1999 Version
Here's an interesting newspaper snippet:1
"Hammer attack backfires
A woman was taken to hospital last night with heavy bleeding to her
head after attacking her husband with a hammer, ... police said. Her
husband held up a rubbish bin and the hammer bounced off, hitting the
woman in the head. No charges would be laid. - NZPA"
Needless to say, this news item was in very fine print and hidden
in the inside pages of the newspaper. If it had been a man who had suffered
as the result of trying to attack his wife, it would of course have
merited headlines on the front page !
Feminism is now a self-perpetuating industry in the Western world,
and it is trying to use the United Nations and other means, in order
to establish itself equally solidly in the rest of the world. This Feminist
industry requires a constant supply of issues and problems for its army
of researchers, politicians, bureaucrats, journalists and social workers
to work on -- often at taxpayer expense.
These problems and issues usually have the following characteristics:
They cast women -- and possibly children -- in the role of victims;
They cast men in the role of miscreants;
They can be used to make men feel guilty and put them onto the defensive;
Any responsibility on the part of women is downplayed, or even ignored
totally.
Rape, Child Sexual Abuse and Domestic Violence (aka Family Violence)
are three classic instances of this sort of Feminist issue.
There are five main Domestic Violence lies (which Feminists typically
just imply, rather than actually stating):
1 There is a syndrome called "Battered Woman's Syndrome";
2 Men commit much more Domestic Violence than women do;
3 Men start most or all incidents of Domestic Violence;
4 Men can do more damage to women than women can do to men, and therefore
only men should be restrained or punished;
5 If a man has been accused of Domestic Violence, this should be grounds
for restricting his access to his children if separation or divorce
takes place.
1 Battered Woman's Syndrome
The book which invented the "Battered Woman Syndrome" is junk science.
This can be seen from the following quotation from a review of "The
Battered Woman" by Lenore Walker (New York: Harper Colophon Books, 1979).
The review is by Robert Sheaffer.2
"We have all heard of the 'Battered Woman Syndrome' which originated
with this book.... The Battered Woman is unsatisfactory as a serious
work, and completely unacceptable as a foundation for family law. First,
it is profoundly unscholarly. Without objective verification of the
incidents herein described, they are nothing more than hearsay. Second,
the book does not even pretend to be objective: the woman's side, and
only the woman's side, is presented, when it is undeniable that in a
large percentage of cases, the woman initiates violence against the
man. Third, Prof. Walker's expanded definition of "battering" that includes
verbal abuse does not even address the issue of female verbal abuse
of men. Fourth, there is no reason whatsoever to believe that Prof.
Walker's sample of 'battered women' is in any way a representative sample,
and even if it were, she presents no statistics to support her conclusions.
In fact, most of her conclusions are utterly unsupported by any kind
of hard data, and are simply pronounced ex cathedra."
Professor Walker (and the wretched quality of her work shows how deceptive
the title "Professor" is) maintained that there was a "syndrome", whereby
a female victim of Domestic Violence was made psychologically incapable
of leaving the relationship. This may or may not be true, but her unscholarly
work certainly does not prove it.
Karen Horney had previously described what could be called the "Masochistic
Woman Syndrome" -- which might be seen as a less anti-male way of describing
the same phenomenon. It is quite possible for a person -- male or female
-- to be subjected to repeated psychological or physical abuse in a
relationship, but to be prevented by various other considerations from
leaving the relationship. Some of these considerations might include:
- fear of what their partner might do if they left;
- concern for possible effects on children;
- fear of loneliness;
- concern about the reactions of families and friends;
- reluctance to open up private, sordid details to the scrutiny of
others.
To lump all this into a "syndrome" and give it a name like "Battered
Woman Syndrome" is a useful way of creating a stick to beat men with,
but it has to be seen as the political ploy that it is. For centuries,
men have complained about nagging wives, but men in the West are practically
forbidden to complain about women in public -- otherwise we would now
perhaps also be reading about a "Nagged Husband Syndrome".
Feminist writers (e.g. Leibrich et al. 1995, Ferraro 1979, and Walker
1984) often state that women find psychological abuse much harder to
live with than physical abuse. An official leaflet3
explains the legal prohibition against psychological violence as meaning
that:
"Nobody is allowed to use intimidation, threats, or mind games
to hurt and control another person." (my emphasis)
Despite that fact, Feminists never mention how much better women generally
are at using verbal weapons than men are. Women are probably much better
at carrying out psychological abuse (especially threats and mind games)
than men are. In Feminist accounts of Domestic Violence, emphasis is
always laid on men's presumed greater physical strength.
In the Feminist propaganda about Domestic Violence, the focus in on
the supposed actions of the men. The reasons they do
what they do (if they do it) are never mentioned. It is as if
domestic violence were the only human activity which occurred totally
without cause. In fact, of course, there are probably patterns
of behaviour in the "victim" which provoked the violence in the first
place. These patterns of behaviour are just as much a "syndrome" as
"battered wife syndrome".
2. Who commits most of the violence ?
Straus and Gelles (1986), for example, showed that men and women commit
just as much physical Domestic Violence as each other. Moffitt, Caspi
and Silva (1996) do likewise. Sewell and Sewell (1997), as another example,
reports statistics showing that women perpetrate even more domestic
violence than men do.4
A lot of the Domestic Violence debate on the Internet, from the Men's
Rights side, has involved exposing false and distorted Feminist statistics.
As this has been so well and thoroughly done by other people, I will
not discuss the details here. However, I do have evidence of falsification
of Domestic Violence statistics by Feminists, and I want to make people
aware that they can't trust the ethics of Feminist researchers, necessarily.
In 1997, I wrote a letter to my country's Minister of Police -- alleging,
amongst other things, that the Ministry of Women's Affairs had caused
domestic violence questionnaire questions to be doctored:5
Because of all the counterevidence to their woman-as-victim approach,
Feminists have been rushing around trying to conceal these findings
or explain them away in a manner that fits in with their political need
to reserve victim status for women. Here is an example of that sort
of Feminist reasoning, from the World Wide Web page: http://www.vix.com/pub/men/battery/studies/lkates.html:
"From: lizkates@delphi.com (Liz Kates)
Subject: Wife Beating
Date: Tue, 4 Oct 94 00:37:09 -0500
WIFE BEATING
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE is a CRIMINAL act of assault, battery, sexual
assault, sexual battery, or other act that injures or kills a family
or household member by another who is or was residing in the same
single dwelling unit. See, e.g. F. S. 741.30(1)(a). If there is no
outcome, claims of who did what to whom are irrelevant for all legal
purposes. Hepburn slapping Tracy across the face in one isolated
instance with no particular outcome, regardless of what you think
of
the behavior, is not what we mean legally by "domestic violence."
SPOUSAL ABUSE is not isolated acts of "conflict tactics" in a vacuum.
A battered spouse is one who may be controlled and terrorized by a
combination of abusive tactics, both directly physical and not. There
is a pattern and a dynamic in the relationship in which one of the
parties is the party abused, disadvantaged and injured--95% of the
time, this is the woman. Counting numbers of slaps without looking
at
the entire relationship dynamic, does not tell us who is the abuser
and who is the abused.
The Straus and Gelles Conflicts Tactics Scale is merely that: it is
a
research tool that counts certain behaviors that might be 'conflicts
tactics,' but tallying up who moved how and when does not necessarily
comport with the legal definition of domestic violence, or accurately
yield any picture of what actually happened. And the individual
conflict behaviors arbitrarily listed therein in varying levels of
"severity" neither bear any necessary relationship to who is injured,
nor identify which of the parties is the party "abused." Physical
movements and contacts tracked and reported without reference to
outcome are misleading, and nothing short of fraudulent when used
to
make the specious claim that 'women are doing it too.' Women are not
battering their husbands in epidemic proportions. Women are not
regularly beating up their men, and leaving them crouched, huddled,
injured and sobbing (or worse) on the kitchen floor. Men are not
fleeing their homes, children in tow. Men are not the spouses who
live
in terror."
