T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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155.1 | Thanks for posting that | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Thu Feb 16 1995 11:48 | 14 |
|
I've seen more than one report that domestic violence in the U.S.
against men is at least as common as against women. .0 Pretty
much tells the story in the U.S. also. It is the same story that
I and others in this file have been trying to tell for years only
to suffer immediate and all-out attack from the politically correct.
One thing that the report didn't mention (directly anyway) is the
taboo of men striking women (contrary to feminist propaganda) even
in self defense. That's how the women get away with such action,
because if a man strikes a woman even in self defense, _he_ is going
to be the one facing abuse charges.
fred();
|
155.2 | | ASABET::YANNEKIS | | Thu Feb 16 1995 12:07 | 11 |
|
hmm ...
I believe women instigate as many events as men ... I've never touched
a women but I was once slapped in the middle of an argument.
I believe men cause much more physical damage than women do.
I believe men are an immensely greater risk to womens lives than women
are to mens lives
|
155.3 | I don't know | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Thu Feb 16 1995 12:35 | 21 |
| Surveys and anecdotes are slippery kinds of evidence, so I would not use them to
answer the question in the base note. (Yes, I have the same reservation when
women use surveys and anecdotes to "prove" how common male violence is.)
But I think the base note is asking the wrong question.
What matters to me is whether men are being abused. If one man is, that is one
too many. If any significant number are, then we should work, privately and
publicly, to control the problem.
.1> taboo of men striking women (contrary to feminist propaganda) even
Right. The idea of not striking women is a large part of both traditional and
modern American culture. A man who has internalized it will have a lot of
trouble bringing himself to the point of striking a woman, even in self-defence.
If he does, regardless of the circumstances, he will feel bad about himself, in
addition to being in trouble with the law, as Fred pointed out.
A reader may wish to reply that some men seem to have no trouble striking women.
Maybe this shows that men are not really faceless interchangeable units.
|
155.4 | hey, they deserve it. So what's the problem? | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Thu Feb 16 1995 12:57 | 14 |
|
Women striking men is much more acceptable. The comic strip Andy
Capp regularly shows Andy getting knocked loop-t-loop by his wife.
This is supposed to be _funny_. I've seen several incidents on TV
of women striking men. The one that comes to mind was a recent
promo form a show called "A Whole New Ball Game". In the promo,
the man was supposed to have said something to a woman who was
setting next to him in a bar. The woman turns and slaps him clear
to the floor. Then a laugh-track is dubbed into the scene.
Right now I'm working on my 5'8" daughter who has recently gotten
the idea that it is ok to go around whacking on people.
fred();
|
155.5 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu Feb 16 1995 13:15 | 9 |
| I had a neighborhood fem tenant from next door harras me. She was being
tossed out of her unit because she had not paid her rent and had tooo
many parties. So, being the live in landlord of the neighborhood. I
became the brunt of her frustrations..... She followed me down the hill
to the corner store yelling and name calling me. On the way back up to
my abode. She stopped me with a round house kick. Missing my face by
wiskers... I was told anything after a contact like that would be self
defence. Including the use of deadly force. Execpt I do not have a gun.
And glad I do not... for the time being....:)
|
155.6 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu Feb 16 1995 13:16 | 4 |
| ...cont.
I was told by a friend that I had smiled at her with one of those looks
that could kill.:)
|
155.7 | | MKOTS3::SEIFERT | | Thu Feb 16 1995 13:22 | 2 |
| This is horrible! Weren't any of these people taught as children that
hit someone is wrong?
|
155.8 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Thu Feb 16 1995 13:44 | 11 |
| re .7
> This is horrible! Weren't any of these people taught as children that
> hit someone is wrong?
Probably, but there are a lot of examples where women hitting men
is acceptable, even supposedly funny. Then as .0 indicates, they
learn, as they escalate the violence and men don't respond, that they
can do it and hide behind the men-don't-hit-women taboo.
fred();
|
155.9 | | MAL009::RAGUCCI | | Thu Feb 16 1995 15:25 | 11 |
|
I agree: Society does think it's funny.
My sisters' girlfriend, had a boyfriend who was a State Trooper:
He was on a routine shift one night, had to pull over a car,
ended up almost losing his testicles from two (mannish) women
kicking the S**t out of him. They got away, he lived. This was over
18 yrs ago. No one, can be trusted @ times: man or woman....
|
155.10 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu Feb 16 1995 15:33 | 7 |
| Of course there is ol Susan Smith... And there are a number of women
who do heinous things to their children. But this is also excused cause
they are under pressure of our society... or under the influence of
drugs. Funny. When they do a crime like this. There is always an excuse
for them to easily get off. And always the blame of their cause is
never their own. Although they are adults, responsible for their adult
acts, and never held accountable.
|
155.11 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Thu Feb 16 1995 16:10 | 11 |
| Just because if I don't make the following statement, Fred will
consider it further evidence, I'll say it: domestic violence and
battery is always wrong. Period. No matter who does it. The
article in the basenote is horrific.
And as has been said before many, many times, no matter how often Fred
chooses to misremember it; when as many men fear for the lives and
safety as women, or even a tenth as many - then I'll consider giving
the effort to prevent it more of of my time and attention.
DougO
|
155.12 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Feb 16 1995 16:22 | 2 |
| George, can you give examples of women who've murdered their children and
have got off?
|
155.13 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu Feb 16 1995 16:51 | 1 |
| I will go research that.
|
155.14 | | MSBCS::GIRONDEL | | Fri Feb 17 1995 09:52 | 25 |
| Ref: .10
Our society is fast going to total exemption of personal
responsability in crimes committed:
The two guys who killed their parents to inherit their life
insurance claimed they were sexually abused by their
parents.
The Framingham 9's claimed "battered woman syndrom" although some of
these ladies, actually killed their SO, while he was asleep,
not in real-time self defense.
Everyone is now a victim (OJ Simpson will have a hard time to claim
being a victim, though..)
Kids who comit crimes, and their lawyers claim the influence
of such and such music/group....
Are you folks not sick of hearing all these victims stories
(folks accused of crimes, always finding someone else
to blame for their actions)
|
155.15 | This is not a note | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Fri Feb 17 1995 12:30 | 11 |
|
re .11
> when as many men fear for the lives and
> safety as women, or even a tenth as many - then I'll consider giving
> the effort to prevent it more of of my time and attention.
In spite of all the blathering about not doing it, you turned right
around and did it.
fred();
|
155.16 | why the hesitation? | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Fri Feb 17 1995 12:52 | 11 |
| .11> when as many men fear for the lives and safety as women
Doug,
Why set such a high standard? A hospital doesn't say "When as many people are
dying of cancer as of stroke, we'll think about treating cancer patients." Why
should you wait for this point of absolute equality?
> or even a tenth as many
Are you sure we haven't passed this threshold? I'm not sure.
|
155.17 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Fri Feb 17 1995 13:06 | 29 |
| Its a proof point thing, Wally. It has been proven to my satisfaction
that the problems caused to every woman in our society by the fear of
violence from men are gargantuan, culturally inbred, and very damaging
to our societal health in numerous dimensions; mental health, economic
health, etc. Such fears as every woman reasonably has about the
potential for experiencing violence from men affects stress levels,
personal freedom to go where they want, dress how they want, do as they
please, economic freedom in the need to be secure (taking cabs instead
of buses or walking, buying more home security, etc, etc) are in fact
damaging to this culture; such fears restrict liberty, distort the
economy, and cripple the nation. I think that identifying and solving
the problems that cause this violence will take a huge effort over many
generations. I consider myself to be making that effort, in my writing,
in my volunteering, in my political activities, and in my educational
efforts.
It has *not* been proven to my satisfaction that even one man in ten
has such debilitating fears about violence from women, much less any
experience therof. Our society, overall, does not appear to me to be
suffering anywhere near so much from this problem as from the other.
Therefore, I don't plan to devote my personal time and activism to
solving this problem. I have no objection to others, who may have a
different take on the situation, from following their consciences and
taking such actions as they see fit. All I'm saying is, I won't spend
*my* time on it. Fred considers that this is an attack, that his
issues aren't good enough for me to promise my time and effort on.
Sorry, Fred, but you haven't convinced me.
DougO
|
155.18 | maybe the pendulum is starting to swing back | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Fri Feb 17 1995 13:21 | 33 |
| .14> The two guys who killed their parents to inherit their life
> insurance claimed they were sexually abused by their
> parents.
As I understand it, the Menendez brothers are in jail and broke, after their
first trial ended in a hung jury. I am still disgusted that the jury bought
what looks to me like a pathetic excuse, but I was not in the jury box.
> The Framingham 9's claimed "battered woman syndrom" although some of
> these ladies, actually killed their SO, while he was asleep,
> not in real-time self defense.
All these women got convicted. Some got pardons recently, but I think some are
still in jail. The claim of the "battered woman syndrome" is that a woman is
not responsible for killing her abuser, even if he is asleep at the time. I
don't buy that in general, although I might in a particular case.
> Everyone is now a victim (OJ Simpson will have a hard time to claim
> being a victim, though..)
The defence is claiming he is a victim of police incompetence and racism.
Observers seem to think that they are not convincing the jury.
> Kids who comit crimes, and their lawyers claim the influence
> of such and such music/group....
Lawyers have used this defence, but I don't think anybody has been acquitted.
Remember lawyers are paid to get their clients off, and the weaker their case,
the farther they will reach for a defence.
I've seen several books and articles lately attacking the "abuse excuse." It
may be getting a lot harder for defence lawyers to sell these excuses to a jury.
|
155.19 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Fri Feb 17 1995 13:24 | 23 |
| re .17
> It has *not* been proven to my satisfaction that even one man in ten
> has such debilitating fears about violence from women, much less any
> experience therof. Our society, overall, does not appear to me to be
> suffering anywhere near so much from this problem as from the other.
It's the old, "you have to prove your point to my satisfaction, else
you lose" game again Doug0. What if I were to take the position
that _I_ just haven't been given enough proof that women are actually
suffering as much as some groups claim, so to h**k with women?
> Therefore, I don't plan to devote my personal time and activism to
> solving this problem. I have no objection to others, who may have a
> different take on the situation, from following their consciences and
> taking such actions as they see fit. All I'm saying is, I won't spend
> *my* time on it. Fred considers that this is an attack, that his
> issues aren't good enough for me to promise my time and effort on.
Not an attack, Doug0. Just a further example of the hypocrisy that
has been pointed out time and again already.
fred();
|
155.20 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Fri Feb 17 1995 16:20 | 17 |
| > It's the old, "you have to prove your point to my satisfaction, else
> you lose" game again Doug0. What if I were to take the position
> that _I_ just haven't been given enough proof that women are actually
> suffering as much as some groups claim, so to h**k with women?
In the discussion between you and me, Fred, I don't see anybody as
'losing'. I see each of us unconvinced by the other. That's fine by
me. I live my life, you live yours, and we each do what we think is
right. If you really think that you haven't seen enough proof
regarding what violence and fear of violence do to women in our
society, then fine: say it: "to heck with women". Live your life that
way. I'll spend my time on what I think are problems, you spend your
time on what you think are problems.
This is not 'hypocracy', Fred; this is choice.
DougO
|
155.21 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Fri Feb 17 1995 17:00 | 15 |
| re .20
> society, then fine: say it: "to heck with women". Live your life that
> way. I'll spend my time on what I think are problems, you spend your
> time on what you think are problems.
>
> This is not 'hypocracy', Fred; this is choice.
