Marilyn York's TEDx Speech on Men's and Fathers' Rights -- Millions of Views
 
			Marilyn York on 
Dad Talk Today
She starts at 1:57 minutes
				 
			WHAT 20 YEARS OF REPRESENTING MEN IN DIVORCE 
HAS TAUGHT THIS WOMAN ABOUT FATHERHOOD
	I’m six years old and all I can think about is getting the pink Barbie 
corvette. I need five more dollars. Luckily for me, it’s Easter
 and I know that my dad always hides a coveted five dollar egg. I also 
know that the best egg is the hardest to find. This year I’m ready! It 
doesn’t take long before I spot it. Right in the middle of my sweet 
seventies swing set pole. You know, the one that runs all along the 
entire top of the set. I scramble to get the ladder and wooden yardstick
 and duct tape it to a broom handle. I fish it into the pipe and give 
that egg a good shove. It flies out the other side and by the time it 
hits the ground I’m waiting above it like an expectant father. The egg 
cracks open and inside is the very opposite of my grand prize, instead a
 perfectly formed dog turd rolls out. In that moment, I burst into loud 
hysterics at the same time my father explodes with laughter. I run as 
fast as I can to my room but he’s not far behind. It’s time for one of 
his talks. “Honey it was clear that you already learned the important 
life lesson: the harder you work, the better the payoff; so it was time 
you learn another valuable lesson: sometimes no matter how hard you 
work, you just end up with shit.” And who better to teach just this sort of hard hitting, direct and painful life lesson to six year old me, but my father? 
	I’m a family law attorney. I’ve been practicing for twenty years. I 
began in LA, but have owned my firm in Nevada since 2001. But my firm 
has a particular sub-specialty, men’s rights. My ten female employees 
and I specifically represent fathers in divorce and custody battles for 
children born out of wedlock. And guess who helps me run the business 
end of my law firm – my very own father. In my practice, we have 
represented over 2000 men, 450 of whom are fathers.
	My expertise
 not only comes from my career of representing fathers, but just as much
 from my personal life and strife. I’m a mother. My children are 23, 15,
 12 and barely 3. They come from two different mothers and three 
different fathers. Don’t fret, I won’t make you work this riddle out 
alone. I helped my ex husband raise our son whom I didn’t birth, from 
age five. I share custody of my 15 year old daughter, with her father. 
My 12 year old son lost his father to suicide when he was just 7. And my
 three year old is being raised at home with his father and me. I 
literally live my work everyday. 
	So what has twenty years of representing men in custody battles, while living my own reality show, taught me about fatherhood?
	First, that men parent differently than women and their influence is 
crucial in the development of their children. Do you know any mom in the
 world who would put dog shit in an Easter
 egg? Okay, maybe that’s a good thing. Let me better demonstrate this 
point from my legal experience. When getting my father clients ready for
 Court I prepare them for this kind of interrogation: Who is your 
children’s doctor or dentist? What is the name of their school principal
 or even their teacher? What grades did they get on their last report 
card? What grades are your children currently in? Nine times out of ten 
they miss the majority of these questions. Truly. Does that mean they 
don’t care, or that they don’t love their children as much? Surely it 
makes you wonder. But please hold your judgment. 
	Here are the 
questions my father clients can easily answer: What makes your daughter 
laugh? If your son could be a super hero, what would his power be? What 
kind of monsters do your kids fear? How high does your daughter feel 
comfortable flying in a swing? What makes your son feel defeated? Yet, 
in my experience cross-examining hundreds of mothers in Court, these are
 the harder questions for them.
	Most of us know that motherhood 
brings with it a sixth sense and unspoken bond to our children, but what
 about fathers? Even fathers feel insecure about this reality. After 
representing 450 fathers, I can count on one hand the number of fathers 
who felt secure in their instinctive role and significance to their 
children in the context of divorce. What’s interesting, however, is that
 my antidotal legal experience suggests otherwise. In 20 years of 
practice, I have had well over a hundred men take a paternity test, in 
most instances while the child was still in infancy. Do you know how 
many were wrong in predicting their biological relation to the child? 
Two. This shocked me and clearly indicated that men too have a genetic 
bond and instinct about their children, from infancy. 
	Forget my
 talk for a moment and instead I’d like to ask you to feel. Everyone 
please close your eyes. Think about your childhood. Picture your father.
 His smiling eyes, his strong hands, hear his deep voice. What did you 
love about your dad? Did he throw you high into the air, teach you to 
ride a bike, carry you home when you skinned your knees, hug you tight 
when you cried? What did your holidays look like. Father’s Day? Your 
birthday? What did it feel like to have a daddy? Secure, safe, fun?… 
Now, go back in your memories and erase your father, from every scene. 
This is what the other 40% of people in America’s childhoods looked 
like. Just under half of the people listening to me, including my 12 
year old son, felt sad or angry during the peek of your joy while 
playing along.
	Nearly 2 of every 5 children in America do not 
live with their fathers, US News and World Report 1995. According to the
 2016 Census, there are over 17 million children growing up in America 
without their fathers. Other sources estimate this figure to be as high 
as 30 million.		
	In 2011 I joined the board for a local charity 
called Nevada Youth Empowerment Project or NYEP. NYEP is a housing 
program for homeless girls ages 18-24. As the board president of this 
small charity I have been closely involved and gotten to know the girls 
and their traumatic stories over the years. We house up to 15 girls at a
 time. Hundreds of otherwise homeless girls have come through our 
program. Their backgrounds and what they have endured would haunt your 
dreams. Do you know the one thing all these girls have in common? They 
all come from fatherless homes.
	Sadly, these girls are not the 
exception, they are the rule. According to the Center for Disease 
Control: Children from fatherless homes account for 90% of all homeless 
and runaway children; 71% of high school dropouts (National Principals 
Associate Report on the State of High Schools); and 63% of youth 
suicides (USDHHS Bureau of the Census). While you listen to me speak, 
you are likely asking “why are fathers so crucial?” The answer is 
complex and better explored by a psychologist. What I can tell you is 
that the data unequivocally confirms that fathers are vital and yet laws
 and society undervalue their importance and often make it harder for 
them to be present in their children’s lives. While the fight for 
father’s rights defines my career, this essential paternal need 
threatens my own children. Remember, I’m a mother raising my son 
entirely without his father and my daughter in a different home from 
hers. Of course I am doing all that I can to see that my children defy 
the odds, but I can’t deny that they are disadvantaged. 
									