I think it's good that Liz Kates refers us to the legal definition
of Domestic Violence, but it is/was only valid in one particular jurisdiction,
and it is an area of the law which is changing fast, under Feminist
pressure. Specifically, Feminist writers on Domestic Violence from Lenore
Walker onward have mentioned how many women find psychological abuse
even worse than physical abuse. So a legal definition of Domestic Violence
that ignored psychological abuse in 1994 (when the quoted passage was
apparently written) is unlikely to be still on the books as I type these
words.
For example, here is just the initial part of a legislative definition
of Domestic Violence:6
"SECT. 3. MEANING OF "DOMESTIC VIOLENCE"--
(1) In this Act, "domestic violence", in relation to any
person, means violence against that person by any other
person with whom that person is, or has been, in a
domestic relationship.
(2) In this section, "violence" means--
(a) Physical abuse:
(b) Sexual abuse:
(c) Psychological abuse, including, but not limited
to,--
(i) Intimidation:
(ii) Harassment:
(iii) Damage to property:
(iv) Threats of physical abuse, sexual abuse, or
psychological abuse:
(v) In relation to a child, abuse of the kind
set out in subsection (3) of this section."
Here it is clear that actual physical injury does not need to occur,
so it is up to the police and the courts to determine how serious any
alleged cases of Domestic Violence are, and whether prosecution or conviction
are warranted.
And in the UK (according to BBC World TV on Sun, 26 November 1995
) "Domestic Violence" was (and probably still is) defined
as violence by a man on a woman. So a woman can/could do anything at
all to a man in the UK, and it is absolutely impossible for that to
be considered as "domestic violence". This shows that it is not particularly
useful to focus on legal definitions in force at particular times in
particular places. It also shows how biased the extreme Feminists are
who push this sort of legislation through legislatures in Western countries.
Liz Kates then goes on to state that the Feminist concept of "spousal
abuse" involves a pattern and dynamic of behaviour where the victims
are 95% female. However, "syndromes" and "patterns" are theoretical
constructs which arise in the minds of researchers and the like, and
bias is absolutely certain to creep in. And Erin Pizzey (1997) makes
it clear that women who are pro-men are ostracised from the subcultures
which these researchers belong to. Anyone who has studied the Philosophy
and History of Science and takes an interest in scientific matters knows
that the creation of hypotheses and theories is a highly subjective
process. It often takes a lot of time, and much testing and argument
to decide the issue between rival theories. At least the counting of
"hits" is a fairly objective process.
This testing and argument can be acrimonious and descend to the level
of personal attacks, even in scientific circles. Since the Battered
Woman Syndrome is one of Feminism's strategic weapons in the Sex War,
they are no more likely to want to give it up than the major powers
want to give up land mines or nuclear weapons. Whatever the findings
of the researchers may be, the media and the politicians will, by and
large, only take note of the findings that are promoted by the relevant
pressure-groups. And as far as Sex War pressure-groups are concerned,
Masculists are heavily out-gunned by the Feminists, who often enjoy
taxpayer support in ministries of Women's Affairs, university departments
of Women's Studies, and the like.
So, when Liz Kates says that men are not subject to systematic abuse
perpetrated by their wives, she is talking from belief, not from knowledge.
Feminists have not taken the slightest interest in the viewpoint of
the male in the Domestic Violence (or any other) scenario. Those who
do, such as Gelles, come to the conclusion that men are indeed the victims
of this sort of abuse -- just as women are.
There is a deep-seated psychological unwillingness in both women and
men to treat women and men equally when they are in violent confrontation.
This is what I call "Machismo's Unholy Alliance with Dykismo (MUAD)."
The machismo of men (e.g. policemen, judges, and social workers) makes
them want to protect women from men, and the "dykismo" of Lesbian Feminists
(who are the powerhouse of the Feminists' Sex War army) also makes them
want to protect women from men.
The result of the power of Feminist pressure-groups and of the MUAD
is to put men -- all heterosexual men -- into a Catch-22 situation.
If a man's wife or female partner abuses him psychologically or physically,
then he is unable to retaliate. If he retaliates, the MUAD will arrest
him and put him in jail, the Family Court will impose a court order
preventing him from contacting her, give her custody of the children,
severely limit his access to his children, and give her sole right to
live in the family home. So, if third-party intervention is not possible
or is unsuccessful, he just has to either put up with the abuse or leave
the relationship -- to the detriment of his children's and his own emotional
health and (probably) standard of living. If anything is a "syndrome",
then this Catch-22 situation is one.
To give some concrete examples, I know a man whose glasses had just
been broken by his wife, and so he rang the police to ask for help.
The policeman at the other end of the phone line asked if she had "hit"
him or "punched" him. The complainant refused to answer this question,
because he didn't know what the difference was supposed to be between
"punching" and "hitting", but he guessed that the policeman was just
trying to disprove the truth of what he was saying. The policeman kept
insisting on getting an answer to this question, and, when no answer
was forthcoming, he hung up !! In today's political climate in Western
countries, it is inconceivable that the police would treat a female
complainant in that way. But males have no rights in such situations.
To give another example, an acquaintance told me about an occasion
when, after a domestic dispute, the police were interviewing him and
his wife in their home. His wife said that he had hit her, and the police
duly wrote that down in their notebook. Then he said that she had hit
him -- and the police wrote nothing down !!
Here's a further example: an advertisement, entitled "Family
Violence is a crime," and authorised by Brian Hartley, President
of the Police Managers' Guild, appeared in a daily newspaper .7
The advertisement mentioned only women and children victims of this
crime, and omitted any mention of the possibility that men could also
be victims of Family Violence. Not only is this a sexist advertisement
in its own right, but it is also frightening testimony to how little
chance men have of being treated fairly by the Justice system as far
as Domestic/Family Violence is concerned. In addition, I must emphasise
that the Police have no chance of reducing the incidence of this sort
of crime as long as they insist in driving men into a corner and treating
them as guilty until proven innocent.
This is why it's not valid to use statistics about police call-outs
as an indication of the level of domestic violence by women on men,
as some Feminists do. Many men know that there's no point calling the
police, because they will automatically take the woman's side.
And this MUAD bias is also a problem in the Third World. India, for
example, has seen the creation of the "All-India Crime Against Men by
Women Front (Akhil Bharatiya Patni Virodhimorcha), which was founded
after the 1988 suicide of Naresh Anand, who had been unable to bear
his wife's physical and mental torture. He left behind a note pleading
with police to form a special cell to deal with cases of abused husbands,
along the lines of the already extant Crimes Against Women cell.
All that needs to be borne in mind when we read the following continuation
of Liz Kates email (quoted above):
"'Who is that [on the phone]!' he demands.
She ignores him, hastily whispering 'I gotta go now...'
'GIMME that phone!!' he shouts. 'Who was that!!'
'It was someone from work.'
He dials call return. It's not. 'You sniveling lying BITCH,' he
shrieks, and yanking the phone out, throws it into the wall. 'YOU
TELL
ME WHO THE F--- THAT WAS RIGHT NOW,' he yells, advancing at her. He
picks up a little glass budvase her grandmother gave her and holds
it
high.
'Nooo, gimme that!' she whines. 'WHO THE F--- WAS ON THAT PHONE!!!'
She grabs his arm to save the vase, and he holds it out of her reach.
[She has started the violence, according who touched who first.]
Smash, the vase shatters into a thousand little shards. 'You pig,'
she
mutters, nearly inaudible.