Given that _every_ attempt to even discuss these problems gets
attacked and rat-holed as this one has, I'm not buying it Doug0.
As they say, "Then push, pull, or get the *&^%$% out of the way".
If you're not going to help, then at least quit trying to rat-hole
and impede those who _are_ trying to do something.
fred();
|
155.22 | | SOLVIT::SOULE | Pursuing Synergy... | Fri Feb 17 1995 17:20 | 9 |
| .20> I'll spend my time on what I think are problems, you spend your
.20> time on what you think are problems.
I see you two guys spending your time on the SAME problem - helping
refugees from the "War of the Sexes"... This War is a violent one as
is any War.
Will we ever be smart enough to teach our children NOT to fight this
War?
|
155.23 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Fri Feb 17 1995 17:47 | 20 |
| re .22
> I see you two guys spending your time on the SAME problem - helping
> refugees from the "War of the Sexes"... This War is a violent one as
> is any War.
>
> Will we ever be smart enough to teach our children NOT to fight this
> War?
Maybe someday we will learn to get along. As for now I think the
men's side of the battle is only just beginning to realize that
there _is_ a war.
To continue with the military analogy, we're kind of in the same place
Russia was in when the Nazis invaded in World War II. They were two
days into the invasion and German troops were 200 miles inside Russia
before Stalin would admit that there was an invasion and allow the
Russian military to act.
fred();
|
155.24 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Fri Feb 17 1995 18:35 | 14 |
| > Given that _every_ attempt to even discuss these problems gets
> attacked and rat-holed as this one has, I'm not buying it Doug0.
Maybe if your first response in the topic didn't start the attack I
wouldn't have chosen to respond to the attack with clarification.
Look at .1 and try to tell me you didn't bring this down on yourself.
.1> ... only to suffer immediate and all-out attack from the
politically correct.
You started that kind of name callin', so quit bitchin' that I set the
record straight.
DougO
|
155.25 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Sat Feb 18 1995 05:07 | 17 |
| re: .11
> And as has been said before many, many times, no matter how often Fred
> chooses to misremember it; when as many men fear for the lives and
> safety as women, or even a tenth as many - then I'll consider giving
> the effort to prevent it more of of my time and attention.
If we can assume that the base note is correct, then a
significantly higher proportion of men than women *should* fear for
their lives and safety.
If, as Doug asserts, they do not, does this prove that men are
rather poor at risk assesment, or slightly insane (as a statistical
generalisation, of course). What can be done about this? Or, since we
are talking about relative proportions of men and women that fear, is
it the case that women are more generally paranoid? Obviously either
one group is not fearing enough, or the other group is fearing too
much.
|
155.26 | | 43GMC::KEITH | Dr. Deuce | Mon Feb 20 1995 06:39 | 10 |
| Two women have now gotten off from conviction from having sexually
dismembered men. In both cases the person either admitted doing the
crime or there was overwhelming evidence that they did it.
'...having something to fear...'
If a man had performed a female circumsicion on a woman while she
slept...
Steve
|
155.27 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Feb 20 1995 08:36 | 8 |
| There was this woman and her pals who led a comando raid upon her
custodial mother and father in-law in the lakes reigon of NH. They
bashed down the door, and with stun guns and real guns held this family
hostage. Their coment about the raid afterwards was that they felt that
the child was in danger from child abuse from the in-laws. She was a
Non custodial mom who had lost custody. And got off charges of the
raid.. The male in the raid party got a free place to stay in the
GrayBar Motel.
|
155.28 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Feb 20 1995 08:39 | 7 |
| There is a woman who had left her children, in Rodchester NH, alone.
The children all under the age of 6 would sit alone in the house as she
went out on the town drinking em up....
Another child was abused in the Laconia area, by her moms new live-in
beau. He would put out ciggies in the 4 years olds face. Mom told all
that it was wind burn...... Case still pending.
|
155.29 | Some problems? Set's start with.. | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Feb 20 1995 11:03 | 24 |
| Some societal attitudes that are a problem in this area.
1) Women hitting men is acceptable, even funny.
2) Men hitting women even in self-defense is taboo.
3) A man who complains of abuse is considered less than a "man".
4) In incidents of domestic violence the man is considered the
aggressor no matter who initiated or escalated the violence.
5) Sugar and spice and everything nice, that's what little girls
are made of. (Women are good).
6) Snakes and snails and puppy dog tails, that's what little boys
are made of. (Men are bad).
7) Women are good, women are helpless, women need to be taken care of.
8) Man are bad, men are violent brutes, men should be locked up,
a man who cannot defend himself is a sissy, a man who does defend
himself is abusive.
9) If a woman leaves a relationship she will almost automatically
be given most of the property and custody of the children.
10)If a man leaves a relationship he will almost automatically lose
all property and be forced to abandon his children to the tender
mercies of their mother.
Have I missed any?
fred();
|
155.30 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Feb 20 1995 11:07 | 4 |
| If a woman leaves family behind and goes off to find herself.... then
returns. Most often she is given the family, the marrital home and the
lions share of all the family wealth. The husband, gets the boot in the
snow... cause he is a provider, he is incabable of nurturing children.
|
155.31 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Feb 20 1995 11:13 | 6 |
| Herd on the radio this morning (I didn't take notes) of a woman who
set her house on fire and left her four children to burn to death
inside. Four children dead. The law isn't buying her story. She's
in lockup facing charges.
fred();
|
155.32 | | NOTAPC::PEACOCK | Freedom is not free! | Mon Feb 20 1995 11:22 | 13 |
| re: .31
> Herd on the radio this morning (I didn't take notes) of a woman who
> set her house on fire and left her four children to burn to death
> inside. Four children dead. The law isn't buying her story. She's
> in lockup facing charges.
Either its the same one I saw on the news last night, or another, but
the one I heard said that the death toll was actually 6 kids - 4 were
her own, and 2 were neighborhood kids... she's facing a charge of
arson as well as having killed 6 kids...
- Tom
|
155.33 | realistic fear | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Mon Feb 20 1995 12:55 | 59 |
| .25> If, as Doug asserts, they do not, does this prove that men are
> rather poor at risk assesment, or slightly insane (as a statistical
> generalisation, of course). What can be done about this? Or, since we
> are talking about relative proportions of men and women that fear, is
> it the case that women are more generally paranoid? Obviously either
> one group is not fearing enough, or the other group is fearing too
> much.
Why don't men acknowledge this fear more widely?
- because fear is a taboo feeling for men. To admit fear is to admit that I am
less than a man, as my culture defines manhood. So if I feel the fear I deny it
to myself and keep my mouth shut about it.
- because all feeling is taboo for men. See above.
- because my culture has usually presented women as helpless victims or
supportive partners. So fearing women is doubly taboo.
- because my culture has usually presented men as powerful and competent. To
admit to accepting violence from a woman is also to admit that I am less than a
man. If it happens to me, I keep my mouth shut.
- because the large majority of men, on the evidence of .0, have not experienced
violence from women, and because of the taboos above, they are not aware that
other men have experienced it. So they reasonably conclude that it does not
happen and can dismiss or misinterpret the few reports that surface.
- because men have not spent a generation having their "consciousness raised"
about this problem.
- because men are constantly told they are the cause of violence, not the
victims.
> What can be done about this?
- admit the possibility that this is a significant problem
- sponsor the usual social science studies to find out if it is a significant
problem
- if we find out it is insignificant, then stop here
- provide support and help to the men who are victims
- spread the news around to the media, schools, legislatures and courts
- fight the stereotypes that say woman=victim and man=perp
A few nits about .25
- Professionals in risk assessment agree that most of us do a very poor job of
assessing our personal risks. So it is not surprising if both women and men
misjudge their risk of becoming victims of violence.
- I think that words like "insane" and "paranoid" should generally be left to
professionals.
- Doug qualified his assertion later in the string to the statement that it has
not been proven to his satisfaction.
- A discussion of the realism of women's fear of violence does not seem to
belong in this conference.
|
155.34 | replies which clarify and replies which illustrate | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Mon Feb 20 1995 13:11 | 20 |
| .20> way. I'll spend my time on what I think are problems, you spend your
> time on what you think are problems.
Doug,
If this is really your position, then that is fine with me, but the tone of your
first reply was different.
Why not at least let us discuss what we think are (or may be) problems?
.24> Maybe if your first response in the topic didn't start the attack I
> wouldn't have chosen to respond to the attack with clarification.
Two points on this:
- you may think your first reply was a clarification. I think it and the first
paragraph of .17 are an illustration of what Fred was talking about.
- blaming Fred for your replies seems kind of silly to me. You always have the
option of ignoring what anyone here writes.
|
155.35 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Feb 20 1995 13:39 | 1 |
| DougO, have you read note 432.3 in QUARK::MENNOTES-V1?
|
155.36 | | BIGQ::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Tue Feb 21 1995 10:12 | 13 |
|
>>>- A discussion of the realism of women's fear of violence does not seem to
>>>belong in this conference.
Pray tell, why not??? This is a conference about issues pertaining
to men just as =wn= is a conference about issues pertaining to
women. Facing the reality of some women's fear of violence is a
necessary tool for men in order to understand the mechanism of the
female psyche.
justme....jacqui
|
155.37 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Tue Feb 21 1995 11:35 | 22 |
|
re .36
> Pray tell, why not??? This is a conference about issues pertaining
> to men just as =wn= is a conference about issues pertaining to
> women. Facing the reality of some women's fear of violence is a
> necessary tool for men in order to understand the mechanism of the
> female psyche.
I'll agree that it is fair to discuss the reality of women's fear
if you'll agree that it is fair to discuss men's fears and problems.
The problem I see is an almost total lack of regard, by some, for
men's fear. (What? Men's Fear? Why that bunch of sissies!). Might
not some of the problems that women suffer at least be lessened
by a discussion and recognition of the problems that men suffer,
Hmmmmm? As someone said before, when the only problems you are
concerned about are your problems, and you demand that others help
with your problem, then you ignore my problems (in some cases even
disrupt my ability to address my problems), then I tend to lose
a lot of sympathy for your problems.
fred();
|
155.38 | | MKOTS3::DIONNE | | Tue Feb 21 1995 12:17 | 31 |
| I've noticed that generally all a woman has to do is make the
*accusation* of violence from a man, it is then recorded as if it
were fact. It is not necessarily investigated for truth, or even
plausibility.
I believe that if a man made the *accusation* of violence against a
woman, then after most authorities got past laughing at him, it is
quite *unlikely* that any credence at all would be given to the
assertion.
This opinion is based on a number of incidence of violence throughout
my childhood, and adulthood. It was recently re-affirmed when my
son (21yrs old) petitioned for custody of his child, the mother of the
child cam back with the claim that he is violent towards her! This
claim is so ludicrious, it would be funny if it weren't for the fact
that within the judicial system, everybody just seems to assume that it
is true! She has never even been asked to offer a single piece of
evidence, or even give testimony to a single incidence of violence!
It seems to be that since she said it about him, then her being the
poor innocent woman, it must be true!
Personnally, I'm sick of this double standard. It's pervasive in
society, and many, many of the men who I love have been injured by it.
