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By Mark Rosenthal
August 19, 2005
NewsWithViews.com
For thirty years
now, researchers have known that wives kick, punch, stab, or shoot
their husbands about as often as husbands kick, punch, stab, or shoot
their wives. But federal law ignores the facts and instead uses the
power of the purse to get states to impose Kafkaesque policies that
punish victimized men and reward violent women.
Back in
1975, the First National Family Violence Survey turned up results that
surprised even the sociologists conducting the survey. Wives attack
husbands about as often as husbands attack wives. And wives attack
first about as often as husbands attack first, which is strong evidence
that women's assaults on men can't be explained away simply as
self-defense.[1]
But battered women's advocates were intent on portraying domestic
violence as something only men do and only women suffer from. So they'd
conveniently leave out the part about women's assaults on men whenever
they cited the study's results.[2]
Susan R.
Paisner is a criminologist and longtime advocate for abused women and
men. She recalls being stunned by the hostile attitudes toward male
victims that she encountered at one of the nation's first conferences
on domestic violence. She naively thought that "we were all there to do
good -- for all who needed it." Yet when she mentioned having read a
brief newspaper article about male victims, many of the other women at
the conference turned on her, saying, "This is OUR issue, OUR cause. If
men are battered, then let other MEN do something for them."[3]
The Second
National Family Violence Survey was conducted ten years after the
first. Contrary to advocates' claims of an epidemic of wife abuse,
violence toward women had declined. But violence toward men by women
had not changed since the first survey.[4]
When
battered women's advocates lobbied Congress, they quoted only the part
of the results that suited their agenda. And so, in spite of
longstanding knowledge among researchers about the existence of
significant numbers of abusive women and victimized men, Congress
enacted legislation in 1994 that addressed only part of the problem.
Rather than passing an inclusive Family Violence Act, they enacted a
Violence Against Women Act.
VAWA
provided billions of dollars for organizations whose primary purpose is
helping abused women, but nothing whatsoever for organizations to help
abused men. The Violence Against Women Office, which administers VAWA,
states that the law prohibits funding of programs that focus on male
victims.[5]
At least one state agency that distributes VAWA funds explicitly lists
"Programs that focus on children and/or men" under "Ineligible
Activities" on their application form.[6]
Even after
receiving $5.1 billion under the past two VAWA bills, battered women's
advocates still argue that there's too little money, and therefore the
government should allocate no funding whatsoever for organizations
whose primary purpose is to help the 835,000 men the U.S. Dept. of
Justice estimates are assaulted by their partner annually.[7]
Yet somehow there's enough money in the current $4.2 billion VAWA
reauthorization bill to make special provisions for an estimated 32,600
Native Americans,[8] but of course, only if those Native Americans are female. No males need apply.
RADAR
(Respecting Accuracy in Domestic Abuse Reporting) has reviewed the VAWA
reauthorization bill and identified the numerous serious problems
listed below.[9] The bill:
1 Misrepresents domestic violence as almost always man-on-woman violence.
2 Violates men's Fourteenth Amendment right to equal protection.
3
Lacks safeguards against false allegations of domestic violence, thus
encouraging the unscrupulous to use false allegations during divorce
proceedings to separate children and fathers.
4 lurs the distinction between violent crime and a verbal argument.
5 Allows restraining orders based on a woman's word; no proof required.
6
Encourages mandatory reporting, mandatory arrest, and "no-drop"
prosecutions, policies which even the Feminist Majority Foundation says
often end up harming families.[10]
7
Pre-empts state partner assault laws and the federal Victims of Crime
Act. Spends $1 billion a year duplicating existing programs.
8
Funds trainings that teach judges to violate the Constitution. In one
such training, judges were instructed: "Your job is not to become
concerned about all the constitutional rights of the man that you're
violating as you grant a restraining order. Thrown him out on the
street, give him the clothes on his back and tell him, 'See ya'
around.'"[11]
9 Funds treatment programs based on ideology, not science.
10 Represents an overreaching of federal power.
11
Corrupts family violence research. VAWA-funded researchers often seek
to bias the outcome of their research by interviewing only women,
slanting the wording of questions, asking only questions that will
produce the desired answer, or by selectively reporting research
findings.[12]
12 Funds educational programs that consistently depict men as perpetrators and women as victims of domestic violence.
VAWA should
have treated all people equally when it was first enacted. Instead,
VAWA tramples on persons' basic human rights while ignoring what
scientific researchers have known for three decades. Our elected
officials have a responsibility to make sure VAWA helps all victims of
domestic violence.
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