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Author Topic: Domestic Violence Has Made Violence A Meaningless Term  (Read 6399 times)

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Domestic Violence Has Made Violence A Meaningless Term
« on: December 17, 2013, 04:24:11 PM »
All of these things that describe the profile of an abusive husband seem very subjective.  Yet, they are used to help women determine if they are victims of domestic violence or not.  Also, there doesn't seem to be much effort or hope to fix the relationship, but rather to just get out of it.  Additionally, there seems to be little to no effort at personal responsibility.    On the one hand i can see how this makes some sense, with a world full of crazies, but on the other it seems like just another way of breaking up families/long term relationships, in favor of a rootless, disconnected and culture-less lifestyle, that seems to mirror the behavior of our business leaders (not much fidelity to anyone or any place).  


Characteristics of Abusive Men

Control

    
Control is the "overarching behavioral characteristic" of abusive men, achieved with criticism, verbal abuse, financial control, isolation, cruelty, etc. (see Power & Control Wheel). The need to control may deepen over time or escalate if a woman seeks independence (e.g. going to school).

    
Entitlement

    
Entitlement is the "overarching attitudinal characteristic" of abusive men, a belief in having special rights without responsibilities, justifying unreasonable expectations (e.g., family life must centre on his needs). He will feel the wronged party when his needs are not met and may justify violence as self-defence.

    
Selfishness & Self-centredness

    
An expectation of being the centre of attention, having his needs anticipated. May not support or listen to others.

    
Superiority

    
Contempt for woman as stupid, unworthy, a sex object or as a house keeper.

    
Possessiveness

    
Seeing a woman and his children as property.

    
Confusing Love & Abuse

    
Explaining violence as an expression of his deep love.

    
Manipulativeness

    
A tactic of confusion, distortion and lies. May project image of himself as good, and portray the woman as crazy or abusive.

    
Contradictory Statements & Behaviours

    
Saying one thing and doing another, such as being publicly critical of men who abuse women.

    
Externalization of Responsibility

    
Shifting blame for his actions and their effects to others, especially the woman, or to external factors such as job stress.

    
Denial, Minimization, & Victim Blaming

    
Refusing to acknowledge abusive behaviour (e.g. she fell), not acknowledging the seriousness of his behaviour and its effects (e.g., it's just a scratch), blaming the victim (e.g., she drove me to it; she made it up because I have a new girlfriend).

    
Serial Battering

    
Some men are abusive in relationship after relationship.

Men can exhibit some or all of these characteristics and never physically assault a woman.

This material was summarized from Lundy Bancroft & Jay Silverman (2002). The Batterer as Parent: Addressing the Impact of Domestic Violence on Family Dynamics. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

http://www.lfcc.on.ca/HCT_SWASM_4.html

Domestic Violence Has Made Violence A Meaningless Term
« Reply #1 on: December 17, 2013, 06:57:26 PM »
A lot of this garbage is pure Marxism. Of course any common sense would give the reason that women should not be educated but that is considered "demeaning."

"..seeing wives and children as property." That comes straight from The German Ideology of Karl Marx.

"...expectation  of being the center of attention..." Of course I see nothing in here about if the woman is the center of attention. A wife should understand her husband's hardships.

"contempt for women outside of a housekeeper..." I can borrow from feminists, "A housewife is an illegitimate profession."



Domestic Violence Has Made Violence A Meaningless Term
« Reply #2 on: December 18, 2013, 02:00:03 AM »
These kind of studies are almost always pandering and politically biased.

You can watch the murder trial for 3 weeks on IN Session where some lady ambushed and murdered her husband or set him up for insurance money so she could run away with her lover, and the next day they are stereotyping men as the abusers.

I have personal experience of lesbians who beat the heck out of each other, this scenario is no stranger to the COPs series where I saw "domestic abuse" between lesbians and it was brutal. A study last year showed that children in lesbian households are 18 times more likely to be sɛҳuąƖly abused then their peers in normal households.

And this study in the OP seems to go over the edge in what is domestic abuse. Forget to take out the garbage suddenly become criminal harassment and grounds for justifiable self-defense homicide.

Domestic Violence Has Made Violence A Meaningless Term
« Reply #3 on: December 18, 2013, 02:02:52 PM »
I do know this.  In Catholic Charities, there is a group for "Domestic Violence" and in it is Planned Parenthood.  Like Susan Komen is of Planned Parenthood.  Planned Parenthood hides in many groups, especially with United Way. That is what Catholic Charities is, United Way.

Domestic Violence Has Made Violence A Meaningless Term
« Reply #4 on: December 18, 2013, 02:37:40 PM »
 :dancing-banana:
Why does Traditional Guy want an "uneducated" wife?  Please define "uneducated!"