As a woman, the feminist movement has helped focus on the issues that
I as a woman have to face, but I would like to see real focus on men's
issues so that my brothers, and sons could reap the benefits of more
fair standards and code of conduct. As a woman, though, I don't
really know how to help them individually, all I can do is mostly offer
support to them. I really think the time is here for men to ban
together and highlight these issues.
|
155.39 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Tue Feb 21 1995 12:42 | 8 |
| .38 Thanks! Your note has given me some re-afirms that there are others
who give a dam beside the men. And Yes, womens fears about men should
be faced. As men must be able to discuss mens issues without fear of
getting their face slammed into the keyboard. And sometimes that fear
of getting the face slammed by others keeps men from opening up in this
file. Such is life.....
|
155.40 | I chose my words carefully | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Tue Feb 21 1995 12:57 | 14 |
| .36> women. Facing the reality of some women's fear of violence is a
> necessary tool for men in order to understand the mechanism of the
> female psyche.
I said "realism" not "reality". The media are filled with women's fears, and I
don't see the need to make this conference a sounding board for them. As far as
I can tell, nobody here has denied the reality of the fears of some women or the
violence of some men.
The base note of this topic is about violence to men. Are you interested in
discussing that? Is it OK if we discuss it?
By the way, I have been married for over twenty years, and I have long since
given up on understanding the mechanism of the female psyche.
|
155.41 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Tue Feb 21 1995 12:57 | 41 |
| .33> Why don't men acknowledge this fear more widely?
Your list of reasons was very good. I see this as a large part of what
hinders society from acknowledging the issue and, by the way, makes it
much harder for us to discuss the issue. When I choose to see this as
a matter of simply lesser overall damage to our culture and therefore
one I choose not to spend my personal time on, others tend to view that
as though I think it isn't a problem at all and by implication react to
me as if I'm dismissing their concerns. This is an unfortunate
mis-reading of my position that I think stems directly from this:
> - because my culture has usually presented men as powerful and
> competent. To admit to accepting violence from a woman is also to
> admit that I am less than a man. If it happens to me, I keep my mouth
> shut.
The cultural messages that make men macho prevent us from having this
discussion very easily; everything we say to each other as men gets
filtered through our primitive defensive mind-shields and my simply
different priorities become threatening and 'attacks'.
.34>- you may think your first reply was a clarification.
yes, I do. Fred always blames those who disagree with him with
pejorative putdowns and distortions of what we've really said.
I decided to clarify my position on this issue rather than allow
his distortion to stand unchallenged. That I can see where he comes
from when he misinterprets me does not, however, incline me to let his
misperceptions stand.
> - blaming Fred for your replies seems kind of silly to me. You always
> have the option of ignoring what anyone here writes.
First 'blame' is not what I assigned. I don't think my replies are
anything about which I need feel ashamed, and therefore no blame is
called for. That I choose to respond to set forth my position so that
others can see how it has been distorted by others is simply my choice.
Note that the very first thing I said in .11 is agreement that all
domestic violence is wrong.
DougO
|
155.42 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Tue Feb 21 1995 13:04 | 19 |
| re .38
Just as it was white people (more precisely what would now be known as
the "Radical Christian Right") who recognized how hideous slavery was
and moved to eliminate slavery, just as one "Conservative" commentator
has said, "Not one woman voted in favor of the 19th amendment" (giving
women the vote), and just as "women's rights" has enjoyed the active
support of many males (believe it or not, myself included), it will
take the support of women to end what is happening to men and children
(and yes it is "children's rights" as much as "men's rights" that are
at stake here).
As someone pointed out in a mail message to me, it is changing. Some
of the most serious supporters of these issues have been mothers,
sisters and second wives of those men and children. Women who have
seen and recognized just how vicious these problems are. To those
women I give my sincere and eternal gratitude.
fred();
|
155.43 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Tue Feb 21 1995 13:07 | 16 |
| >have you read note 432.3 in QUARK::MENNOTES-V1?
yes. I have also read several criticisms of the Gauss/Steinmetz
studies, which are 90% of the data cited in the article. One concludes
that there may be some validity in their findings, but this kind of
article is only the first step for a serious investigator; to be
convinced, I would have to wade through the bibliography's references
for myself, or see abstracts of many more studies by numerous other
researchers in the field. Sadly, there don't seem to be numerous other
researchers in the field; or, if there are, they aren't coming up with
similar findings that we would hear about.
Certainly you can't expect that a single source is sufficient to inform
oneself in this day and age?
DougO
|
155.44 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Tue Feb 21 1995 13:16 | 17 |
|
re .41
> yes, I do. Fred always blames those who disagree with him with
> pejorative putdowns and distortions of what we've really said.
> I decided to clarify my position on this issue rather than allow
> his distortion to stand unchallenged. That I can see where he comes
> from when he misinterprets me does not, however, incline me to let his
> misperceptions stand.
And yet, DougO, nearly everything that you've done since then has
only provided even more evidence that what I claim is happening.
It appears to me that you have an incredible knack for doing exactly
what you are, in the same breath, denying that you are doing.
fred();
|
155.45 | | BIGQ::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Tue Feb 21 1995 13:55 | 28 |
|
>>>By the way, I have been married for over twenty years, and I have long since
>>>given up on understanding the mechanism of the female psyche.
Well Wally,
I have been married for over thirty years to the same man, and I have
NOT given up on understanding the mechanism of his male psyche!
I think dialoging about some women's fears and having male feedback
that these fears are being HEARD and UNDERSTOOD (validated) is a
most important step in the process of the male/female communication
process.
Having more forums for men to find out that their inner fears are not
unique is also most important for male recovery. It is a tough world
to live in when one cannot find comfort in order to function freely
in society with out the aid of emotional crutches.
Did anyone watch the Boys of St. Vincent this week on A&E? It was
based on true happenings in Canada. It was considered Adult Themed!
justme....jacqui
|
155.46 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Tue Feb 21 1995 14:00 | 8 |
| > And yet, DougO, nearly everything that you've done since then has
> only provided even more evidence that what I claim is happening.
The very note you extracted that excerpt from contains my substantive
responses to Wally, on topic. Seems you ignore inconvenient evidence
that proves your allegations false.
DougO
|
155.47 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Tue Feb 21 1995 15:09 | 11 |
| re .46
> The very note you extracted that excerpt from contains my substantive
> responses to Wally, on topic. Seems you ignore inconvenient evidence
> that proves your allegations false.
HooooWeeee talk about the pot calling the kettle black, DougO.
Let's just say that you haven't proven your point to my satisfaction
yet 8^}.
fred();
|
155.48 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Tue Feb 21 1995 15:11 | 1 |
| Gee... The DougO in denial is starting to be a real bummer....
|
155.49 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Tue Feb 21 1995 16:03 | 4 |
| For as long as Fred distorts my position, George, rest assured your
bummer will continue.
DougO
|
155.50 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Wed Feb 22 1995 08:33 | 3 |
| Woman throws her two children off a bridge in Cal. She then jumps to
take her life. The child under two drowns. Saw this on the morning
tube.
|
155.51 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Wed Feb 22 1995 10:53 | 22 |
|
re .49
> For as long as Fred distorts my position, George, rest assured your
> bummer will continue.
I don't know of you are intentionally doing this or if you really
believe what you are doing, but it this certainly appears to be the
old Joseph Goebbles trick of attempting to divert attention away
from what your are doing by accusing the opposition of doing it
first. From my point of view, as I've said before, at this point
you are only providing examples of what we're talking about, and that
there really _are_ people out there that think as you do. So if you
are so inclined to continue, please do. If you personally are not
inclined to aid in this particular problem, so be it, but so far,
it certainly appears, your actions have gone beyond not helping to
outright attempting to impede others who do want to do something about
the problem, which does nothing for the credibility of the problems
that you _do_ seem to care about.
fred();
|
155.52 | | HANNAH::MODICA | Journeyman Noter | Wed Feb 22 1995 10:56 | 16 |
|
Been a long time since I checked in here,
Before I leave, I just wanted to reply to a point brought up
by DougO in .43 about the scarcity of researchers and studies.
I read a while back that Steinmetz received death threats
and was quite severely harassed for her work in the field
of domestic violence. As such, she has gone into a bit of seclusion
and has not done further research on the subject.
Supposedly she is not alone. Seems that many do not want studies
that contradict popular beliefs to be made public.
I'm sorry but I don't have the article(s) to offer for reference.
Regards and adios til next time
Hank
|
155.53 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Wed Feb 22 1995 13:50 | 12 |
| careful, Hank, if you notice that I'm actually on topic and try to have
a conversation with me on topic, you'll disturb someone who insists I'm
a nazi. aw, what the heck, shatter his misconceptions.
This is the first I'd heard that Steinmetz had withdrawn from the
field. If true, its a shame; certainly more research is needed.
Why do you say that "Supposedly she is not alone"? Do you think
there's a conspiracy to suppress research?
perhaps there are other reasons that steinmetz withdrew from the field.
DougO
|
155.54 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | proud counter-culture McGovernik | Wed Feb 22 1995 14:50 | 22 |
| Are the women who killed their children any worse than the man sho shot
all three of his kids, and then set the van on fire to make sure they
were dead? Are women who hit their husbands any better or worse than
the man in texas who killed his wife, chopped her into pieces, spray
painted her body parts and distributed them around town?
Violence is bad. Hitting is bad, raising children to believe that
hitting is a way to enforce behavior is to me what starts this idea
that might makes right, and continues the violence by people on people
to "make them behave" even when those people are adults. Unless we
start at the beginning with weeding out violent behavior, I see no end
to this.
I will recommend to my daughters that they not marry anyone who was
hit as a child. The fear that they could decide to beat them to "make
them behave" is great. If I had sons I would recommend the same thing
to them.
Frank and I aim to stop the violence with our children's generation.
We don't hit for this reason.
meg
|
155.55 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Wed Feb 22 1995 15:44 | 16 |
|
re .54 Meg
Actually I can agree with everything you said. None of us have ever
said that one was any better or worse than the other. You seem to take
offense that there have been several notes focusing on violence by women
and not balancing those notes against violence by men. If you are
honest, then, I think you can understand why we are offended when other
groups and other media spotlight the violence by men and gloss over
(if not outright ignore) the violence by women. If we are going to
address violence, then lets address violence. However, as we have been
discussing for the last 50+ notes, it seems that the discussion is
terribly one sided in nearly every place but here, and it seems that
some will not even begrudge us this file.
fred();
|
155.56 | SOME EVIDENCE FROM ISRAEL | MR4DEC::RONDINA | | Thu Feb 23 1995 09:02 | 23 |
| I heard it reported that during the Isaeli 6 day war back in the 60's,
female soldiers were less moved to compassion and to sparing the enemy
than were the male soldiers. They were more prone to kill vengefully
than the men. Anyone hear this same thing or have more info on it?
Also concerning violence as a method to "make people behave", I read an
editorial in Newsweek about 2 years ago which stated that "Christian
Nations" of the West have a hard time understanding the Israeli bent
for quick retribution when they are attacked because the Christain West
believes in a "forgive and forget" approach. The Isaelis, on the other
hand, believe that when someone has "left the path of righteousness"
and commited some crime or hideous act, that person must be swiftly and
strongly punished as a reminder that they have strayed from
"acceptable/righteous" behavior and must quickly return to the path of
goodness or receive more "corrective encouragement". This approach
finds its source in the Old Testament "eye for an eye" law. It's kind of a
biblically-sanctioned "shock therapy" for wayward-ness, be it personal,
political, or international.
Can anyone add any more light here?
Paul
|
155.57 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Thu Feb 23 1995 13:29 | 8 |
| > This approach finds its source in the Old Testament "eye for an eye"
> law.
Actually, that precept comes from a far older source, the Code of
Hamurabi. If it is repeated in the Old Testament it was cribbed from
the preceding source, as workable precepts in civil affairs often are.