'WHAT'D YOU SAY!!! SAY IT AGAIN, BITCH!!!' he screams. She crouches
at
the floor, attempting to scoop up glass splinters. He grabs her by
the
upper arm, bringing her to her feet. She wrenches her arm away, and
as
he reaches for her again, pushes his forearm away from her. [Conflict
tactics scale: one grab for each, plus a push for her.]
'I WANNA KNOW WHO WAS ON THAT PHONE!' he yells, down, close into her
face as she backs away. 'No one...'
'YOU STUPID LYING CUNT!!' he shouts, and shoves her with a force that
flings her into the corner of the wall, hitting her head...
[Conflict Tactics Scale: two for two. Nothing but a fair fight...
so
far...]"
Here it is appropriate to use Liz Kates' own words, "misleading, and
nothing short of fraudulent" for her own use of the above (presumably
real) conflict data. What she is trying to do here is show that physical
violence is not the whole picture. I agree with her that the above example
does just that. But if she is trying (as I think she is) to depict this
woman as a helpless, innocent victim of male abuse, then this shows
how one-sided the misandrist (man-hating) Feminist "experts" on Domestic
Violence are.
It is quite clear that this man is being subjected -- probably over
a long period of time -- to severe psychological abuse by this woman.
She is lying to him point blank, which is about as extreme a form of
Psychological abuse as you can perpetrate in a relationship. She is
doing something detrimental to his interests behind his back, such as
having an affair -- or doing her best to give him the impression that
she is doing that.
Over a long period of time, this would be quite sufficient to drive
any man "mad" -- mad/angry, or even mad/insane. Her psychological abuse
is what started the whole incident -- yet it would be the man who would
be arrested if the police were called. This shows how criticial the
issue of interpretation is, and how powerless men are in the political
and legal processes of the West, when it is the extreme Feminists who
are doing most of the interpreting.
3 Who starts the Domestic Violence ?
According to Figure 1 in Straus and Kantor (1994), wives are reported
as committing more minor assaults and major assaults than are husbands.
No doubt this trend will increase. As women become more and more confident
that the legal systems of Western countries will now allow them to initiate
Domestic Violence, get their male husband/partner arrested for retaliating,
get possession of the family home, sole custody of the children, and
a state benefit -- with the father's access to his children severely
restricted because of his history of "Domestic Violence" -- we must
logically expect that more and more women will see the obvious benefits
to them in initiating more and more Domestic Violence, and more and
more men will end up alone, destitute, and desperate. If they then turn
violent towards their ex-partners or themselves, then that is only natural
-- in the face of such legalised oppression.
4 Who should the police concentrate on restraining ?
The police should investigate Domestic Violence like any other alleged
crime, find out who started it, and then concentrate on warning or punishing
that person. At present, police in some countries are being trained
to automatically punish the man, because they are being told that only
men commit abuse and any violence by women is only retaliation to abuse
by the man, and because men are supposed to be capable of inflicting
more damage than are women.
Men who are beaten by their wives are treated with contempt or derision,
so they know they can only rely on their own strength in domestic disputes
-- the police will always be on the woman's side.
In New Zealand, for example, there are three kinds of Assault offences
that men can be charged with:
Common Assault;
Assault on a Female;
Aggravated Assault.
A man convicted of "Assault on a Female" is subject to a higher maximum
penalty than one convicted of Common Assault. This quite clearly sends
a signal to all men and women that the legal system is sexist and operates
an anti-male double-standard.
5 What is the relevance of Domestic Violence to the Family Court ?
A record of Domestic Violence directed against a partner should not
be taken into account when deciding custody and access issues, because
it is not relevant. This would also discriminate against the father's
chances of getting custody and access, because the police, as we have
seen, are biased against men as regards cases of alleged Domestic Violence.
Domestic Violence might even occur because a father suspects that his
partner is not properly looking after his children -- but he might not
have the evidence to prove it in court. So he would then lose his children
and be forced to leave them to the mother's inadequate care, which caused
the problems in the first place !
6 Conclusion
The specific Feminist Catch-22 on Domestic Violence is that women
are always in the right, whatever they do:
1. Men who hit their wives are deemed to do it without provocation
and without
reason -- and therefore without excuse.The issue is never raised by
Feminists.
2. Women are deemed never to hit their husbands (the issue is never
spontaneously raised by Feminists) -- or, if women do hit their husbands,
Feminists (when Feminists are forced to agree that women do do this)
take the
line that they only do it justifiably.
3. When Feminists admit that men are also abused by women, Feminists
claim
that only women suffer from a "syndrome" of domestic abuse. In other
words, women are allowed to use the excuse of a "syndrome" as a defence
when they murder their husbands.
4. When women murder their husbands, there is usually some excuse
or
justification (e.g. domestic violence by the man in their lives).
5. When men murder their womenfolk, they are not allowed to claim
that the woman's behaviour was a justifying factor.
6. When women murder their men, the cause is often deemed to be domestic
violence, but when men murder their women, this murder is deemed to
be an
*instance* of domestic violence.
Men and fair-minded women must campaign together against women-only
defences and men-only crimes. Feminists have been steadily working towards
the goal of getting all women treated as innocent victims, no matter
what they have done -- and all men treated as criminals, no matter if
they are innocent.
Anti-male bias doesn't just infect the Police -- it is particularly
strong in the media, who pass on this infection to the whole of Western
Society. For example, there was a letter to Time magazine, published
on January 20, 1997, in which Richard M. Riffe, Assistant Prosecutor
of Boone County, Madison, West Virginia, complains about the biased
way in which Time wrote up a case involving a woman who murdered her
husband.8
Time magazine, like most of the Western media, is consistenly anti-male.
As far as public attitudes are concerned, here are a couple of examples:
a newspaper advertisement 9
for a stage show called "Full Marx" quoted a review of the show by one
Ralph McAllister, which ended with the words:
"So take your family, wallop your husband (my emphasis),
even bring along the great dane, but make sure you see Full Marx !"
Another example is a student's cartoon (in French) which the mainly
female staff of the Language department of a school 10
thought suitable to post prominently on a wall in the 1990's. This cartoon
told the story of how a woman threw a plate of breakfast at her husband/partner
and then left him -- on the grounds that he was lazy and had asked for
breakfast in bed. (There was no mention of any background to the incident
-- for example, the man involved might be exhausted from staying up
most of the night doing some dangerous voluntary work, for all we know.)
This is Domestic Violence, but because it was committed by a woman,
it was not only considered innocuous, it was even decorated with written
teacher comments such as, "Very good !", and "Serves him right !" (in
French).
I'd also briefly like to raise the issue of PMT (Premenstrual Tension).
Research needs to take place into the role of PMT in bringing about
Domestic Violence. Of course, research may already have been carried
out into this topic, but I am unaware of any such studies. It would
be ironic, but typical of modern societies, if PMT were (as is quite
possible) a major cause of physical and psychological abuse of men by
women, which then led to men being arrested because of MUAD bias in
the Establishment.
The power angle needs to be looked at, as well. What does it do for
the relative power of men and women in a relationship if the woman can
say and do what she likes, in the sure knowledge that -- if the worst
comes to the worst -- she will get the children, an income from the
taxpayer, and at least half the joint assets, and he will have restricted
or nil access to his children, and a jail term and child-support bills
to pay ? That is the bottom line in modern western heterosexual relationships.
The man has to either defer to the woman, walk out of the relationship,
or run the risk of the worst-case scenario becoming a reality. The United
States divorce rate in 1988 was the fourth-highest in the world, according
to the UN Demographic yearbook. And there has been research in that
country, which has found that the marriages that last the longest are
those where the husband always gives way to the wife! So the extreme
Feminist Domestic Violence campaign has also got to be seen as a tool
for bringing about Matriarchy in the family and for increasing the number
of solo mothers and fatherless children, in order to replace a social
system based on the nuclear family with one based on no particular structured
unit between the individual and local government.
