The Emasculation of America

The Case Against Feminism:

About the Author

AUTHOR’S BRIEF BACKGROUND SUMMARY

 

Doug Baker’s background includes working for 25-years in corporations, primarily in the personnel field, serving over 100,000 employees. He reached a peak generalist position accountable for supporting 13,000 employees in 17 countries. His areas of specialization included compensation, management development, and international. He designed and implemented several unique organizational development, broad business management strategies, and various reward systems, and worked in marketing and manufacturing for several years.

Baker changed assignments about every two years while working for companies as large and diverse as Sperry Rand, Chesebrough-Ponds, and Kraft Foods, as well as for smaller companies like United Nuclear, Kennametal, Hussmann, and Mueller. He lived in several locations in Connecticut; in London, England; in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; and in Pittsburgh, Chicago, and Decatur, IL. Doug traveled extensively in much of North America, Western Europe, and Latin America, and visited parts of Africa. In the mid-1980s, he founded a computer assembly and retailing business, and then managed it successfully for well-over a decade. Revenues reached $1.5 million and staffing peaked at eight professionals and technicians before the business closed for competitive reasons in 1999.

In 1975 Baker earned a B.S. in general management, magna cum laude, from the University of New Haven. In the 1980’s, he completed half of a master’s in sociology and psychology at UNH and Duquesne. Doug was also certificated in 1998 as a Microsoft Computer Systems Engineer (MCSE) in NT-4. In 2000, Baker earned an M.A. in psychosocial studies from the University of Illinois. His Master's Project surveyed dozens of major studies, establishing beyond a reasonable doubt, that males and females are equally physically violent in their relationships with one-another. He thereafter did doctoral work briefly in Educational Psychology at the Univ. of No. Illinois in 2001.

Transpersonal Psychology (TP) is is his area of academic interest. TP is an obscure scientific—i.e.  non-secular and apolitical—field that recognizes domains of existence transcending the person and physical reality. In other words, TP accepts that realms reaching beyond the human body and brain; beyond physic’s fourth-time/space-dimension; beyond social science’s classical five-senses; and beyond the intangible mind and emotions actually exist. TP's acceptance of immaterial realities is like modern astrophysics' belief in math-derived theories like "dark energy," "string theory," “worm holes” and that something existed prior to the Big-Bang. In other words, like the Big-Bang, while no concrete proof exists, indirect evidence that immaterial realties exist are too great to arbitrarily deny. Baker is an eclectic lifetime student, interested in such disparate fields as the physical science, philosophy, history, and biography. He enjoy athletics, movies, and games, including Texas-hold’em and Scrabble. He continue to pursue his life-long interest in psychology, sociology, and organization, management, and human development.

Doug was born in Wichita Falls, Texas in 1943, lived briefly in California as a child, but was largely reared in the St. Louis, Missouri metropolitan area. He was mentioned for all-state teams in basketball and football while attending high school in Festus, Missouri. Two small schools in Missouri, Hannibal-LaGrange and Westminster, provided him with athletic scholarships for two years of college. This was followed by 10 years of part-time bachelor’s studies while working full-time and supporting a wife and three children.

Writing and educational projects have been his recent focus, but he is currently retired. Doug has submitted several articles to magazines and worked on full-length unpublished book exploring the major changes affecting the American culture during the 20th century. That book probed modern trends in the social sciences, education, religion, the media, publishing, politics, and philosophy. It explored patterns of psychosocial and political change, including culture-wide polarizations and imbalances experienced in gender relations, childrearing, and politics. It also indentified major cultural dysfunctions called "social-sciencitis," "gender-divisiveness," "institutional-erosion," "media-terrorism," and "love-deprivation." He is currently working on a book about nature and effects of Feminism and activism.

 

 

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