DougO
|
155.58 | | RT128::KENAH | Do we have any peanut butter? | Thu Feb 23 1995 13:48 | 19 |
| >The Isaelis, on the other hand, believe that when someone has "left the
>path of righteousness" and commited some crime or hideous act, that
>person must be swiftly and strongly punished as a reminder that they
>have strayed from "acceptable/righteous" behavior and must quickly
>return to the path of goodness or receive more "corrective
>encouragement". This approach finds its source in the Old Testament
>"eye for an eye" law. It's kind of a biblically-sanctioned "shock
>therapy" for wayward-ness, be it personal, political, or
>international.
If you think that "an eye for an eye" was set down to legitimize the
concept that "the punishment should be as harsh as the crime," you're
right -- but for the wrong reason. "An eye for an eye" was a plea
for leniency, not for harshness. You see, before this, many crimes
were either capital offenses (a head for an eye) or just plain harsh
(a hand for a tooth).
So, while "an eye for an eye" might have been a plea to let the
punishment fit the crime, it was a plea for mercy, not vengence.
|
155.59 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Thu Feb 23 1995 14:29 | 32 |
| > Woman throws her two children off a bridge in Cal. She then jumps
> to take her life. The child under two drowns. Saw this on the morning
> tube.
Horrible. Here's a followup from today's paper:
"...Neighbors said they sometimes had noisy, violent fights and the
woman seemed depressed. Los Angeles police said her husband had a
history of spousal abuse.
"...Michael Fleming, whose 37th birthday was Tuesday, was arrested
several times over the past 13 months for allegedly beating his wife
and was convicted at least twice, Los Angeles police said.
"Donna Fleming suffered minor injuries in some of the six incidents,
which date to January 1994, detective Dick Simmons said. The most
recent incident was Jan. 12.
"After three calls last June, Fleming was sentenced to 10 days in jail
and put on three years' probation.
"``There were arguments and allegations of choking with the hands,''
Simmons said.
"Donna Fleming was advised she could seek a restraining order or get
outside help, but she never did, said Simmons.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Some people think that women so seldom commit violent crimes that the
few cases where they do must have extraordinary causes. Seems to me
the Flemings' story supports that viewpoint.
DougO
|
155.60 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Thu Feb 23 1995 15:43 | 19 |
|
re .59
That still doesn't justify her actions. She had many other forms
of support and way's out than to murder her children.
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
> Some people think that women so seldom commit violent crimes that the
> few cases where they do must have extraordinary causes. Seems to me
> the Flemings' story supports that viewpoint.
And some people will go to any length to justify a woman's actions. Seems
your note supports that viewpoint.
There are many men who "lose it" because of the court system and the
hypocritical bigotry against men and commit murder/suicide against
spouse, children, self. Should their actions the be justified?
fred();
|
155.61 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Thu Feb 23 1995 16:05 | 21 |
| Yet again, you distort my viewpoint. I have stated that domestic
violence is always wrong (.11). I have called this particular woman's
actions horrible (.59). In no way have I argued that her actions were
'justified', nor do I think they are. You are wrong to claim it.
What I *am* trying to do is to examine the circumstances that lead to
this kind of behavior. This is not to excuse or justify her crime.
This is to identify patterns that will hopefully lead us to stop it
from happening to other people.
> She had many other forms of support and way's out than to murder her
> children.
I agree. Why didn't she use them? We *must* examine her circumstances
to try to find clues to her behavior. That examination is NOT to
"justify" her crime.
Your CONTINUAL misreading of my positions gets tiresome, Fred. Why are
you so afraid to examine the facts of the case?
DougO
|
155.62 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Thu Feb 23 1995 16:30 | 18 |
|
re .61
> What I *am* trying to do is to examine the circumstances that lead to
> this kind of behavior. This is not to excuse or justify her crime.
> This is to identify patterns that will hopefully lead us to stop it
> from happening to other people.
Sigh, if only, as .0 indicates, there were those as concerned about
identifying the causes and look for solutions when some poor sap
goes off the deep end because he's been living in his car and eating
dog-food because his paycheck has been confiscated to support his
wife's unemployed boy friend drinking the guy's beer, sleeping in
his bed and having sex with his wife while he's not even allowed to
visit his kids. Maybe that too would save a few lives? Hmmm?
fred();
|
155.63 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Thu Feb 23 1995 18:50 | 6 |
| Yes, Fred. And as I have said before, more research is needed. I say
that in good faith- by which I mean, if your view is correct, and the
problem is bigger than I think, then the research will demonstrate
that, and support your case. And that would be ok by me.
DougO
|
155.64 | | 43GMC::KEITH | Dr. Deuce | Fri Feb 24 1995 06:54 | 6 |
| DougO:
What should be the punishment for this woman?
Steve
|
155.65 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Fri Feb 24 1995 09:53 | 17 |
|
re .63
> Yes, Fred. And as I have said before, more research is needed. I say
> that in good faith- by which I mean, if your view is correct, and the
> problem is bigger than I think, then the research will demonstrate
> that, and support your case. And that would be ok by me.
Just how much research is it going to take. I've already seen
at least two studies that you've essentially blown off as not
proven to _your_ satisfaction.
Getting beyond the bigotry far enough to even get the research done
is a good size chunk of the problem as nearly all research, even, is
directed in a near witch hunt at the female side of the problem.
fred();
|
155.66 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri Feb 24 1995 12:33 | 4 |
| >What should be the punishment for this woman?
Send her home to bed without any desert. Send the rasputin man to jail
in her place. He is responsible, she is not responsible.
|
155.67 | conspiracy or peer review | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Fri Feb 24 1995 13:03 | 27 |
| .53> Why do you say that "Supposedly she is not alone"? Do you think
> there's a conspiracy to suppress research?
The word 'conspiracy' is a red herring in this context. If people share the
same values and outlook, no conspiracy is needed to make them behave the same.
If few people at the country club want any Jewish members, no conspiracy is
needed to be sure that the membership committee never approves one. The world
is, unfortuantely, full of examples.
Similarly, if most people in the social sciences accept the idea that women are
victims and men are perps, no conspiracy is needed to ensure that little
contrary research gets done. Most research funding goes through peer review
panels. All professional publications are peer reviewed. Presentations at most
conferences and seminars are by invitation.
I think that peer review does a good job, mostly, but we should be aware of the
possibility of abuse. There are several claims of abuse, among them from women
claiming discrimination because they have deviated from the feminist dogma.
From the outside, it is hard to tell whether these are serious charges or
academic politicas as usual. I'm still undecided.
> perhaps there are other reasons that steinmetz withdrew from the field.
Perhaps there are. One response is to jump, sight unseen, to the conclusion
that makes us comfortable. Another is investigate the situation, or at least
keep an open mind while it is investigated by others.
|
155.68 | conclusion first, evidence afterwards | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Fri Feb 24 1995 13:15 | 15 |
| .59> Some people think that women so seldom commit violent crimes that the
> few cases where they do must have extraordinary causes. Seems to me
> the Flemings' story supports that viewpoint.
It is almost always possible to interpret evidence to support our prejudices.
The risk is that we maintain an incorrect viewpoint too long. We may
misinterpret the evidence we have, search out the evidence that supports our
viewpoint, and neglect the evidence which would help us correct our ideas.
If women commit 20% of the homicides in this country (I heard that on the radio,
can't confirm) is "so seldom" an appropriate phrase?
I don't think we can look at all evidence with a completely open mind, but I
think it is better to ask what we can infer from evidence than to ask whether it
supports our viewpoint.
|
155.69 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Fri Feb 24 1995 20:49 | 6 |
| > What should be the punishment for this woman?
I think people who murder children, like this woman did, should be
locked up for life (no possibility of parole) or put to death.
DougO
|
155.70 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Fri Feb 24 1995 20:49 | 5 |
| > Just how much research is it going to take.
lots.
DougO
|
155.71 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Fri Feb 24 1995 20:57 | 33 |
| > The word 'conspiracy' is a red herring in this context.
> ...
> Similarly, if most people in the social sciences accept the idea that
> women are victims and men are perps, no conspiracy is needed to ensure
> that little contrary research gets done. Most research funding goes
> through peer review panels. All professional publications are peer
> reviewed. Presentations at most conferences and seminars are by
> invitation.
>
> I think that peer review does a good job, mostly, but we should be
> aware of the possibility of abuse. There are several claims of abuse,
> among them from women claiming discrimination because they have
> deviated from the feminist dogma.
There is no such consensus in my readings. Feminist scholars are
routinely harassed by peers when presenting their findings. I don't
think there's any such conspiracy (or would you prefer the politer
'groupthink'?) going on throughout the entire field. Its a
possibility, I can easily grant you that; but the dissension in the
field is extravagant.
If we're going to speculate on why there are so few studies showing
that men suffer from female violence, you'll have to accept the obvious
theory as well; studies don't find it because it doesn't happen to any
significant numbers in the population, only in rare cases. Its a
possibility, I think you have to grant. Occam's razor certainly does.
> Another is investigate the situation, or at least keep an open mind
> while it is investigated by others.
As I said, I'd welcome further research in the field.
DougO
|
155.72 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Fri Feb 24 1995 21:06 | 10 |
| Wally, you must admit there is a significant research gap. Studies of
domestic violence against women were routinely discounted and ignored
for decades, until an overwhelming avalanche of data and the existence
of hundreds of shelters proved the existence of the problem. I do not
think it unreasonable to posit that the status quo perception which
denies the likelihood of significant numbers of men being victimized
must be suspect simply because it is status quo. Sure, examine the
evidence. I await much more of it.
DougO
|
155.73 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Sat Feb 25 1995 19:22 | 7 |
| If you like statistics, here's an interesting one. Year to date in
Massachusetts there have been thirteen murders classified as "domestic
violence". Out of the thirteen, thirteen were women killed by men;
zero were men killed by women. Admittedly we're not even two months
into the year, but it seems a bit lopsided so far.
Steve
|
155.74 | One does not justify the other | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Feb 27 1995 11:05 | 17 |
| re .73
Ah, must have been self defense. At least that's what they say here
in Colorado when a man is killed in "domestic violence" :^|.
Men may be able to defend themselves better in such cases better and
may do more damage when they are violent, but that does not justify or
excuse the actions of the women.
I've repeatedly stated that I do not disagree that it happens to women.
ONE MORE TIME. My problem is that the women's side is the ONLY side
that gets any attention. Even outright denial that it even happens
to men, or if it does, then men don't deserve any attention because
women don't get even more of the attention that some think they
should. As amply demonstrated here by DougO.
fred();
|
155.75 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Feb 27 1995 11:10 | 6 |
| .73 Perhaps the saying by Mark Twain that there are polititions, liars,
and statatitions. And the worst is the statatition(sp). Cause one can
gather info and create all kinds of charts, graphs, and misleading
info. Case in point how about the MIPs vs VUPs delema? O.K. So now
there are 13 women dead, and no men. Gathered by the same cause of
Doug0's...
|
155.76 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Feb 27 1995 11:51 | 7 |
| ...and perhaps much of any sort of women trashing men now fall into the
catogorie that he was mentally abusing her, or PTS of anything from the
fact that he farts in his sleep to perhaps in the words of Pam Smart...
'Try not to get any blood on the carpet, or don't shoot Paul in front
of the dog, cause you don't want to tramitize (it/him/her)dog.'
|
155.77 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Mon Feb 27 1995 12:03 | 9 |
| > Even outright denial that it even happens to men, or if it does, then
> men don't deserve any attention because women don't get even more of
> the attention that some think they should. As amply demonstrated here
> by DougO.