2002 Version
CHAPTER 7
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE LIES & MEN'S CATCH-22
Introduction
Here's an interesting newspaper snippet:
Hammer attack backfires: A woman was taken to hospital last night with
heavy bleeding to her head after attacking her husband with a hammer,
... police said. Her husband held up a rubbish bin and the hammer bounced
off, hitting the woman in the head. No charges would be laid. –
NZPA1.
This news item was in very fine print and hidden on an inside pages
of the newspaper. Had it been a man who suffered as the result of trying
to attack his wife, it would have merited headlines on the front page!
An equally short article – originating from the Australian Associated
Press in Wellington's Dominion newspaper on 29 November 1999 stated:
Scissors in head: A domestic dispute left a New South Wales man with
scissors protruding a centimetre into his brain at the weekend. The
man, 24, still conscious, was flown from Bathurst to Sydney for surgery.
What is astonishing about this article is that it doesn't mention who
the perpetrator was, which made me cynically certain it must have been
a woman. It does not mention what action, if any, the police took against
the perpetrator. If the perpetrator had been a man and the victim a
woman, the article would have been written very differently, with emphasis
on the heinousness of the deed and of the perpetrator.
The same approach to the story was taken by Australia's Sydney Morning
Herald on the same day. It seems clear that (male and female) Feminists
in positions of power (such as journalists) abuse their power, tailoring
information, and access to information, in whatever ways suit their
political goals. Thus deprived of information that depicts women as
perpetrators and men as victims of domestic violence, the public at
large is that much more likely to be conned by the one-sided propaganda
on this subject that comes from overtly Feminist sources. This includes
conning legislators, the police, judges and juries. Only against this
background does it make any sense that the USA has a "Violence
Against Women Act" on its statute-books !
As I explain elsewhere (in the chapter on the Media University Complex),
the mass media is blatantly biased against men. As another example,
the world's media (e.g. the Wellington Dominion newspaper on 15 April
1999) reported how music celebrity Whitney Houston publicly announced
she was the one who hit her husband, and not vice versa. Reportedly,
her husband was arrested for battery against other women, but there
were no suggestions from third parties that Whitney Houston should be
arrested for battery – she is a woman, after all!
The objective statistics show men and women hit each other about equally.
See Fiebert's extensive annotated bibliography at: www.csulb.edu/~mfiebert/assault.htm
-- except that women are starting to hit men more often than vice versa,
because they now know that the police will almost certainly not arrest
them for it !
On page 237 of the Handbook of Family Violence, edited by Vincent B.
Van Hasselt (Plenum, 1998), Steinmetz and Lucca report that men were
battered by their wives by a 1.47 : 1.0 margin. Similarly, the Guardian
Weekly, in February 1999, reported a British Home Office study that
showed that "men ... are just as likely as women to be assaulted
by a partner." And, in a study in New Zealand (Moffitt, T., A.
Caspi, and P. Silva (1996): "Findings about Partner Violence: from
the Dunedin Multidisciplinary Health and Development Study" (MS)),
it was also found men and women assault each other equally frequently
in the home.
When journalists talk about bias in the media, they tend to focus on
the red herring of the political bias of the owners of the media. Journalists
seldom criticise their own bias. Media owners, however, are usually
more interested in making money than pushing a particular political
line. Editorials and leading articles may, in some cases, be conservative
in tone, but it is the selective reporting and highlighting of anti-male
news (such as items on domestic violence) and the slanted coverage,
using Feminist jargon, by rank-and-file journalists which is the most
influential form of media bias. Because it is not as obvious as the
bias in an editorial or leading article, the rest of us are hard pressed
to guard against it or filter it out.
In a 1999 report about US Congressional hearings on the Violence Against
Women Act (VAWA) he issued to the American Coalition for Fathers and
Children, Stuart Miller writes:
"Afterward, the media only interviewed the battered women's advocates
and refused to accept any studies or comment that did not support the
'need' for more VAWA money....One reporter rolled her eyes at the thought
that any men have been deprived of their children because of false allegations...and
sneered at the men who suggested such 'an absurd proposition.' "
Here we will examine these issues in some detail. Sommers (1994, page
10) states:
"For the past two decades, ... the study of spousal violence has
become synonymous with the term 'wife abuse'.... The reason for this
misnomer is due to almost exclusive focus of research on husband-to-wife
abuse because of the high visibility of females as victims of family
violence.... The shelter movement has also made it possible for researchers
to have a ready made sampling base comprised of women who were willing
to provide testimonies of the abuse they endured."
Domestic Violence is a weapon in the Feminist arsenal. Feminism is
now a self-perpetuating industry in the western world, and it is trying
to use the United Nations and other organisations, such as World Vision,
to establish itself throughout the world. For this purpose, they require
a steady supply of issues and problems for its army of researchers,
politicians, bureaucrats, journalists and social workers to work on
– often at taxpayer expense. These problems and issues usually
have the following characteristics:
1. They cast women – and possibly children – in the role
of victims;
2. They cast men in the role of miscreants;
3. They can be used to make men feel guilty and put them onto the defensive;
4. Any responsibility on the part of women is downplayed or even ignored.
Rape, Child Sexual Abuse and Domestic Violence are three classic instances
of this sort of Feminist issue. The Feminist view of Domestic Violence
focuses on the male as perpetrator and the female as victim. This feeds
on myths perpetrated by books and films such as "Once Were Warriors,"
an internationally known New Zealand film based on a novel by a Maori
man about violence in a New Zealand Maori family. Maori women in New
Zealand have been quick to accept this fiction as a portrayal of the
reality of domestic violence in New Zealand families, and this has inspired
them with seemingly righteous anger against people like myself who portray
a balanced picture of domestic violence. Some of these Maori women have
gone so far as to scratch my car and limit my participation in the Wellington
(New Zealand) "Fathers, Families, and the Future" event in
April 1999. There was even one incident, where a woman seemingly deliberately
rammed my car (at the driver's door) at a roundabout – coming
at me from another lane in the roundabout, despite my hooting at her,
as I saw her coming a couple of seconds beforehand !
Domestic Violence lies
There are five main Domestic Violence lies which Feminists typically
imply rather than state:
1. There is a syndrome called "Battered Woman's Syndrome";
2. Men commit much more Domestic Violence than women do;
3. Men start most or all incidents of Domestic Violence;
4. Men can do more damage to women than women can do to men, and therefore
only men should be restrained or punished;
5. If a man has been accused/convicted of Domestic Violence, this should
be grounds for restricting his access to his children if separation
or divorce takes place.
Battered Woman's Syndrome
The "Battered Woman Syndrome" originated in the Jennifer Patri
case in 1977. Syndromes are nebulous patterns of symptoms or behaviour
which lend themselves to political manipulation. The book (The Battered
Woman by Lenore Walker, New York: Harper Colophon Books, 1979), which
first popularised and justified the notion, is junk science. This can
be seen from the following excerpt from a review by Robert Sheaffer:
We have all heard of the 'Battered Woman Syndrome' which originated
with this book.... The Battered Woman is unsatisfactory as a serious
work, and completely unacceptable as a foundation for family law. First,
it is profoundly unscholarly. Without objective verification of the
incidents herein described, they are nothing more than hearsay. Second,
the book does not even pretend to be objective: the woman's side, and
only the woman's side, is presented, when it is undeniable that in a
large percentage of cases, the woman initiates violence against the
man. Third, Prof. Walker's expanded definition of "battering"
that includes verbal abuse does not even address the issue of female
verbal abuse of men. Fourth, there is no reason whatsoever to believe
that Prof. Walker's sample of 'battered women' is in any way a representative
sample, and even if it were, she presents no statistics to support her
conclusions. In fact, most of her conclusions are utterly unsupported
by any kind of hard data, and are simply pronounced ex cathedra.2
Professor Walker (and the wretched quality of her work shows how deceptive
the title "Professor" can be) maintained there was a "syndrome"
whereby a female victim of Domestic Violence was made psychologically
incapable of leaving the relationship. This may or may not be true,
but her unscholarly work certainly does not prove it. Karen Horney previously
described what could be called the "Masochistic Woman Syndrome,"
which might be seen as a less anti-male way of describing the same phenomenon.