	Nearly 30 years ago, leading child psychologist Michael Lamb reminded 
us that fathers are the “forgotten contributors to child development.” 
Researchers have found that children with involved fathers have stronger
 cognitive and motor skills, elevated physical and mental health, become
 better problem-solvers, and are more confident, curious, and 
empathetic. They also show greater moral sensitivity and self-control. *
 2018 Report by the US Department of Health and Human Services. Sadly, 
while we have had this data for thirty years, the instance of 
fatherlessness continues to increase. 
	The main contributors to 
fatherlessness are divorce and out of wedlock births. Every 13 seconds, 
someone in America gets divorced. That equates to almost 2.5 million 
divorces a year. Currently more than 40% or 1.5 million babies are born 
out of wedlock in the US each year, Yale Global 2017.
	Family 
Court is one of the critical places where fathers are disadvantaged and 
sadly that reality hurts children. The legal origin of the maternal 
preference comes from the “Tender Years Doctrine”. Essentially, this 
doctrine mandated that custody of children under four be awarded to 
mothers as it was believed that “the tender age” children primarily need
 their mothers. This doctrine was in use until the 80’s, when the laws 
began to change and it was no longer mandated. As the laws progressed, 
things slowly improved for fathers but it took many years until the 
custody laws were finally gender equal. In fact, it wasn’t until 2017 
when the custody laws in Nevada finally changed to include a presumption
 for joint physical custody. When I began my practice and until only ten
 years ago, the best my father clients could expect was every other 
weekend visitation and maybe a dinner on the off week. While positive 
legal changes are happening, the true bias of such long standing laws 
persists through the interpretation and enforcement of custody orders.
	All the while, the number of children growing up without their fathers 
is still rising. Between 1960-2016, the percentage of children living 
with just their mothers nearly tripled, from 8 to 23 percent. 2016 
census.
	There is one area that desperately needs legal change, 
protection of the 40% of children born out of wedlock each year. Right 
now, once custody has been ordered, it’s illegal to take a child from 
their father, usually a felony. But, it is perfectly legal in all fifty 
states for a woman to conceal her pregnancy, leave the father’s name off
 the birth certificate and never tell him he has a child – ever. How is 
this not kidnaping? Just as horrible, a woman can knowingly list the 
wrong father on the child’s birth certificate and in many states, a 
short while later, the wrong man becomes that child’s legal father 
forever. He is obligated to a child that isn’t his and the child just 
lost his real father with little to no recourse. This is a betrayal of 
the worst kind and the laws not only allow it, but they create the 
opportunity.  
	This is what we know: children need their fathers
 and every bit of data we have supports this fact; the law and it’s 
application and society at large disfavor fathers; the law is improving 
but the statistics are not. So, what can you do?
	
	We are the 
change makers. All of us. If you are a Father, make the effort, do all 
that you can to be present in your children’s daily lives. If you are a 
Mother, facilitate and encourage the relationship between your children 
and their father whenever possible. If you are a child, make an effort 
to spend time with your father, ask him to do something with you, seek 
his advice and guidance. If you are an employer, grant the fathers you 
employ the ability to be at their children’s performances, to help in 
their schools and take sick days to care for their kids. If you are a 
lawyer, judge, legislator or political figure, help us progress, change 
the laws and ensure that they are enforced fairly to protect fathers and
 their children. The importance of this pursuit cannot be overstated. 
The fate of almost half of America depends on it. 
	I would like 
to close by asking all of you to do one final thing. Please stand (or 
raise your hand if you can’t easily stand) if you grew up without a 
father; if you raised or are raising a child without a father; or if you
 are a father who has been separated from your child. Now look around 
and see the staggering number of people affected by fatherlessness. 
Really look. Those of you standing and raising your hands aren’t 
numbers. You are real living and feeling humans. You are the children 
scarred by fatherlessness. You know who can’t stand with you? But let me
 tell you who can’t stand with you:  1,000 fatherless children who were 
murdered last year; the 3,200 fatherless children who committed suicide;
 the 3,000 fatherless children who died from drugs; and the 14,000 
fatherless children who are incarcerated. 
	Please stand for them and do everything you can to help the remaining 17,000 million fatherless children avoid these fates. 
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