Just for the record, both you and I know, Fred, that this is not an
accurate statement of my position or anything I've "demonstrated."
DougO
|
155.78 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Feb 27 1995 12:27 | 33 |
|
re .77
> Just for the record, both you and I know, Fred, that this is not an
> accurate statement of my position or anything I've "demonstrated."
Again you appear to do the very thing you deny.
from .72
>Wally, you must admit there is a significant research gap. Studies of
>domestic violence against women were routinely discounted and ignored
>for decades, until an overwhelming avalanche of data and the existence
>of hundreds of shelters proved the existence of the problem. I do not
>think it unreasonable to posit that the status quo perception which
>denies the likelihood of significant numbers of men being victimized
>must be suspect simply because it is status quo. Sure, examine the
>evidence. I await much more of it.
from .70
>>How much evidence will it take?
>
> lots.
You bemoan the length of time that it took for women to draw attention
to this problem, then seemingly hypocritically attack evidence that
the problem is happening to men. I'm beginning to think that there
just plain _isn't_ enough evidence to prove this problem to _your_
satisfaction. The scary part is that it appears that you believe
this attitude _justified_. The even scarier part is that you are not
alone.
fred();
|
155.79 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Mon Feb 27 1995 12:55 | 13 |
| > attack evidence
Where did I do that? I have asked for more. I have stated that what
exists is simply not enough in quantity (not enough studies, not enough
researchers) to pretend its sufficient to get a feel for how big the
problem is.
> there just plain _isn't_ enough evidence
yet. not that's been called to my attention. You're correct. Glad
its starting to sink in, I've said it about a dozen times.
DougO
|
155.80 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Feb 27 1995 14:11 | 12 |
| re .79
> yet. not that's been called to my attention. You're correct. Glad
> its starting to sink in, I've said it about a dozen times.
And, as I've said before, nice of you to demonstrate so thoroughly
that there really are people out there that think as you do, and
how thoroughly you believe in the righteousness of your cause. And,
also, as I've said before, the scarier part is that you are not
alone.
fred();
|
155.81 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Mon Feb 27 1995 15:04 | 9 |
| > nice of you to demonstrate so thoroughly that there really are
> people out there that think as you do,
It would be one thing if I wasn't willing to consider the evidence.
Of course, that isn't the case. I said I wanted much more evidence.
I want to have a valid basis for decisions about such matters. This
is scary? This frightens you? Too bad!
DougO
|
155.82 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Feb 27 1995 16:31 | 8 |
| > This approach
> finds its source in the Old Testament "eye for an eye" law. It's kind of a
> biblically-sanctioned "shock therapy" for wayward-ness, be it personal,
> political, or international.
Halacha (Jewish law) interprets "an eye for an eye" as meaning "the value
of an eye for an eye." In other words, it requires financial compensation
for damages.
|
155.83 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Feb 27 1995 18:11 | 24 |
| re .81
> It would be one thing if I wasn't willing to consider the evidence.
> Of course, that isn't the case. I said I wanted much more evidence.
> I want to have a valid basis for decisions about such matters. This
> is scary? This frightens you? Too bad!
The whole problem, DougO, is that I seriously doubt that there ever
will be enough evidence for _your_ satisfaction. I believe that
you are just using this as a smoke screen to continue deluding
yourself that the problem doesn't exist so that you can continue
to demand _all_ the effort (not only yours as you have stated before,
but also everyone else's) be directed to _your_ problem. And
again, I don't think you are alone in this endeavor.
Once Again, I think you are providing us with a better example than you
are an argument, and as such, as someone said before, you actually hurt
your own cause by making it harder to be sympathetic to your cause.
The problem _does_ exist, DougO. If you want to continue in your
state of denial, fine. I just hope you never need to start caring
about it the hard way like so many other men have.
fred();
|
155.84 | what a cloud of distraction! | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Tue Feb 28 1995 13:03 | 55 |
| .71> There is no such consensus in my readings. Feminist scholars are
> routinely harassed by peers when presenting their findings.
Doug, I presume you are putting the second statement forward as evidence for the
first, and not just as another red herring For me to accept it as evidence, I
would have to see enough recent examples to convince me it is routine, and to
show me that it is harassment. Note that disagreement is not harassment, it is
part of the standard process of science. I would also need enough examples to
see that it represented a significant viewpoint within the social science
community, not attacks by outsiders or by a small and vocal minority.
> think there's any such conspiracy (or would you prefer the politer
> 'groupthink'?) going on throughout the entire field. Its a
You seem very attached to your red herring. I don't prefer groupthink. I
prefer the words I have already used.
> If we're going to speculate on why there are so few studies showing
> that men suffer from female violence, you'll have to accept the obvious
> theory as well; studies don't find it because it doesn't happen to any
> significant numbers in the population, only in rare cases.
That hypothesis (not an obvious theory) assumes that studies have been done
which would have found it if it existed, and that such studies have found
nothing. Both of these assumptions are simple statements of fact, which could
be checked in a good research library.
> Its a possibility, I think you have to grant.
Yes, I grant the possibility. Two sentences back you said I have to accept the
theory, which I do not.
.72> Wally, you must admit there is a significant research gap.
I don't "admit" it; I state it. I think the gap is a problem which should be
corrected by more research, and by an open-minded evaluation of the results.
> domestic violence against women were routinely discounted and ignored
> for decades, until an overwhelming avalanche of data and the existence
> of hundreds of shelters proved the existence of the problem.
Doug, you seem to have difficulty talking about violence done to men. You are
constantly changing the subject to violence done to women. I don't deny the
violence done to women, but I would like to talk about the violence done to men.
> I do not
> think it unreasonable to posit that the status quo perception which
> denies the likelihood of significant numbers of men being victimized
> must be suspect simply because it is status quo.
I have read this statement over three times without being able to make heads or
tails of it. It seems like you are trying to say, once again, that we should
assume the problem does not exist because strong evidence has not been produced.
I disagree.
|
155.85 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Tue Feb 28 1995 20:18 | 26 |
| What *do* you want, Wally? If I respond to your statements suggesting
that there are like minded people all somehow ignoring the problem with
a word analyzing deliberate intent to do so ('conspiracy' the first
time, 'groupthink' the second) you accuse me of introducing red
herrings. Seems to me the only other alternative is to assume they're
all incompetent, to be working in this field and yet ignoring a pattern
so obvious to you and Fred, but somehow invisible to them. What is it,
Wally, do you prefer to think of them as deliberately avoiding the data,
or do you prefer to think them too incompetent to investigate such
obvious patterns?
Or the third possibility, which I suggested and around which you
two-stepped: that there is no such obvious pattern of abuse to avoid
noticing, and therefore no conspiracy or groupthink involved in not
seeing one.
So sorry that I can't seem to find words to discuss this with you.
You dislike every possible formulation I offer, every token of yours I
reparse to attempt to start a conversation meets only your reproof.
I can't even tell what you're talking about anymore. Do try again.
Explain in your own words, without quoting mine, just what you think
is an appropriate response to the data gap. Explain what position you
think the researchers should adopt towards the field. Explain what
position you yourself hold on the issues. I purely can't tell.
DougO
|
155.86 | even research is taboo | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Wed Mar 01 1995 09:52 | 19 |
|
re .85
> Seems to me the only other alternative is to assume they're
> all incompetent, to be working in this field and yet ignoring a pattern
> so obvious to you and Fred, but somehow invisible to them. What is it,
> Wally, do you prefer to think of them as deliberately avoiding the data,
> or do you prefer to think them too incompetent to investigate such
> obvious patterns?
Given you as an excellent example I can say that this is indeed what
is happening. You yourself pointed out how long it took to get
acknowledgment that it was happening to women even. And you yourself
pointed out how few studies researchers dare to perform to even
look for such evidence, and those who do dare are silenced by threats
and intimidation. As they say, "There are none so blind as those who
will not see".
fred();
|
155.87 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Wed Mar 01 1995 10:21 | 2 |
| .85 I donno if I should come to attention. Or sing the French National
anthem as they did in Casablanca.:)
|
155.88 | nope | DECALP::GUTZWILLER | happiness- U want what U have | Wed Mar 01 1995 12:16 | 21 |
|
> Are women more violent than men?
in a study conducted by the univeristy of fribourg in switzerland,
50% of the men answered YES,
0% of the women answered yes
to the question:
"if rape was not a crime, could you imagine raping someone - even if just
in your phantasies?"
would you ever phantasize about rape?
as long as rape is such a real threat to women, as it still is, it is
clear to me who is the more violent gender.
andreas.
|
155.89 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Wed Mar 01 1995 12:49 | 10 |
| > Given you as an excellent example I can say that this is indeed
> what is happening.
Only one problem, Fred- I'm not a researcher in the field. It isn't
my job to identify and study social trends in the field of domestic
violence, I sling code for a living. My readings in this field are
those of an educated lay person only. So your example doesn't prove a
thing about why professionals don't find what you wish they would find.
DougO
|
155.90 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Wed Mar 01 1995 13:15 | 5 |
| Doug,
Yha mean you dont read Time or NewsWeek? There have been some good
articles on it there. They may not have the N.O.W. stamp of
aprovial on them though.
|
155.91 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Wed Mar 01 1995 14:14 | 14 |
| re .89
< Only one problem, Fred- I'm not a researcher in the field. It isn't
< my job to identify and study social trends in the field of domestic
< violence, I sling code for a living. My readings in this field are
< those of an educated lay person only. So your example doesn't prove a
< thing about why professionals don't find what you wish they would find.
So that makes your opinion no better than that of any other poor futz
out there. However it is your _attitude_ that I think makes an
excellent example. Because I think your attitude is very indicative of
the anti-male left.
fred();
|
155.92 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Wed Mar 01 1995 14:40 | 11 |
| Again, your answer is unresponsive, Fred, unless you think that the
field of professional researchers into domestic violence is composed
entirely of "the anti-male left".
DougO
ps- [The personal slur you make against me by describing my attitude
as "anti-male" is beneath contempt and deserves no other response;
though if you piss me off sufficiently you may wish to remember what
happened to Herb Nichols when he did so.]
|
155.93 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Wed Mar 01 1995 14:42 | 7 |
| No, George, I don't read Time or Newsweek. I have read them both in
the past and found them completely inadequate to developing an informed
opinion on most subjects of interest to me. If they have recently
included a section of abstracts referencing current research in
domestic violence I'd be very surprised.
DougO
|
155.94 | ? | LASSIE::TRAMP::GRADY | Subvert the dominant pair of dimes | Wed Mar 01 1995 15:10 | 27 |
| Re: .88 (GUTZWILLER)
This one doesn't make much sense to me...the survey
numbers don't seem to mean much, and the questions about
rape fantasies don't seem relevent either. Public
opinion polls mean nothing to this subject - in fact, the
possibility that women are at least AS violent (I doubt
they're significantly MORE violent) flies in the face of
public opinion - that's the whole point of the
discussion, is it not?
Fantasy and reality seldom intersect - and the ability or
even propensity to fantasize something has nothing to do
with the willingness to act it out. I dream about flying
all the time (i.e. without an airplane)...but I've never
tried to... Rape fantasies aren't unusual, even amoung
women, but that doesn't have any bearing on societal
violence whatsoever. Perhaps I've misunderstood your
point.
Re: .92
Who is Herb Nichols? What did he do? What horrible
wrath did he incur by doing so? My curiosity is killing
me.
tim
|
155.95 | since you ask | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Wed Mar 01 1995 16:09 | 11 |
| > Who is Herb Nichols? What did he do? What horrible wrath did he
> incur by doing so? My curiosity is killing me.