And no doubt it is quite possible for a person – male or female
– to be subjected to repeated psychological or physical abuse
in a relationship yet be constrained by various considerations from
leaving the relationship. Some of these might include:
1. fear of what their partner might do if they left;
2. concern for possible effects on children;
3. fear of loneliness;
4. concern about the reactions of families and friends;
5. reluctance to open up private, sordid details to the scrutiny of
others.
To lump all this into a "syndrome" and give it a name like
"Battered Woman Syndrome" is a useful way of creating a stick
with which to beat men, but it has to be seen as the political ploy
that it is. For centuries, men have complained about nagging wives,
but men in the West are practically forbidden to complain about women
in public – otherwise we would now perhaps also be reading about
a "Nagged Husband Syndrome."
Feminist writers (e.g., Leibrich et al. 1995, Ferraro 1979, and Walker
1984) often state that women find psychological abuse much harder to
live with than physical abuse. An official leaflet explains the legal
prohibition against psychological violence as meaning "nobody is
allowed to use intimidation, threats, or mind games to hurt and control
another person."3
In Feminist accounts of Domestic Violence, emphasis is always laid
on men's presumed greater physical strength. Feminists never mention
how much better women generally are at using verbal weapons than men.
But the book Brain Sex, by Anne Moir and David Jessel, states:
The language skills related to grammar, spelling and writing are all
more specifically located in the left-hand side of the brain in a woman.
In a man they are spread in the front and back of his brain, and so
he will have to work harder than a woman to achieve these skills. (page
45)
Also, Deborah Tannen's 1990 book, You Just Don't Understand, claims
women more commonly do their talking in intimate contexts while men
do most of their talking in group contexts. This makes women more skilled
at manipulating men verbally than vice versa, according to her.
I have seen research evidence that women tend to view talking as an
end in itself, whereas men tend to talk only if there is a specific
reason to. Similarly, females predominate in people-centred occupations
and in the study of language-centred academic subjects. There is also
evidence that women are much better at reading emotions from people's
faces and body-language than men. Which explains why women are more
proficient at psychological abuse (especially psychological threats
and mind games) than men.
In the Feminist propaganda about Domestic Violence, the focus in on
the supposed actions of the men. The reasons they do what they do (if
they do it) are never mentioned. It is as if domestic violence were
the only human activity which occurred totally without cause. In fact,
of course, there are frequently patterns of behaviour in the "victim"
which provoked the violence in the first place. These provocative behaviours
are just as much a "syndrome" as any "battered wife syndrome."
(See the discussion of related issues at www.backlash.com/book/domv.html.)
Who commits most of the violence?
Extreme Feminists claim men commit most domestic violence, but, as noted
at the beginning of this chapter the evidence refutes their contentions.
Straus and Gelles (1986), for example, showed men and women commit just
as much physical Domestic Violence as the other. Moffitt, Caspi and
Silva (1996) do likewise. Sewell and Sewell (1997), as another example,
report statistics showing that women perpetrate even more domestic violence
than men do. 4
Feminists falsify and distort Domestic Violence statistics and everybody
needs to know they can't necessarily trust the ethics of Feminist researchers.
In 1997, I wrote a letter to my country's Minister of Police –
alleging, amongst other things, that the Ministry of Women's Affairs
had caused questions in a domestic violence questionnaire to be slanted.5
Because of all the counterevidence to their woman-as-victim approach,
Feminists have been rushing around trying to conceal these findings
or explain them away in a manner that fits in with their political need
to reserve victim status for women. There is an example of that sort
of Feminist reasoning at
www.vix.com/pub/men/battery/studies/lkates.html.
Feminist writers on Domestic Violence from Lenore Walker onward have
mentioned how many women find psychological abuse even worse than physical
abuse. This view has found itself into legislation. Here is the initial
part of a legislative definition of Domestic Violence:
SECT. 3. MEANING OF "DOMESTIC VIOLENCE-
(1) In this Act, "domestic violence", in relation to any person,
means violence against that person by any other person with whom that
person is, or has been, in a domestic relationship.
(2) In this section, "violence" means-
(a) Physical abuse:
(b) Sexual abuse:
(c) Psychological abuse, including, but not limited to,–
(i) Intimidation:
(ii) Harassment:
(iii) Damage to property:
(iv) Threats of physical abuse, sexual abuse, or psychological abuse:
(v) In relation to a child, abuse of the kind set out in subsection
(3) of this section.
Here it is clear that actual physical injury does not need to occur,
so it is up to the police and the courts to determine how serious any
alleged cases of Domestic Violence are, and whether prosecution or conviction
are warranted.
And in the UK, according to the BBC's World TV on Sunday, 26 November
1995, "domestic violence" was (and probably still is) defined
as violence by a man on a woman.6 So a woman can/could do anything at
all to a man in the UK, and legally it is impossible to consider it
"domestic violence." This demonstrates why it is not particularly
useful to focus on legal definitions in force at particular times in
particular places. It also shows how biased the extreme Feminists are
who push this sort of legislation through legislatures in western countries.
Liz Kates (www.vix.com/pub/men/battery/studies/lkates.html) states
that the Feminist concept of spousal abuse involves a pattern and dynamic
of behaviour where the victims are 95% female. The facts do not support
this but prove the prejudice of the researchers behind it. Moreover,
Erin Pizzey (1997) makes it clear the Feminist community ostracizes
women who are pro-fairness.
Subjective science?
Anyone who has studied the Philosophy and History of Science and takes
an interest in scientific matters knows that the creation of hypotheses
and theories can be a highly subjective process. It often takes a lot
of time, much testing and argument to decide the issue between rival
theories. Despite the fact that counting blows between domestic partners
should be a fairly objective process, such rigour is not practiced by
Feminist ideologues.
Since the Battered Woman Syndrome is one of Feminism's strategic weapons
in the Sex War, whatever the findings of the researchers may be, the
Feminist media and the politicians will, by and large, only take note
of the findings promoted by Feminist pressure-groups. Masculists are
heavily out-gunned by the Feminists, who often enjoy taxpayer support
in ministries of Women's Affairs, university departments of Women's
Studies, and the like.
So, when Feminists such as Liz Kates say men are not subject to systematic
abuse perpetrated by their wives, they are talking from belief rather
than knowledge. Feminists have not taken the slightest interest in men's
experiences of Domestic Violence (or anything else), so they have no
data on which to base their assertions. Those who do examine domestic
violence objectively, such as Gelles, come to the conclusion men are
indeed the victims of this sort of abuse – just as women are.
The "syndrome" will include as many – if not more –
men, when gender is ignored and only other factors are considered. Hence,
it's better for everybody if we deal with these issues rationally rather
than turning everything into a gender war. Then we can focus on solving
problems where now the system tears families apart.
Does anybody give a DUAM about men?
There is a deep-seated psychological unwillingness in both sexes to
treat women and men equally when they are in violent confrontation.
Part of this is what I call " Dykismo's Unholy Alliance with Machismo
(DUAM)." The machismo of men (e.g., policemen, psychologists, lawyers,
judges, etc.) makes them want to protect women from men, and the “dykismo”
of Lesbian Feminists (who are the powerhouse of the Feminists’
Sex War army) also makes them want to protect women from men.
