 years ago

My cat is eating my grapes. This is the same cat that likes lukewarm chamomile tea. She’s an odd little thing. Off topic, I know…

cloudiah
11 years ago

My left foot is looking decidedly masculine to me today. (cloudiah squints suspiciously at her feet, while waiting for Alan to answer.)

CassandraSays
CassandraSays
11 years ago

My old cat loved grapes. He didn’t really eat them to much as roll around on them like they were catnip.

LBT
LBT
11 years ago

RE: Alan

…if I was being abused by my spouse for years, I wouldn’t cheat. Seriously, that’d be as dangerous as LEAVING, only without the benefit of actually getting away.

cloudiah
11 years ago

This cat also really loves mushrooms, but only the ones in a takeout dish I get from a vegan place near where I work. I don’t care for mushrooms, so I always bring them home for her and she gets so excited — she eats them, and then rubs her face on the plate when they’re gone. She seems to know I’m writing about her now, because she came over to bat at my fingers.

I suspect Alan finally got around to reading the linked story, and realized it didn’t say what he assumed it said.

clairedammit
clairedammit
11 years ago

She wasn’t abusing him. Her crime was that she was overwhelmed by the noise and chaos at JB’s house, where they have three kids, and her cheating spouse thought she might only want one child, whereas he thought he might want lots. So instead of discussing it with her, he cheated on her.

Alan, show me where one feminist, anywhere, applauded a woman for cheating on her spouse instead of discussing things with him.

The Kittehs' Unpaid Help
The Kittehs' Unpaid Help
11 years ago

Cloudiah – does that mean your cat is a hobbit? :O

I think my feet are male. They refuse to wear high heels or have their nails painted and only want to wear comfy shoes.

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