Herb Nichols made unsupportable statements in summary and incorrect
judgement of me. He suffered a public verbal spanking in full view
of the community and after sufficient punishment and humiliation
grudgingly apologized for his errors. Twice. In less than a week.
See mennotes-v1 689.*.
DougO
|
155.96 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Wed Mar 01 1995 16:12 | 16 |
| re .92
> DougO
>
> ps- [The personal slur you make against me by describing my attitude
> as "anti-male" is beneath contempt and deserves no other response;
> though if you piss me off sufficiently you may wish to remember what
> happened to Herb Nichols when he did so.]
Thank you again for providing us with such a wonderful example, DougO.
The fact that the only way you can defend your position is by personal
threats, IMHO, says much about your credibility and the credibility
of you position.
fred();
|
155.97 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Wed Mar 01 1995 16:40 | 21 |
| re .92
> Again, your answer is unresponsive, Fred, unless you think that the
> field of professional researchers into domestic violence is composed
> entirely of "the anti-male left".
Your argument is not based on the fact that research has been done and
has found no evidence. Your argument is based on the fact that no
research has been done at all, or at least not enough for _your_
satisfaction. Why is it that nearly _all_ research that is done is
done to prove how violent men are to women? There seems to be a lot of
research going on. Why is it nearly all research is directed to
proving abuse against women while abuse against men, even any research
on the subject, is ignored, if not outright attacked? Why is it every
time some Susan Smith or Loraina Bobbit pulls some stunt we hear a
veritable chorus of "that poor thing, what made her do that", while
you never see _any_ mention that domestic violence might be caused by
anything other than "brutal men"? Could there be an anit-male bias?
Naaaaa, surely not.
fred();
|
155.98 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Wed Mar 01 1995 16:51 | 10 |
| Gee Doug0! He thought you were the cats jams! Herb told me off like
that you were a wonderful person and all.:)
Herb wanted this file to be open to men who could not open up in other
notes because of the feminist ovature. Herb felt that the gays had
there own corner, the women had theirs too. But men had nothing... But
as you can see. We all have DougO. And he wants to spank us all. Esp if
we miss behaive to his disliking.
Perhaps if I act up... I too will go to bed with out any rat pudding.:)
|
155.99 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Wed Mar 01 1995 17:56 | 7 |
| Fred, you have misrepresented my position again. This is really
tiresome.
George, I don't want to have to spank anybody. Herb deserved it,
though.
DougO
|
155.100 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Wed Mar 01 1995 18:32 | 8 |
|
> This is really tiresome.
No one is forcing you to participate, DougO. If you choose to do
so, however, I suggest you base your argument on evidence and logic
rather than on threats of violence (verbal or otherwise).
fred();
|
155.101 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Wed Mar 01 1995 18:56 | 5 |
| Nobody forces you to participate either, Fred. If you choose to do so,
however, I suggest you base your arguments with me on what I've said,
rather than what you make up.
DougO
|
155.102 | re. rape phantasies | DECALP::GUTZWILLER | happiness- U want what U have | Thu Mar 02 1995 06:50 | 56 |
|
.94> Fantasy and reality seldom intersect - and the ability or
.94> even propensity to fantasize something has nothing to do
.94> with the willingness to act it out. I dream about flying
.94> all the time (i.e. without an airplane)...but I've never
.94> tried to...
you may consciously phantasize at great length and in detail (and i
mean phantasize, not dream in your sleep) about flying, about winning
a million $$$'s, about being the boss in the white house.
would you also phantasize at length about being a murderer, a torturer,
a rapist? would you thrive in your phantasies on spreading terror and
fear by brute force? i doubt that.
.94> Rape fantasies aren't unusual, even amoung
.94> women, but that doesn't have any bearing on societal
.94> violence whatsoever.
the inquiry (.88) specifically asked "would you rape" not "would you be
raped". women also have rape phantasies, mostly fear phantasies of being
raped - according to the inquiry not a single woman phantasized about raping
someone herself whereas half of the men did.
this can only mean that every (other) man is potentially a rapist, as some
women would have us think.
or is it, when so many men have sexual phantasies about raping someone this
means that
- many men do not realise that sex is always between CONSENTING adults
- many men do not understand what rape is (that it is a brutal act based
on asserting one's authority by mere force and designed to hit the victim
where it hurts most)
obviously, on understanding this issue of extreme violence there must be
an enormous gap between men and women.
common sense suggests that women are as much inclined to be verbally abusive
(and as .0 suggests, possibly even physically abusive up to a certain degree)
as men are.
personally, i don't buy the theory that every (other) man is potentially a
rapist. i do believe though, that many of us men will resort to violence when
pushed to it, and that male violence is ultimately of a different "quality"
than female violence. particularly in the privacy of our own homes, when
resorting to violence in a "the b*tch deserved it" attitude, this is when rape
becomes a real threat for the woman involved.
on the general subject of violence and women, aslong as rape remains a real
threat to women, the fact that women become increasingly more violent makes
sense in the light of the fact that only a violent response offers protection
against rape.
andreas.
|
155.103 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu Mar 02 1995 08:45 | 13 |
| .99 >George, I don't want to have to spank anybody. Herb deserved it,
Spare is the rod oh master of pain, teacher of feminism, terror of the
mennotes.....
Oh! Tonight boys and girls, there is another hardcopy horra of some
man, Mr. California body builder, and his blonde bomb shell body
builder. And she shoots him... And lord knows what kinda excuse will be
heard on this of why she shot him... Maybe its another verbal abuse
doo-dha.......
Welp. The phone rings. Its a dirty job... But someones gotta do it.:)
|
155.104 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri Mar 03 1995 10:41 | 10 |
| Welp.... Hard Copys show was informative. They had Mr. California and
his wife on. They both were punch and judy artist as well as body
builders. She gets a restraining order against him under a domestic
violence rap...... She then miss's him and invites him home.... Things
go along well... for a while. He comes home late from the gym. They
argue. She blows him away. She tells the cops that it was self
defence... She shoots one over his head. Second shot hits him. He is
down on his back. She shoots him again... Deadmen tell no lies...
AaAAh! The excuse??? Self defence? Nope! Not a chance! Royds??? Royd
rage??? Who can tell...
|
155.105 | | DECALP::GUTZWILLER | happiness- U want what U have | Fri Mar 03 1995 11:26 | 2 |
| dontcha just fear foryer life if you ear such orrible horra staris ;-)
|
155.106 | | LASSIE::TRAMP::GRADY | Subvert the dominant pair of dimes | Fri Mar 03 1995 12:11 | 5 |
| >Royds??? Royd rage??? Who can tell...
Wow. All that over a case of hemmorhoids? Ouch!
;-)
|
155.107 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Fri Mar 03 1995 12:29 | 22 |
| Last night on ABC News there was an item that you probably won't
see repeated any where again, but...
I usually try to ignore the OJ case, but it seems that after the
famed 911 call by Necole the cop that answered the call had a tape
recorder going. ABC obtained a transcript of that tape. A couple of
interesting quotes from that transcript:
Necole: "I's just that I get so scared when he _looks_ like that.
I mean, the _look_ he gets in his eyes. It's so--animalistic"
Necole: "I know he won't do it again. He's already been convicted
once, and he knows the next time will be the last".
OJ: "When she comes at me like that, all I can do is cover my
groin and my face and try to weather the storm".
Also Rosa Lopez testified that she had had an argument with Necole
and was struck in the face by Necole.
fred();
|
155.108 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri Mar 03 1995 12:51 | 2 |
| Gee. I saw that too Fred. Wonder what the heck really went on behind
closed doors?
|
155.109 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Fri Mar 03 1995 13:42 | 7 |
|
One thing I'll gar-run-beeping-t you. You won't see .107 on the
news 10 times a day like you did with that 911 call. ABC will run
it once (I'm surprised that they ran it at all) and call it "balanced"
news reporting.
fred();
|
155.110 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri Mar 10 1995 09:06 | 7 |
| A legal friend of mine was in a place where there was a man looking for
shelter and for free legal help offered to women. And was delied. He
was a battered man. And was turned down from a place called the Dove.
This info was relayed to me about a week ago. Just remembered this one
on the way in.
|
155.111 | in my own words | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Mon Mar 13 1995 12:26 | 26 |
| .85>Seems to me the only other alternative is to assume they're
> all incompetent
I suggested a different alternative way back in .67. You can continue to ignore
it if you wish.
.85> Explain in your own words, without quoting mine, just what you think
> is an appropriate response to the data gap. Explain what position you
> think the researchers should adopt towards the field.
Examine, as open-mindedly as possible, the very limited data which is available
on violence of women towards men. Plan and carry out research to provide more
data, and analyze that. Make both men and women aware of the results of the
research. If the research suggests a significant social problem, then plan and
carry out a social response to the problem.
> Explain what position you yourself hold on the issues. I purely can't tell.
My personal position, based on what little I know, is that we are seriously
ignorant of the scale and nature of this problem. My guess is that it
significant enough that we should be aware of it, as individuals and in groups.
My guess is also that it is not significant enough to call for a major social
program.
In any case, I feel compassion for the men who are victims of this violence,
just as I feel compassion for the women and children who are victims of violence.
|
155.112 | as I said previously | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Mon Mar 13 1995 14:17 | 13 |
| > I suggested a different alternative way back in .67. You can continue
> to ignore it if you wish.
You posit some invisible bias, such that these people who are
researchers in the field all suffer from the same blindness and somehow
cannot put together studies that would demonstrate something so obvious
that even we untrained casual readers in the field can discuss it. A
bias that such researchers are trained precisely to examine and detect.
It doesn't meet the minimum standards for believability for me, Wally.
Sorry.
DougO
|
155.113 | ex | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Mar 13 1995 14:40 | 18 |
|
Doug0,
You are playing "prove it to _my_ satisfaction else you lose" again.
I already posted this question about "why are all of the studies
aimed towards proving violence against women and so few aimed towards
investigating violence towards men" back in .97. Which you ignored.
You chose just to launch a personal attack against me instead.
You've already pointed out yourself that you are only a layman in
these matters. So I don't see how you can legitimately just
reject, out of hand, any studies, or lack there of.
Yes I do think there is a bias in the "research" community over this
problem. Just as there seems to be a bias (as pointed out by
feminist "equal rights" groups) that most medical research is directed
primarily at men.
fred();
|
155.114 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Mon Mar 13 1995 15:10 | 12 |
| >You are playing
No, Fred, I'm explaining to Wally why his hypothesis about why the data
gap exists isn't adequate in my view. This is not a game I play. This
is a serious exercise in seeking to comprehend an alledgedly serious
situation and the data that don't show it.
>Yes I do think there is a bias in the "research" community
Fine. You think there's a bias. I don't.
DougO
|
155.115 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Mar 13 1995 15:15 | 4 |
| Tell us Doug0.. As a stonch feminist.. What roles do you play in your
cause.. Besides a fincial contributor. I mean Meg does something. Do
you? Besides make us live up to your higher standards of bias?
|
155.116 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Mar 13 1995 15:19 | 9 |
|
re .114
What I don't buy, Doug0, is that we're supposed to accept what you,
an admitted layman, _think_. Whereas we're supposed to produce
study after study, which you reject out of hand anyway. Talk about
a credibility gap.
fred();
|
155.117 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Mon Mar 13 1995 16:12 | 24 |
| You're supposed to accept what I think? In what sense? I'm not trying
to browbeat you into any particular position, I speak for myself only.