I am not attacking Lesbianism as such, here. The sexual habits of Lesbians
are one issue, and their political power in the Sex War is another.
It has been a struggle for many people in the West to be reprogrammed
into realising that people of other races and sexual orientations are
not inferior or evil. However, having made that transition in their
thought-patterns, many people over-correct, and find themselves unable
to criticise anyone of a different race or sexual orientation. This
is what gives Lesbian Feminists their power.
I'd like to give some examples of what I mean here, because this is
a very serious problem. My examples come from the Machismo side of the
DUAM, but the same sort of remarks apply equally well to the Dykismo
side of the phenomenon. On November 19th 1999, I went to see Mr. J.
J. Taylor, Family Violence Prevention Coordinator
at Police national headquarters, Wellington, New Zealand. I asked to
see the Police Commissioner himself, but was put on to Mr. Taylor as
the most appropriate person for the topic that I wanted to discuss.
The reason I decided to talk to the police about this issue (I had
been working in the same building that housed the police national headquarters
for 12 years) was that I had just come across the Fiebert Bibliography.
That bibliography's summary states:
This bibliography examines 95 scholarly investigations, 79 empirical
studies and 16 reviews and/or analyses, which demonstrate that women
are as physically aggressive, or more aggressive, than men in their
relationships with their spouses or male partners. The aggregate sample
size in the reviewed studies exceeds 60,000. (www.csulb.edu/~mfiebert/assault.htm)
Armed with this ironclad evidence the Feminists were lying about Domestic
Violence, I arranged a meeting. On the telephone, he agreed there was
a disparity between what academic research said about the roles of males
and females in Domestic Violence, and what the media said. But he changed
his tune when we met.
At the meeting itself, which was held in the (apparently empty) cafeteria
rather than in a meeting-room, it turned out he believed the standard
Feminist explanation for the above-mentioned discrepancy, and handed
me some police statistics and other information on Domestic Violence
arrests. I handed him a copy of the Fiebert bibliography, then spoke
about the six (minor) workplace assaults I had been the victim of over
the past 12 years at the hands of three females – just four floors
above where we were sitting (I didn't mention the sexual harassment
or intimidation I had suffered in addition to those straightforward
assaults). He covered his mouth with his hand as if he was covering
an itch to smile. Certainly, the expression in his eyes suggested he
was smiling! And I must admit my own instinctive reaction is also to
smile when hearing about female assaults on males (the DUAM, again!),
but it was significant to see this reaction from someone in his position
in the field of domestic violence.
Then he asked me if all the research I had read showed that women and
men hit each other equally frequently, and I said not every single one.
I recalled, in particular, the 1996 New Zealand National Survey of Crime
Victims, commissioned by the Victimisation Survey Committee, comprising
representatives from the Police, Ministry of Women's Affairs, and other
government agencies. However, I pointed out that the relevant questionnaire
had been slanted – possibly on the initiative of the Ministry
of Women's Affairs – to make it appear men hit women more frequently
than the other way around. Moreover, Mr. Taylor could not explain the
questions' slant. The questionnaire (from Table 2.13) did not ask men
and women simply whether:
1. Any partner ever actually used force or violence on you, such as
deliberately kicked, pushed, grabbed, shoved you or hit you with something;
or
2. Any partner ever threatened to use force or violence on you such
as threatened to kick, push, grab, or shove you; or
3. Any partner ever deliberately destroyed or threatened to destroy
your belongings.
Instead of those straightforward question, the questionnaire asked
whether:
1. Any partner ever actually used force or violence on you, such as
deliberately kicked, pushed, grabbed, shoved you or hit you with something
in a way that could hurt you; and
2. Any partner ever threatened to use force or violence on you such
as threatened to kick, push, grab, or shove you in a way that actually
frightened you; and
3. Any partner ever deliberately destroyed or threatened to destroy
your belongings in a way that frightened you.
The bias against men responding positively is immediately obvious,
since men are socialised to downplay fear and to be relatively insensitive
to pain. This was confirmed by data from another table (page 81) in
the very same survey, which showed that 50.5 percent of women, as compared
to only 31.4 percent of men, reported experiencing fear when on the
receiving end of a violent offence. So the results of this survey are
useless as evidence of the comparative incidence of domestic violence
committed by women, as compared to men. I cannot think of any reason
for the questions being framed in that way, except in order to make
women appear to be more frequent victims of family violence than men
are. The focus is women's subjective experience of events, rather than
the events themselves.
Then Mr. Taylor mentioned the other relevant New Zealand survey on
this topic – "Findings About Partner Violence" by Moffitt,
Caspi and Silva (1996), which showed the same thing as the overseas
studies – that women hit men at least as often as men hit women.
However, Feminists are not to be outdone by mere facts, and this is
where Mr. Taylor came out with his most telling statement. I can't quote
him verbatim, but what he said was more or less that you can't just
count "hits" in that way, and that, in one case referred to
by Moffitt (et al), the woman had kicked the man because he was holding
her by the throat. The implication was, of course, that she was acting
in self-defence.
So I asked Mr. Taylor why the man had held the woman by the throat,
but he just replied, "Because he was assaulting her !"
This is exactly what I mean by the DUAM - Feminists and police officers
like Mr. Taylor follow the chain of causation only just far enough back
to establish (to their satisfaction) that the woman is the innocent
party in such circumstances.
So I repeated this little dialogue between Mr. Taylor and myself back
to Mr. Taylor, and I accused him of being biased against men, and said
I would quote him. He then accused me of quoting him out of context
(which is absurd, since we were still in the same context) ! Then I
offered to retrace the conversation, in order to give him a chance to
clarify what he had meant, but he refused. He just added - implausibly
to me - that this sort of bias would never stand up in a real courtroom
to the detriment of any man. But this is exactly what I am sure does
happen again and again to countless men all over the western world.
Only an unusual combination of client and lawyer would uncover such
bias in a courtroom. In fact, exactly this sort of bias was shown by
a Judge Adams in a programme on the Family Court that was broadcast
on Television New Zealand in 2001 – to the detriment of a Polynesian
man's access to his child (See the chapter on the Justice System)..
I was absolutely aghast and yet felt triumphant - here were the exact
allegations of police and Feminist bias which I had discussed and read
about in theory, coming to live in the flesh and blood of the head of
domestic violence policy in the country where I live ! A few months
later, after publicising that incident, I heard from a judge (Judge
Carruthers, who was meeting with men's groups about Family Court issues)
that Mr. Taylor had left the position he was holding when I interviewed
him.
Lesbians as Activists
There is no denying many Feminists are not lesbians, particularly now
that Feminism is so mainstream in western societies. But Lesbian Feminists
are still at the cutting edge of man-hatred (misandry), and they frequently
work behind the scenes, letting the photogenic heterosexual Feminists
pose in the limelight. It is important not to be naïve about this,
because there are a lot of Feminists who are intelligent enough to see
how having obviously butch spokeswomen creates poor Public Relations.
Anyone who has taken an interest in the Women's Refuge and Rape Crisis
movements, for example, will have seen how they have largely replaced
their Lesbian spokeswomen with apparently heterosexual women. But it
would be naïve to assume the Lesbians have somehow disappeared
or been overthrown in some sort of coup d'etat.
It is not my intention to attack Lesbianism as a lifestyle, as I have
stated previously. Too many men in the international Men's/Fathers'
movement are homophobic, already. However, my point here is to lay bare
part of what I see as the Psychohistory of Feminism. Lesbians are of
course subject to oppression, but they also use this to garner sympathy
from politically correct communities, such as western bureaucracies,
while they get on with the business of drafting anti-male legislation.
