13/11/04
Domestic Violence Distortions
Conceal Culture of Male Hatred
Mark Charalambous
MensNewsDaily
(NOTE: Site is now dead, archived version used)
October was Domestic Violence Month, and once again the PR campaign was
ramped up to convince women that the only thing more dangerous than being on a
date is being home with their husbands. Radio stations broadcast public service
announcements from SAFE, a national battered women’s organization, reminding us
that “domestic violence is the leading cause of injury for women in the United
States.”
Once again the truth squad had to answer the bell with the real facts. Far
from being the leading cause of injury to women, domestic violence accounts for
somewhat less than 2 percent of all women’s injuries. Data on injury rates of
women is freely available from the CDC’s National Electronic Injury Surveillance
System (NEISS) which tracks a representative sample of hospitals nationwide.
A 1997 Dept. of Justice report, “Violence-Related Injuries Treated in
Hospital Emergency Departments” based on 1994 NEISS data, reports that 1.4
million people were treated “for injuries from confirmed or suspected
interpersonal violence.” It states in the first paragraph: “These patients
represented about 1.5% of all visits to hospital EDs and 3.6% of the
injury-related ED visits in 1994.”
NEISS data from 2000, also on the internet, shows women’s injuries from all
types of violence amounts to 4.9 percent of the total. The leading cause of
injury is falling down (28%), followed by vehicle accidents (18.1%).
The claim that domestic violence is the leading cause of injury is
exaggerated by an order of magnitude, that is, by a factor of at least 10.
What cause is served by exaggerating the true incidences of domestic violence
against women? Is the truth not horrendous enough – that perhaps 2 percent of
all injuries to women are due to assaults from people they know?
And this “error”—if that’s all it is—has a flip side. Just as the Red Sox
never-before-in-history-of-baseball comeback from a 0-3 game deficit in the ALCS
assures their place in the history of baseball, it simultaneously condemns the
Yankees as the greatest chokers in the history of the game. Implicit in this
domestic violence lie is a devastating indictment of men. Each of these grossly
exaggerated number of women’s domestic violence injuries must be mated with a
male batterer.
Though this may be one of the more flagrant examples of statistic abuse by
the domestic violence community, it is not some aberration. The domestic
violence experts use every trick in the statistical book to cook up their
alarming “facts.”
Let’s call this “error” what it is: thinly disguised hate speech against men.
While Congress dances around legislation that will criminalize speech
critical of the accepted victim classes, it is funding hate speech campaigns
against men. The Violence Against Women Act, besides being facially
discriminatory if not unconstitutional, is funded to the tune of billions of
dollars.
Think about it. If someone inflated claims of black-on-white violence by over
1,000 percent, do you think they would qualify for government funds to spread
this “information” as a public service announcement?
Several years ago I attended a seminar by Denise Gosellin, a criminologist
who had just authored a book on domestic violence, “Heavy Hands.” In response to
a question of mine she related how she had been told that the government would
not fund any study that includes male victims of female domestic violence.
Organizations like SAFE produce domestic violence “fact sheets” that usually
include a list of debunked “myths” such as: “Substance abuse is a cause of
domestic violence.” Those who actually work as first responders in the community
know that substance abuse is indeed a major cause of domestic violence. But
since this subverts the overall message of male demonization that is the true
objective, it is presented as a “myth.”
The real cause of domestic violence, according to these “experts,” is that
violence against women is inherent in the construct of masculinity. Men resort
to violence when they lose the control over women that the “patriarchy” bestows
upon them, otherwise identified in these circles as “using male privilege.”
The more one digs into this movement, the more it resembles a religion rather
than a campaign for social reform and justice. It is a belief system steeped in
feminist anti-male ideology, based on feelings and fear rather than sound
scientific research. At the heart of the domestic violence industry is a culture
of male hatred.
Ever since male-bashing became the national sport decades ago, there is no
shortage of studies to quote in support of the campaign to demonize men. But the
public would be shocked if they knew just how academic standards have been
corrupted in the social sciences where students who eventually produce these
studies are indoctrinated.
A standard introductory sociology textbook used in many colleges and
universities, “Essentials of Sociology” by James Henslin, actually steers
students away from doing research on women who abuse men. The first chapter
includes a section on the correct methodology for doing research. It uses spouse
abuse as an example:
“Let’s use spouse abuse as our topic. The next step is to narrow the topic.
Spouse abuse is too broad; we need to focus on a specific area. For example, you
may want to know why men are more likely to be the abusers.”