Though I refuse to let you misrepresent me. But you can think whatever
you want to, Fred.
George, are you trying to ask me how my feminist ideals are reflected
in the way I live the rest of my life? Everywhere. In my home life,
where I'm a partner in several senses of the word to Stacey; in raising
our son, Erik, who is now almost seven. Quite overtly in such things
as abortion clinic defense (Operation Rescue came to our town twice
during their summer "Cities of Refuge" campaigns, and I was one of
thousands of locals who went out to do clinic defense.) In the choices
of what I read, and what I watch on tv, and what music I buy. In the
friends I keep. My feminist politics are reflected in all areas of my
life because my feminist beliefs are an integrated part of my identity.
I really, truly think that women are prevented from reaching their
potential due to institutional discrimination, tradition, politics, and
outright prejudice and bigotry, to an extent that most men seem to have
any idea even imagining, much less comprehending; and since I see that
as the most obvious injustice on the face of the planet it is only
natural that my consciousness of it is reflected in all areas of my
life. Why did you ask?
DougO
|
155.118 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Mar 13 1995 16:26 | 1 |
| I ask to understand....
|
155.119 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Mar 13 1995 16:37 | 13 |
| reply .117
> You're supposed to accept what I think? In what sense? I'm not trying
> to browbeat you into any particular position, I speak for myself only.
> Though I refuse to let you misrepresent me. But you can think whatever
> you want to, Fred.
Then I can reject your opinion as just another opinion with nothing
to back it up but your own (apparently considerable) personal bias.
Which, as I've said before, makes you nothing more than an example
of the bias that we've been discussing.
fred();
|
155.120 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Mon Mar 13 1995 20:09 | 8 |
| > Then I can reject your opinion as just another opinion with nothing
> to back it up but your own (apparently considerable) personal bias.
'nothing to back it up'? You forget that data gap we've been
discussing. All the evidence, in fact, is on my side. But you think
whatever you like.
DougO
|
155.121 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Tue Mar 14 1995 13:34 | 15 |
|
re .120
>All the evidence, in fact, is on my side.
I thought that this whole thing was about there being _no_ evidence.
Least wise none that stood up to your, admittedly layman's,
scrutiny. You've yet to provide any evidence other than your,
admitttedly layman's, opinion.
At the risk of repeating myself, you sure are a persistent cuss 'bout
providing us with an excellent example. Although I doubt that that
is your intent.
fred();
|
155.122 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Tue Mar 14 1995 14:20 | 9 |
| > I thought that this whole thing was about there being _no_ evidence.
None (well, an insufficiency) to support your contention that men
suffer in great numbers from violence from women.
Certainly there are a plethora of studies to support my positions with
regard to how many women suffer from violence at the hands of men.
DougO
|
155.123 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Tue Mar 14 1995 14:25 | 3 |
| And men going off to war does not count in the suffering contest?
|
155.124 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Tue Mar 14 1995 14:35 | 3 |
| eh? Do women send men off to war? No, other men do.
DougO
|
155.125 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Tue Mar 14 1995 15:15 | 3 |
| eh.... there was a country... in the middle east who had sent theirs
off to war....... hint...... And they were some of the bloody-est
battles know to modern warfare.
|
155.126 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Tue Mar 14 1995 15:34 | 15 |
| re .122
> Certainly there are a plethora of studies to support my positions with
> regard to how many women suffer from violence at the hands of men.
I thought that we were talking about women's violence agains men.
Hey, how many tims have I said that I do not deny this is happening
and is a bad thing? However, I thought we'd already covered this
business of these studies only showing violence against women.
There definately _is_ bias in those studies. To start with only
_women_ are studied/surveyed looking specifically for violence
against women.
fred();
|
155.127 | Off the topic, but... | SOLVIT::SOULE | Pursuing Synergy... | Tue Mar 14 1995 17:31 | 5 |
| .117> because my feminist beliefs are an integrated part of my identity.
DougO, how does a feminist male handle Birth Control?
Please take this as a serious question...
|
155.128 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Tue Mar 14 1995 17:39 | 13 |
| Depends on if you're having sex or not...with most of the women of
my acquaintance, it never comes up.
Ahem ;-). Ah, that's kind of a personal question, you know? The
details are between me and my partner. In general, I can say that we
figured out a method that works for us, we split the expenses and
inconveniences thereof as best we can. We're planning to have a child
together in a few years, so a more permanent solution is currently out
of bounds. But I think I'll get a vasectomy when that's appropriate.
So far it works for us.
DougO
|
155.129 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Wed Mar 15 1995 08:22 | 3 |
| The answer to DougOs question about birth is that it is not you sperm
and her egg to union into the common child. The child is chattel, it is
her body, she can terminate life or bring to term life with out you.
|
155.130 | | SOLVIT::SOULE | Pursuing Synergy... | Wed Mar 15 1995 09:10 | 10 |
| Thanks for answering... Didn't mean for the question to be so personal
(seem to have this problem in this file) but I believe I got what I was
looking for... I have extrapolated from your reply as well as previous
statements that although you support a woman's right to abort, you would
never be the "cause" for a woman to seek an abortion, i.e., you belong to
the pro-choice movement but are personally pro-life in your relationship
with your lover?
Please don't take this as "baiting". I seek a level of profundity which
I feel you can offer...
|
155.131 | more corrections | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Wed Mar 15 1995 12:40 | 38 |
| .112> You posit some invisible bias, such that these people who are
Not invisible, just not generally acknowledged.
> researchers in the field all suffer from the same blindness and somehow
Not all, just a large and influential fraction.
> cannot put together studies that would demonstrate something so obvious
Not cannot, just do not in large numbers.
> that even we untrained casual readers in the field can discuss it.
We can at least discuss a possibility. It is often the case that outsiders to a
field can see more possibilities than those immersed in it.
> It doesn't meet the minimum standards for believability for me, Wally.
> Sorry.
Don't apologize. I don't care whether it meets your standards or not.
I do find it interesting that a situation you find unbelievable has occurred
many times in the sciences. This suggests to me that the standards you are now
applying are unreasonable.
I could offer several examples, but I'll content myself with one that you have
used already: the inability of the researh community to acknowledge domestic
violence by men against women until the evidence became overwhelming.
I also find it interesting that your title for this note is
> as I said previously
suggesting that you had discussed this alternative. In .71 you grant the
possibility only to wave a few red herrings at it. Then you wrote .85 as though
the alternative did not exist. Do you really imagine that ideas that do not
meet your standards cease to exist?
|
155.132 | shell games with evidence and positions | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Wed Mar 15 1995 12:49 | 17 |
| .120> discussing. All the evidence, in fact, is on my side. But you
.122> None (well, an insufficiency) to support your contention that men
> suffer in great numbers from violence from women.
An interesting shift. First all the evidence supports Doug, then there is not
enough evidence. I'll agree that not enough evidence has been brought forward.
This may be because the relevant evidence has not yet been gathered. Or it may
be because the problem does not exist. I don't know.
> Certainly there are a plethora of studies to support my positions with
> regard to how many women suffer from violence at the hands of men.
I agree that women suffer great violence from men. I don't recall anybody here
disagreeing with that position.
As I understand it, the disagreement is about violence done to men by women.
|
155.133 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Wed Mar 15 1995 14:50 | 10 |
| > An interesting shift. First all the evidence supports Doug, then
> there is not enough evidence.
Talk about red herrings! The first statement was in reference to
all the evidence about domestic violence, including that large body
studying violence done to women; the second statement was explicitly
about violence done to men by women. Two different situations, no
shift necessary, merely an ability to follow along.
DougO
|
155.134 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Wed Mar 15 1995 14:53 | 12 |
| > suggesting that you had discussed this alternative. In .71 you grant
> the possibility only to wave a few red herrings at it.
Nonsense. I discussed the possibility. You disagree with my
assessment, fine, but even you admit I had discussed the possibility.
> Do you really imagine that ideas that do not meet your standards cease
> to exist?
Do try to follow.
DougO
|
155.135 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Wed Mar 15 1995 14:58 | 13 |
| > although you support a woman's right to abort, you would never be
> the "cause" for a woman to seek an abortion, i.e., you belong to the
> pro-choice movement but are personally pro-life in your relationship
> with your lover?
Um...that isn't how I would describe it, no. We are planning to have a
child together, eventually. If we happen to get pregnant sooner, we'll
decide at that time whether to continue or not. I suspect we would, but
that decision isn't yet made. But describing this as 'pro-life' when
that word has such distasteful associations with religious fanatics is
simply unacceptable to me, personally, so I wouldn't use that word.
DougO
|
155.136 | | SOLVIT::SOULE | Pursuing Synergy... | Wed Mar 15 1995 17:31 | 17 |
| WOW, guess I was wrong BIG TIME...
>> I suspect we would, but that decision isn't yet made.
It's kind of a fundamental Life decision, wouldn't you say? I'm
kind of surprised that a feminist Male would consider having to subject
his mate to needing an abortion...
Suppose every Male was indoctrinated early-on that they had the power
to free Women from the "need for abortion"... Do you think Women would
go for such a concept or that this would be too patriarchal? Wouldn't
these Men be the real feminists? This is NOT so far-fetched as it
sounds - it seems to be happening over in Holland.
>> simply unacceptable to me, personally, so I wouldn't use that word.
What's a good word for you?
|
155.137 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Wed Mar 15 1995 18:01 | 26 |
| > a feminist Male would consider having to subject his mate to needing
> an abortion...
Oh, like it would be *my* decision? We would make that determination
together. I really think we would continue the pregnancy, but who
knows?
> Suppose every Male was indoctrinated early-on that they had the power
> to free Women from the "need for abortion"... Do you think Women would
> go for such a concept or that this would be too patriarchal? Wouldn't
> these Men be the real feminists? This is NOT so far-fetched as it
> sounds - it seems to be happening over in Holland.
I don't think I follow you. What power do men have that frees women
from the need for abortion? When a woman is simply not ready, herself,
to be a mother, to carry a pregnancy to term, for any of a million
reasons, there's precious little 'power' a man has to change that
situation. Is there?
> What's a good word for you?
pro-choice.
DougO
|
155.138 | | SOLVIT::SOULE | Pursuing Synergy... | Thu Mar 16 1995 10:44 | 26 |
| > Oh, like it would be *my* decision?
Doug, you're the one making the choice whether or not to impregnate Her.
> We would make that determination together.
You may think so but it will be Her subjected to the invasive surgical
procedure known as abortion... Sure, you may even be there to hold her
hand as they scrape out Her insides, but, it is still the price _Women_
pay when Men abdicate their choice in the matter.
> What power do men have that frees women from the need for abortion?
Poets may call it something else but for our discussion lets call it the
Power of Restraint. We, as Men, exercise it every day - it's probably
the one thing that keeps us from readily killing/harming each other.
To exercise the power is to Care... If you Care you make choices,
beforehand, about what your actions may do to other people. As Men, we
need to do a better job in this area. Just as strong as the power to
impregnate is the ability to Care that we NOT impregnate at inopportune
times and thus cause the need for abortion...
> pro-choice.
To abdicate Your choice is to force the responsibility for a choice onto
Women.
|
155.139 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Thu Mar 16 1995 11:55 | 13 |
| I'm still not following you. Are you suggesting I use my power to
refrain from sex to avoid the risk of impregnating her? She'd throw me
out of the house, sex is something she happens to enjoy and expect in
our relationship, and that certainly isn't an issue for me. So we
practise birth control responsibly, and in over five years we haven't
had any pregnancies. Now you ask, what would we do if it happened?