There is a difference between attacking what Lesbians do in their private
life and attacking what they do politically.
It certainly fits with the self-interest of Lesbians to be Feminist.
And it is from Lesbians I have experienced some of the most marked physical
intimidation, discrimination against pro-men views, and the most extreme
reactions against anti-Feminist statements. If you know that a TV news
producer is a Lesbian, for example, it is a cast-iron guarantee she
will be biased against men's issues. If she is merely a heterosexual
Feminist, the likelihood she is biased against men is somewhat reduced.
Catch-22
The result of the power of Feminist pressure-groups and the DUAM is
to put men – all heterosexual men – into a Catch-22 (i.e.
No-Win) situation. If a man's wife or female partner abuses him psychologically
or physically, he is unable to retaliate. If he retaliates, the DUAM
will arrest him and put him in jail, the Family Court will impose a
court order preventing him from contacting her, give her custody of
the children, severely limit his access to his children and give her
sole right to live in the family home. So if third-party intervention
is not possible or is unsuccessful, he just has to either put up with
the abuse or leave the relationship – to the detriment of his
children's and his own emotional health and (probably) standard of living.
If anything is a "syndrome," this Catch-22 is one.
To give some concrete examples, I know a man whose glasses had just
been broken by his wife, so he rang the police to ask for help. The
policeman asked if she had "hit" him or "punched"
him. The complainant refused to answer this question because he didn't
know what the difference was between "punching" and "hitting",
and he suspected that the policeman was just trying to disprove him:
If he said "punched", he expected that the policeman would
says something stupid like, "Women can't punch." The officer
insisted, however, on getting an answer to this question and when no
answer was forthcoming he hung up! In today's political climate in western
countries, it is inconceivable that the police would treat a female
complainant that way. But males have no rights in such situations.
An acquaintance told me about another incident when, after a domestic
dispute, the police interviewed him and his wife in their home. His
wife said he had hit her and the police duly wrote that down in their
notebook, but when he said she had hit him the police wrote nothing
down.
Here's a further example: an advertisement, entitled "Family Violence
is a crime," and authorised by the President of the Police Managers'
Guild, appeared in a daily newspaper.7 It portrayed only women and children
as victims of this crime, omitting any mention of the possibility men
could also be victims of Family Violence. Not only is it a sexist advertisement
in its own right, but also frightening testimony to how little chance
men have of being treated fairly by the Justice system. The police have
no chance of reducing the incidence of domestic violence so long as
they insist in driving men into a corner and treating them as guilty
until proven innocent.
For example, in New Zealand there is an organisation called "Victim
Support" which, as its name implies, supports crime victims. A
woman there attacked a man for repeatedly doing noisy "wheelies"
with his car on the street in front of her house. She threw things at
him and menaced him with a stick. Yet, despite that it was the woman
who assaulted the man, the police intervened on her side and Victim
Support called to offer psychological support to her family. Moreover,
when I was assaulted outside a supermarket in the same city, my glasses
were broken and I received cuts that required stitches, but did Victim
Support call? No. Evidently, such organisations (or the police who refer
people to them) work according to the unwritten rule that only women
are victims and men can look after themselves.
Many men know there's no point calling the police, because they will
automatically take the woman's side. This is why it is not valid to
use statistics about police call-outs as an indication of the level
of domestic violence by women on men, as the former Minister of Justice,
Doug (now Sir Douglas) Graham did when a deputation from the New Zealand
Men for Equal Rights Association went to see him in 1998.
Doug Graham was proud of his Feminist-inspired domestic violence legislation
and maintained he was not stupid (evidently I have a reputation for
thinking Feminists are stupid). So I pointed out he was contradicting
himself – showing himself to be stupid, by basing his notions
of the relative culpability of men and women in domestic violence on
the arrest figures! When I explained, he agreed with me. I am certain,
however, that his Feminist advisers would have made sure he did not
actually do anything based on the fleeting insight he gained that day.
My impression as to how Feminist his ministry is relates to incidents
such as the publication of Hitting Home. His Ministry of Justice had
been planning to produce a series of studies on domestic violence:
1. Men talking about violence against their female partners;
2. Women talking about violence against their male partners;
3. People talking about violence against their same-sex partners.
But they only produced the first one, Hitting Home. The official reason
was they ran out of money. This seems suspicious given the sheer volume
of programmes addressing that same issue. Why not focus on female violence
for a change? Because Feminist journalists latch onto Feminist-compatible
research and turn it into headlines and documentaries, which Feminist
politicians then use to push Feminist legislation into Law, I am certain
the Feminists in the Ministry of Justice stopped the second and third
studies because they did not want the political impact of the first,
anti-male report to be at all blunted by publicity about the fact that
women (including lesbians) commit domestic violence. See, for example,
the webpage: "Gay and Lesbian Same-Sex Domestic Violence Bibliography"
(www.xq.com/cuav/dvbibl.htm)
And this DUAM bias is also a problem in the Third World. India, for
example, has seen the creation of the "All-India Crime Against
Men by Women Front" (Akhil Bharatiya Patni Virodhimorcha), which
was founded after the 1988 suicide of Naresh Anand, who had been unable
to bear his wife's physical and mental torture. He left behind a note
pleading with police to form a special cell to deal with cases of abused
husbands, along the lines of the already extant Crimes Against Women
cell.
All of this needs to be borne in mind when we read the following excerpt
from Liz Kate's email (on the website mentioned above):
'"Who is that [on the phone]!" he demands.
She ignores him, hastily whispering "I gotta go now..."
"GIMME that phone!" he shouts. "Who was that!!"
"It was someone from work."
He dials call return. It's not. "You sniveling lying BITCH,"
he shrieks, and yanking the phone out, throws it into the wall. "YOU
TELL ME WHO THE F- THAT WAS RIGHT NOW," he yells, advancing at
her. He picks up a little glass budvase her grandmother gave her and
holds it high.
"Nooo, gimme that!" she whines.
"WHO THE F- WAS ON THAT PHONE!!!"
She grabs his arm to save the vase, and he holds it out of her reach.
[She has started the violence, according who touched who first.]
Smash, the vase shatters into a thousand little shards. "You pig,"
she mutters, nearly inaudible.
"WHAT'D YOU SAY!!! SAY IT AGAIN, BITCH!!!" he screams.
She crouches at the floor, attempting to scoop up glass splinters. He
grabs her by the upper arm, bringing her to her feet. She wrenches her
arm away, and as he reaches for her again, pushes his forearm away from
her.
[Conflict tactics scale: one grab for each, plus a push for her.]
"I WANNA KNOW WHO WAS ON THAT PHONE!" he yells, down, close
into her face as she backs away.
"No one..."
[Conflict Tactics Scale: two for two. Nothing but a fair fight... so
far...]'
Here it is appropriate to use Liz Kates' own words: "misleading,
and nothing short of fraudulent" for her use of the above (presumably
real) conflict data. Part of what she is trying to do here is show that
counting hits is not the whole picture. I agree. But if she is also
trying (as I think she is) to depict this woman as a helpless, innocent
victim of male abuse, then this shows how one-sided the misandrist (man-hating)
Feminist "experts" on Domestic Violence are.
It is quite clear this man is being subjected – probably over
a long period of time – to severe psychological abuse by this
woman. She is blatantly lying to him point blank, which is about as
extreme a form of Psychological abuse as you can perpetrate in a relationship.
She is doing something detrimental to his interests behind his back,
such as having an affair or doing her best to give him the impression
she is.
