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To: Doctor Raoul
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Under questioning, Wade was apologetic for his remarks, which he acknowledged to be thoroughly unprofessional — although he's made no move to apologize to Sommers herself and spent most of our call taking potshots at her. According to Wade, Sommers roused the anger of the people in the crowd — especially minorities, many of whom, according to Wade, had no advanced degrees — by insisting that scientific research was needed to validate the effectiveness of government programs. That hardly seems a crime. But Wade also said that what was really bothering Sommers was that she had been left feeling "insulted" and "flustered" by HHS officials, who had refused to let her finish her presentation. So why exactly had Sommers been silenced by HHS officials to begin with?

I called Alvera Stern, acting director of the Division of Prevention Application and Education at HHS, for comments on what had happened to Sommers. Readers of National Review Online will know that I'm a fan of Sommers and her work, so I thought it was particularly important that I have a taped copy of the session, so as to fairly establish the truth of what happened. To her credit, Stern was kind enough to provide me with both a transcript of the session and a copy of the tape. Unfortunately, Stern's explanation for what happened simply doesn't hold up.

Stern told me that Sommers's talk had been cut off because she'd run overtime. But it's obvious from the tape that Sommers was silenced at the moment she began to raise questions about "Girl Power" — the female counterpart of the "Boy Talk" drug-prevention program that was the subject of the conference. And even Jay Wade — hardly a Sommers fan — told me that it was Sommers's attempt to discuss Girl Power that had led to her being silenced. The tape makes it clear that Linda Bass, the HHS official who shut Sommers off, said nothing at all about Sommers's time being up. Bass simply insisted that any discussion of "Girl Power" was out of bounds — although it would seem to be impossible to properly evaluate a proposal to create a "Boy Talk" counterpart to "Girl Power" without considering the effectiveness of the Girl Power program itself.

So what exactly is "Girl Power," and why were HHS officials so determined to prevent anyone from raising questions about it? The Girl Power program was a cornerstone of Clinton HHS secretary Donna Shalala's pro-androgyny feminist agenda, and a favorite of Hillary Clinton's. It's obvious from the transcript that the officials who run "Girl Power" were unwilling to allow any questions about the efficacy of the program to be raised. Sommers's daring to imply that overcoming femininity in girls and masculinity in boys might not be the most effective way to fight teenage drug abuse is the real reason she was put upon and effectively ejected by this crowd of HHS consultants and administrators.

The highly questionable premise of the Girl Power program is that making girls less traditionally feminine will somehow cause them to be less likely to smoke, take drugs, or get pregnant. Of course, most people would expect the opposite effect. Isn't it precisely because girls are nowadays less bound by traditional codes of feminine behavior that we are seeing increases in smoking, drug-taking, and premarital sex among girls? Given the exceedingly debatable assumption upon which it rests, Christina Hoff Sommers can certainly be forgiven for asking to see some empirical research confirming that the Girl Power program actually succeeds in reducing substance abuse by making girls less traditionally feminine.

But of course it would be naive to think that reducing drug abuse is the real purpose of either the Girl Power or Boy Talk programs. A careful reading of the reams of slick, expensive pamphlets put out by HHS under the heading of Girl Power makes it clear that the problem of drug abuse is just a convenient bureaucratic excuse for housing these programs in the Center for Substance Abuse and Prevention division of HHS. The obvious purpose of Girl Power and Boy Talk is feminist social engineering.

How exactly does encouraging girls to shoot, hunt, or play the drums, instead of sew and dance make them less likely to smoke or get pregnant? The Girl Power pamphlets cite statistics in which female athletes get pregnant at lower rates than non-athletes, but that could easily be a "selection effect," rather than actually caused by going out for the team. This is obviously something that needs to be carefully researched. And doesn't Girl Power's own resort to statistics validate Sommers's point that real empirical studies are needed to show that the Girl Power program actually reduces drug abuse?

The truth is, Health and Human Services' Girl Power and Boy Talk programs are simply government-funded attempts to promote the training for sexual androgyny mandated by feminist Carol Gilligan and her followers. Studies by Gilligan, and such groups as the American Association of University women — studies that describe alleged "crises" of sexual identity among American girls and boys — are the only "evidence" that HHS officials will allow to be invoked in assessments of these programs. Of course, in a series of brilliant studies, psychologist Judith Kleinfeld — as well as Sommers herself, in her extraordinary book, The War Against Boys — have already thoroughly debunked Gilligan's notion of a "girl crisis." That is why Sommers was cut off by HHS officials as soon as she was about to raise questions about the shaky empirical foundations of the Girl Power and Boy Talk programs.

Do Girl Power and Boy Talk really reduce teen drug use? It doesn't matter. Is there really a "girl crisis" or a "boy crisis?" It doesn't matter. Ultimately, the Clinton holdovers at HHS aren't interested in these questions, because the real rationale for their pet programs never really had anything to do with teen substance abuse — or even educational competence — to begin with. All of these rationales are simply bureaucratic window dressing for channeling literally millions of government dollars into a misguided and chimerical attempt to break American girls of their femininity and American boys of their masculinity. Christina Hoff Sommers understood this, and that is why she was silenced, insulted, and ejected from a conference before she could speak the truth. Will the Bush administration acquiesce in this outrage?

Maybe we should contact Stanley Kurtz at the National Review Online. He might want to cover this little war. LOL!

13 posted on 01/26/2002 1:51:23 AM PST by kcvl
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To: kcvl
Surely these Girl Power programs aren't teaching girls to shoot and hunt. I can't imagine them even suggesting it.
25 posted on 01/26/2002 3:57:41 AM PST by TN Republican
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To: kcvl
I have said it before about the Department of State, the Department of Commerce, the Department of Justice, and now the Department of Health and Human Services: "The failure to purge the Clintonistas from positions of power in the government will guarantee that Bush is a one-term president." Don't forget: Clinton did a massive purge of the government when he took office in '93 - Travelgate was only the visible tip of the iceberg.
67 posted on 01/26/2002 6:14:32 AM PST by bimbo
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To: kcvl
Great post. What it shows is that there are people desperate to get at your children and teach them their own agenda. And they won't take no for an answer as long as your children are in public school. If you think that your public school is different, think again. There is some bit of propaganda in some program that is being fed to them. Even a little bit is hard to overcome.
74 posted on 01/26/2002 6:29:08 AM PST by Demidog
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To: kcvl
"Isn't it precisely because girls are nowadays less bound by traditional codes of feminine behavior that we are seeing increases in smoking, drug-taking, and premarital sex among girls"

Yes, this is key - women nowadays do not have any sense of their real value. God made woman for a specific purpose - to be a helper to her husband. My Pastor preaches to the husbands in our church that God made a woman from Adam's rib - which is Adam's side - indicating God meant for a woman to have an equal side-by-side place. God did not use a bone from Adam's foot - indicating a man should tread all over a woman; nor did God choose a bone from man's head - indicating a man should lord it over a woman. The bone came from Adam's side - indicating they were to be a helper to each other. Your church may teach differently, but that's what my Pastor teaches to our church. He also tells husbands they are responsible for the success of the marriage. If you are not the leader of the relationship before you get married, you will not be the leader after you're married.

172 posted on 01/26/2002 2:23:01 PM PST by Sueann
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