Ironically this falls on the same pages as a boxed feature that warns against
trusting common sense and conventional wisdom when approaching research. It
lists ten true/false statements and then reveals on the next page that all are
false, contrary to common sense. But the author contradicts his own instructions
in his spouse abuse research example:
“You must review the literature to find out what is already known about the
problem. You don’t want to waste your time rediscovering what is already known.”
According to Dr. Heslin, the assumption that men are far more likely to abuse
their female partners than vice-versa is a commonsense notion that needn’t be
questioned – furthermore, it would be a waste of time to do new research to
confirm a result that “is already known.”
When social science serves the cause of ideology, this is just the kind of
nonsense we can expect.
The corruption of the behavioral sciences in feminist-driven areas of study
such as domestic violence and “gender” studies is uniformly appalling. Students
across the educational landscape are not being educated as much as indoctrinated
into a distorted feminist worldview. Perhaps schools should consider placing
their behavioral science departments into some kind of academic receivership
under trusteeship of their mathematics departments.
It’s instructive to reflect on the fallout of Steve Basile’s attempt to do
research on domestic violence.
In 1997, when Basile undertook to analyze in a scientific and comprehensive
manner the issuing of domestic abuse protection restraining orders (aka 209A’s),
the reaction of the domestic violence “experts” in the community was to pass a
law restricting access to the data Basile used. In contrast to most domestic
violence studies, Basile’s research was scientifically sound. He didn’t
self-select a sample to predetermine the results as is typically done with
advocacy research, but examined all domestic abuse prevention orders issued by
Gardner District Court for one year, 1997. The first phase of the study was
published in the Journal of Family Violence earlier this year; the second phase
of the study, which focuses on court response, is pending publication.
During the data gathering phase the domestic violence community (specifically
Jane Doe, Inc.) got wind of his research and in record time legislation was
passed amending the Public Records Law, Massachusetts’s version of the Freedom
of Information Act. Attorney General Tom Reilly, state senator Therese Murray
and then-Senator Cheryl Jacques submitted and lobbied for legislation
restricting access to 209A documents. So much for legislative gridlock – if
you’re on the “right” side of the issue; in this case the side of ensuring that
actual data on domestic violence never fall into the hands of anyone who doesn’t
follow the party line.
More recently Basile attempted to gain access to the data behind a
junk-science study, “Child Custody Determinations in Cases Involving Intimate
Partner Violence: A Human Rights Analysis,” authored by Dr. Jay Silverman, an
assistant professor in the Department of Society, Human Development, and Health
at Harvard University.
The data for Silverman’s study is based on a 2002 Wellesley College study:
‘Battered Mothers Speak Out’. It purported to show that battered women are being
abused by the state's family courts by awarding custody of their children to
their “batterer” husbands, thus endangering the children of these parents.
In typical junk-science fashion, the research made absolutely no attempt at
objectivity. To achieve the desired results the researchers engineered an
appropriate population sample and solicited “expert” testimony from the plethora
of feminist, anti-male practitioners employed in family law and domestic
relations. Inclusion in the population required that a participant be 1) female,
and 2) angry at the outcome of her case. Once a candidate was found, so-called
“snowball sampling” was used to find other potential participants. That is, a
disgruntled female litigant recommended other disgruntled mothers to the
researchers.
Basile’s request for the data was met with a series of rebuffs after he
approached in turn the Harvard School of Health, Silverman himself, and finally
Harvard President Lawrence Summers. His efforts were eventually squelched when
he received a terse, threatening letter from Diane E. Lopez, of the Office of
the General Counsel for Harvard.
The media is also complicit in promoting these vicious stereotypes. They
never employ journalistic standards when reporting on these studies, fail to
report on contrary research, and generally display an unquenchable thirst for
any “news” that confirms the reprehensible behavior of men toward women.
Consider the following
False data about female victims of domestic violence that implicitly demonize
men are presented as fact.
Social science courses steer students away from doing research that
challenges the false data.
The government funds the organizations that present the false information,
and won’t fund studies that might contradict it.
The state legislature amends the Freedom of Information Act to restrict
access to court documents to those friendly to the domestic violence industry.
The media uncritically report garbage science results that support the false
data and ignore contrary studies and viewpoints that challenge the established
“facts.”
The courts use double standards for men and women in domestic relations cases
based upon a paradigm that relies upon the false data, leading to host of
injustices, some of which are a direct cause of the nation’s number one social
problem: fatherlessness.
There’s a word that is appropriate to describe such a confluence of interests
promoting lies as truth: Conspiracy. And if the issue were anything but the
politically loaded third rail subject of domestic violence, that’s how it would
be recognized, and maybe eventually, exposed.
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