Over a long period of time, this would be quite sufficient to drive
any man "mad" – mad/angry, or even mad/insane, but the
DUAM has no concept of male pyschological suffering. Her psychological
abuse precipitated the confrontation yet if they call the police he
will be the one they arrest. Indeed, I have ample anecdotal evidence
of cases in which men who complained their female partners had attacked
them were investigated as cases of domestic violence by the man against
the woman! This shows how critical the issue of interpretation is, and
how powerless men are in the political and legal processes of the West,
when it is the extreme Feminists who are doing most of the interpreting
– and teaching their interpretations to the Establishment as fact
!.
Murray A. Straus (1997), responding to Feminist criticism of the Conflict
Tactics Scale, approvingly quotes Gelles as stating:
"(W)hile the statement is true that men and women hit one other
in roughly equal numbers, it cannot be made in a vacuum without the
qualifiers that: 1) women are seriously injured at seven times the rate
of men; and 2) that women are killed by partners at more than two times
the rate of men."
First we should note he is obviously reiterating the Feminist-unfriendly
fact that men and women do indeed hit one other in roughly equal numbers.
Only if we expect abused men to shrug off their abuse, however –
"take it like a man" and not defend themselves – are
his other two points truly relevant. But can we reasonably expect men
to let an abusive woman rage simply because she may (in many cases)
be physically weaker? Don't men have a right to defend themselves, too?
Whatever happened to the notion of equality?
The fact that women are more likely than men to be killed in acts of
domestic violence needs to be investigated in detail and addressed with
grave concern, not as a gender issue, but a social problem. Moreover,
our investigation should ignore the age of the victim lest we overlook
the many male infants murdered by their mothers. (It is a sad truth
that when age is excluded as a factor there are nearly as many male
as female perpetrators of domestic homicide in the U.S. -- A grim equality.)8
The actual numbers and proportions will of course vary from country
to country, but it is interesting to read the "Most Recent US Spousal
Murder Statistics" web-page
. (www.kidpower.org/stats/stats2.html).
Although more husbands were convicted of murdering their wives than
the converse (156 wives, but 275 husbands), this might well be a feature
of anti-male judicial bias, since:
1. the average sentence for spousal murder (excluding the death penalty
and life sentences) for men was 16.5 years, whereas it was only 6 years
for women;
2. 94 percent of husbands, but only 81% of wives, received a prison
sentence on conviction for spousal murder;
3. "Victim Provocation" was given as a defense in 44% of the
wives' trials, but only in 10% of the husbands' trials. This does not
mean the husbands were not provoked – it just means that the DUAM
makes it much harder for men to make a claim of provocation with judges
and juries.
Who starts the Domestic Violence?
The police should investigate Domestic Violence like any other alleged
crime, find out who started it and then concentrate on warning or punishing
that person. At present, police in some countries are trained to automatically
punish the man, because they are told only men commit abuse and any
violence by women is simply retaliation to abuse by the man, and men
are supposed to be capable of inflicting more damage than women.
Men who are beaten by their wives are treated with contempt or derision,
so they know they can only rely on their own strength in domestic disputes
– the police will always be on the woman's side. In New Zealand,
for example, there are three kinds of Assault offences that men can
be charged with:
1. Common Assault;
2. Assault on a Female;
3. Aggravated Assault.
A man convicted of "Assault on a Female" is subject to a
higher maximum penalty than one convicted of Common Assault. This sends
a clear signal to all men and women that the legal system is sexist
and operates an anti-male double-standard.
What is the relevance of Domestic Violence to the Family Court?
A record of domestic violence against a partner (i.e., violence between
adults) should not be taken into account when deciding custody and access
issues, because it is not relevant. It also discriminates against fathers'
chances of getting custody and access because the police, as we have
seen, are biased against men. Indeed, domestic violence might even occur
when a father suspects his partner is neglecting or abusing his children
but he lacks the evidence to prove it in court. He might notice they
are looking unwell, listless, etc., but the children might be too afraid
of the consequences to say what their mother has been doing. If he defends
them from her, he risks losing his children to the mother's inadequate
care, which is what caused the problems in the first place!
Conclusion
The Feminist line on domestic violence is official policy in many countries.
As one Women's Refuge worker put it in Contact newspaper (July 22, 1999),
talking about the changes she noticed during the past 15 years:
"One of the main things that struck me is that the police attitude
has got much better. Our work is known and the various agencies are
working together."
The specific Feminist Catch-22 on domestic violence is that women are
always in the right, no matter what they do:
1. Men who hit their wives are deemed to do it without provocation
and without reason – and therefore without excuse. This issue
is never raised by Feminists.
2. Women are deemed never to hit their husbands (the issue is never
spontaneously raised by Feminists) – or, if women do hit their
husbands, Feminists (when Feminists are forced to agree that women do
do this) take the line that they only do it justifiably.
3. When Feminists admit men are also abused by women, they claim only
women suffer from a "syndrome" of domestic abuse. In other
words, women are allowed to use the excuse of a "syndrome"
as a defence when they murder their husbands.
4. When women murder their menfolk, there is usually some excuse or
justification (e.g., domestic violence by the man in their lives).
5. When men murder their womenfolk, they are not allowed to claim the
woman's behaviour was a justifying factor.
6. When women murder their men, the cause is often deemed to be domestic
violence, but when men murder their women, this murder is deemed to
be an instance of domestic violence.
Men and fair-minded women must campaign together against women-only
defences and men-only crimes. Feminists have been steadily working toward
the goal of getting all women treated as innocent victims, no matter
what they have done – and all men treated as criminals, no matter
if they are innocent.
Anti-male bias doesn't just infect the police – it is particularly
strong in the media, who pass it on to the whole of western society.
For example, there was a letter to TIME magazine, published on January
20, 1997, in which Richard M. Riffe, Assistant Prosecutor of Boone County,
Madison, West Virginia, complains about the biased way in which TIME
wrote up a case involving a woman who murdered her husband.9
As far as public attitudes are concerned, here are two examples:
1. A newspaper advertisement for a stage show called "Full Marx"
quoted a review of the show by one Ralph McAllister, which ended with
the words, "So take your family, wallop your husband (my emphasis),
even bring along the great dane, but make sure you see Full Marx!10
2. A cartoon (in French) which the mainly female staff of the Language
department of a school thought suitable to post prominently on a wall
in the 1990's. This cartoon told the story of a woman who threw a plate
of breakfast at her husband and then left him on the grounds he was
lazy and had asked for breakfast in bed. This is Domestic Violence,
but because it was committed by a woman, it was not only considered
innocuous, but some of the teachers even decorated it with comments
such as, "Very good!" and "Serves him right!" (in
French).11
I'd also like to briefly raise the issue of PMT (Premenstrual Tension),
or PMS (Premenstrual Syndrome). The role of PMT in domestic violence
needs research. It would be ironic, but typical of modern societies,
if PMT were (as is quite possible) a major cause of physical and psychological
abuse of men by women, which then led to men being arrested because
of DUAM bias in the Establishment.
We need to investigate the power relationship, as well. What does it
do for the relative power of men and women in a relationship if the
woman can say and do what she likes, in the sure knowledge that if the
worst comes to the worst she will get the children, an income from the
taxpayer, and at least half the joint assets, while he will have restricted
or no access to his children, a jail term and child-support bills? That
is the bottom line in modern western heterosexual relationships.
The man has to either defer to the woman, walk out of the relationship
or run the risk of the worst-case becoming a reality. The United States
divorce rate in 1988 was the fourth-highest in the world, according
to the UN Demographic yearbook. And there has been research in that
country which found that the marriages that last the longest are those
in which the husband always gives way to the wife! So the extreme Feminist
domestic violence campaign has also got to be seen as a tool for replacing
a social system based on the nuclear family with a Matriarchal society
comprised of single mothers and fatherless children.
For more on this topic, see "Femi-Fascism Flourishes," by
Cassandra Hewitt-Reid, at the free radical website. (www.freeradical.co.nz/content/37/37hewittreid.html).