We'd figure it out then. I certainly can't just unilaterally quit
engaging in the sexual aspect of our relationship and expect it not to
have an effect, and I wouldn't even want to.
You have a really weird point of view, from where I sit.
DougO
|
155.140 | yet more distraction | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Thu Mar 16 1995 13:09 | 30 |
| .133> Talk about red herrings! The first statement was in reference to
> all the evidence about domestic violence, including that large body
> studying violence done to women; the second statement was explicitly
> about violence done to men by women. Two different situations, no
> shift necessary, merely an ability to follow along.
Simple logic, DougO. If all the evidence about domestic violence were on your
side, there would be no evidence supporting an alternative, like the evidence in
155.0. In .122 you first typed "none", which would follow from your statement
in .120, and then wisely shifted your ground.
> Nonsense. I discussed the possibility. You disagree with my
> assessment, fine, but even you admit I had discussed the possibility.
I did not "admit" anything, I stated that you had granted the possibility. And
that you wrote .85 as if the alternative did not exist.
> Do try to follow.
I seem to be following your replies better than you are. Do you really imagine
that if you deprecate my intelligence I will curl up and go away?
All of this is more distraction, of course.
Do you have anything relevant to say about
.132> As I understand it, the disagreement is about violence done to men by
> women.
which is the subject I am interested in discussing.
|
155.141 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Thu Mar 16 1995 14:36 | 32 |
| >I seem to be following your replies better than you are.
Except for the slight problem you have in distinguishing between the
different subjects between the statements you picked out of .120 and
.122. Hey, I know what I was talking about, and the errors you impute
are your own invention.
> All of this is more distraction, of course.
So perhaps you should drop it.
>Do you have anything relevant to say about
>
>.132> As I understand it, the disagreement is about violence done to
> > men by women.
There certainly isn't a single disagreement. We've disagreed about the
amount of evidence regarding that topic. We've disagreed about the
reasons for the lack of evidence, you positing [whatever you posited
that you won't even recognize in whatever other words I offer so we
can't discuss it, and I tried three times] and I, not finding your
position discussable, left with the alternative of accepting it
outright or rejecting it outright, so I reject it. Then, there's the
disagreement about what is a responsible position to take with regard
to the data gap; and since we can't even manage to discuss your theory
about bias in the research community, we haven't got much room to go
forward on this, either.
Well, nice not discussing this with you, Wally, maybe some other topic
will present itself such that we can not discuss with each other again.
DougO
|
155.142 | On the mans side | WOTVAX::PC0383::herleyj | | Mon Mar 20 1995 08:09 | 21 |
|
I believe that there is a growing number of women being violent toward men,
but they are far more devious about it. They tend to use a lot of mental cruelty
towards their men, naging and nagging wanting more and more, until the poor men finally
snaps or they can provide no more so get kickedout onto the street. I believe that
there is limited evidence of cruelty by women against men because or reasons mention
earlier in this note. Nobody believes that women can be vile, devious and wicked. As
also mentioned in an earlier note, if a man claims to be the battered partner they are
laughed at.
(Women are such sweet downtrodden little things). Women seem to be innocent until
proved innocent. It seems that men started to get the worst of things from the
day that Eve first tempted Adam with the apple in the Garden of Eden.
They have skilfully manouvered society into the position of believing that they are the
weaker sex. WRONG' they get away with it because they are downtrodden women, under
stress, or suffer from pr-menstrual tension. I think that men have a lot to put up
with and believe that the law would treat them as "EQUALS" in this modern EQUAL
society where women are always crying out to be treated as EQUALS.
Jean
|
155.143 | reformatted for legibility | RT128::KENAH | Do we have any peanut butter? | Mon Mar 20 1995 09:32 | 26 |
| > <<< Note 155.142 by WOTVAX::PC0383::herleyj >>>
> -< On the mans side >-
>
>
>I believe that there is a growing number of women being violent toward
>men, but they are far more devious about it. They tend to use a lot
>of mental cruelty towards their men, naging and nagging wanting more
>and more, until the poor men finally snaps or they can provide no more
>so get kickedout onto the street. I believe that there is limited
>evidence of cruelty by women against men because or reasons mention
>earlier in this note. Nobody believes that women can be vile, devious
>and wicked. As also mentioned in an earlier note, if a man claims to
>be the battered partner they are laughed at.
>
>(Women are such sweet downtrodden little things). Women seem to be
>innocent until proved innocent. It seems that men started to get the
>worst of things from the day that Eve first tempted Adam with the
>apple in the Garden of Eden. They have skilfully manouvered society
>into the position of believing that they are the weaker sex. WRONG'
>they get away with it because they are downtrodden women, under
>stress, or suffer from pr-menstrual tension. I think that men have a
>lot to put up with and believe that the law would treat them as
>"EQUALS" in this modern EQUAL society where women are always crying
>out to be treated as EQUALS.
>
>Jean
|
155.145 | | NQOPS::APRIL | Xtra Lame Triple Owner | Wed Mar 22 1995 16:59 | 10 |
|
I'm glad someone finally agrees with me (and she happens to be a woman
too !!! ... psssst - where have you been all my life ???)
Anyways, in earlier replies I was trying to make the point that
MENTAL cruelty is not being recognized here and in woman-man
relationships. Yet, I believe, it does as much damage as a slap in
the face or a kick in the shins.
Chuck
|
155.146 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu Mar 23 1995 09:36 | 3 |
| Yet, there are no shelters, no refuge from a woman who does either
physical or mental abuse to a man. There are no studies because there
is no money to make the studies to the contrar of DougO.
|
155.147 | | AXPBIZ::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Thu Mar 23 1995 14:20 | 4 |
| I don't recall offering an opinion on whether there is sufficient money
to fund the studies, George.
DougO
|
155.148 | But does it exist? | DECLNE::SHEPARD | Crashin' and Burnin' | Fri Apr 14 1995 10:58 | 12 |
| RE: .147
DougO:
Granted, violence by men against women is a serious issue that must
continue to be dealt with. However, I take it from your responses, that
violence by women against men does not happen. Or at least, if it does it is
not so frequent as to be a matter of concern. Please explain to me if I am off
base in my read of your notes, why I am, and exactly how you stand on the issue
of violence against men by women. After all that is the topic of this
discussion.
Mikey
|
155.149 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri Apr 14 1995 11:24 | 5 |
| There is a case in the Exeter court system. Mr. Paul Langdon who killed
his wife. Paul was constantly beaten, and many have seen the beatings
in town. But, this is such a rare case. Right dougo.
|
155.150 | I decline | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Tue Apr 18 1995 19:27 | 22 |
| > Granted, violence by men against women is a serious issue that must
> continue to be dealt with.
right.
> However, I take it from your responses, that violence by women
> against men does not happen. Or at least, if it does it is not so
> frequent as to be a matter of concern.
No, that isn't what I think.
> Please explain to me if I am off base in my read of your notes, why
> I am, and exactly how you stand on the issue of violence against men
> by women.
Again? You know that if I do that it'll just give Fred() an excuse to
come moanin' at me again. I'd thought my past explanations about where
I see the bigger problems and what I choose to be concerned about were
complete enough to answer your question. Feel free to go re-read my
previous answers; .17 addresses these fairly well, I think.
DougO
|
155.151 | since you ask me directly... | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Tue Apr 18 1995 19:28 | 5 |
| >But, this is such a rare case. Right dougo.
right.
DougO
|
155.152 | Just so you won't be disappointed :^). | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Wed Apr 19 1995 12:10 | 5 |
|
re .150
Groan!
fred();
|
155.153 | use of force by women | MAYDAY::ANDRADE | The sentinel (.)(.) | Fri May 19 1995 14:20 | 31 |
| Modern Cultures (men and women) have finaly come to a consensus that
it is wrong for men to use force to dominate and abuse their women.
It took a long time, but it finaly happened, men who use force are
now moraly and legally prosecuted and punished for such un-human
behavior...
The question is now how long it will take society (men and women)
to come to terms that it is also wrong for women to use force of
whatever kind (physical violence, mental abuse, "woman's viles")
to dominate or abuse their men.
Personaly I expect it to take at least another two generations
(i.e. 50 years) minimum.
...
Its not that women are more violent then men is that they can get
away with it easier and with lesser consequences then a man could.
Even in cases of major physical violence, ... as for the rest
... what is wrong with a woman using her tongue and her other
assets to make her man's life miserable, isn't it only RIGHT!!!
Afterall he doesn't make as much money as he should, doesn't do
as many house chores as he should, doesn't like the same TV
programs as she does, and to top it all all he thinks about is
sex and more sex nothing but sex, besides he IS insulting
ALWAYS looking at other women, as if she wasn't enough. (-; (-:
Gil
|
155.154 | woman charged with attempted murder and molestation in FLa | WMOIS::MELANSON_DOM | | Mon Jul 15 1996 14:38 | 41 |
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Woman with HIV charged with attempted murder in molestation case
PALM BAY, Fla. -- An HIV-infected woman was charged with attempted murder
after she admitted during a police wiretap to having sex with an 11-year-
old boy who played Little League baseball with her son.
Stacey Renee Jacobs, 32, was arrested June 7 on a molestation charge of
sexual battery on a child younger than 12, after the boy told his mother
of an alleged encounter with her.
After tests revealed she was infected with the AIDS virus, she was charged
with attempted second-degree murder late last month. Jacobs is being held
without bail in a county jail in the central part of the state.
It won't be known for months whether the youngster is infected with HIV.
The boy plays baseball in a league in nearby Melbourne, and police fear
he may not be the only victim, said police spokesman Gus Williams.
"She may have befriended other young men. If parents have children in
that league, they need to sit down with their children and find out the
level of their relationship with her," Williams said.
The boy came forward in late May, after developing a rash doctors thought
might have been a venereal disease. It turned out to be a urinary tract
infection, but the boy told his mother Jacobs invited him to her home
May 23 and they had sex, according to a police affidavit.
Investigators tapped Jacobs' telephone and had the boy call her again.
During the call, she admitted to the sexual encounter and invited the boy
over again, police said.
Evidence in the case indicates Jacobs knew she had the virus but the boy
did not, said prosecutor Meryl Allawas McCormick. Jacobs has prior
convictions for battery and making obscene or harassing phone calls.
|
155.155 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Jul 15 1996 14:42 | 1 |
| Hope she goes to jail for a very long time.
|
155.156 | | BIGQ::MARCHAND | | Mon Jul 15 1996 14:47 | 10 |
| Hopes she never gets out!
|
155.157 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Jul 15 1996 15:49 | 5 |
|
This is one area that I have no sympathy for women _or_ men who would
do such a thing. Throw away the key!
fred();
|
155.158 | | SPECXN::CONLON | | Mon Jul 15 1996 16:03 | 3 |
|
Agreed!
|
155.159 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Jul 15 1996 16:20 | 2 |
| A cell next to the good teacher from Philips Academy.. Mr. Cobbs...
|
155.160 | Sick! | NCMAIL::COWPERTHWAIT | Sue Cow | Thu Jul 25 1996 14:40 | 5 |
| Why wasn't she charged with statutory rape?
Sue Cow
(a read only till now)
|
155.161 | | MKOTS3::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu Jul 25 1996 14:43 | 5 |
| Sue!!! How the heck are you!!! Some entries in Flex I know. Good to see
yha here!!:)
Cruely Yours!
|