Two Males, No Men. By Daniel J. Flynn.
Two Males, No Men. By Daniel J. Flynn. The American Spectator, July 12, 2013.
Zimmerman, Trayvon, and Manliness. By Rush Limbaugh. RushLimbaugh.com, July 12, 2013.
Flynn:
They
don’t make men like they used to. One can consult a Danish study that shows
plummeting testosterone levels for scientific confirmation of this. Or, one
could more easily turn on any cable news network’s wall-to-wall coverage of the
Zimmerman-Martin case, a tragedy involving two males fumbling in the dark on
how to be men.
Whatever
the protagonists may be guilty of they are surely innocent of being men. The
six female jurors, not tasked to reach a verdict on the manhood of the central
players, nevertheless know the truth of this more than other trial observers.
The Venusians know the Martians better than they know themselves. And vice
versa — what do they know of x chromosomes who only x chromosomes know?
On the
maturity count, Trayvon Martin might reasonably plead not guilty by reason of
chronology. Seventeen-year-old boys quite often act like, in the vernacular of
Zimmerman, “f—-ing punks.” Most grow out of it, but Mr. Martin unfortunately
will not get that chance. Rarely, in spite of their exaggerated masculine
posturing, do teenage boys behave as mature males.
Martin’s
Twitter feed reads as a parody of poor grammar and an even more impoverished
vocabulary. There, he’s a “No Limit N-gga,” girls he knows are “bitches” and
“hoes,” and the primary extracurricular activity he immerses himself in is
marijuana. The gold-teeth smile, the tattoos, the ten-day suspension from
school, and all the rest appear as pathetic attempts to assert his virility.
Yet, as his supporters point out, Trayvon also liked Skittles and Chuck E.
Cheese’s. The presentation that Trayvon affected and the Trayvon that his
supporters present are, like so many making the journey from adolescence to
adulthood, at war internally.
George
Zimmerman, in contrast, projects a courtroom image of a meek pudgeball who
wouldn’t (couldn’t?) hurt a fly — and not in a Norman Bates way. Perhaps this
is the effect that his lawyers intended. But it jibes with what we know.
According to one unidentified witness, Zimmerman endured a domineering mother’s
frequent beatings and a docile father who failed to stick up for his kids. His
mixed-martial arts instructor described him as “physically soft,” a student who
lacked athleticism and “didn’t know how to really effectively punch.”
One
wonders if the cage-fighting classes, the pursuit of a career in law
enforcement, and a firearm kept ready to fire were Zimmerman’s ways of
discovering his elusive manhood in a manner akin to Trayvon’s tattoos, coarse
language, and demonstrative drug use. With the teenager sans a father in the
home to serve as guide, and the neighborhood-watch captain growing up watching
the cowed captain of his home, the pair’s past altered their future as much as
anything else did.
Zimmerman’s
screams and Trayvon slamming Zimmerman’s head into the concrete weren’t the
acts of men. A man is neither a woman nor an animal. The proper response to an
assault by a 158-pound teenager isn’t to scream for help or grab for a gun. It
is to punch back or better yet subdue and issue a spanking. And a sucker punch,
the repeated hitting of a downed opponent, and the bashing of a skull against
the concrete doesn’t pass muster with the Marquess of Queensberry. Perhaps the
“No Holds Barred Fighting” dojo that Zimmerman had signed up for would approve.
Their
households lacked strong male role models; their society, even more so. Four in
ten American kids enter the world without their father married to their mother.
When schoolboys begin to exhibit traits natural to their sex, the energetic
fellows earn the wrath of detention and Ritalin. Any game that highlights
contact — from dodgeball to football — comes under attack. Primetime television
celebrates the fop and makes a buffoon out of fathers (see Simpson, Homer;
Everybody Loves, Raymond). Jobs relying on the physical characteristics favored
in males have been outsourced to robots and foreigners. When a pundit asked
“Are Men Necessary?” a few years back it reflected the scarcity rather than the
superfluity of the genuine article.
Civilizing
men out of existence has come at great cost to civilization. Instead of men, we
get feminine imitations lacking beauty. We get lost boys compensating by
becoming barbarians. We get Sanford, Florida, February 26, 2012.