• Biblical Families is not a dating website. It is a forum to discuss issues relating to marriage and the Bible, and to offer guidance and support, not to find a wife. Click here for more information.

The Role Of Patriarchy In Domestic Violence

  • Thread starter Thread starter Anonymous
  • Start date Start date
A

Anonymous

Guest
I thought this was a very good article concerning the myths promoted by feminists concerning men and domestic violence.



The Role Of Patriarchy In Domestic Violence
by Charles E. Corry, Ph.D.

patriarchy: 1. a form of social organization in which the father is the supreme authority in the family, clan, or tribe and descent is reckoned in the male line, with the children belonging to the father's clan or tribe. 2. a society, community, or country based on this social organization.

The feminist viewpoint
Gloria Steinem has asserted that "The patriarchy requires violence or the subliminal threat of violence in order to maintain itself...The most dangerous situation for a woman is not an unknown man in the street, or even the enemy in wartime, but a husband or lover in the isolation of their own home."
Feminist analysis thus states that a patriarchal society is a direct cause of domestic violence against women.
Steinem's theory rests on such works as Robert Burns' 1788 poem:

The Henpecked Husband
Curs'd be the man, the poorest wretch in life,
The crouching vassal to a tyrant wife!
Who has no will but by her high permission,
Who has not sixpence but in her possession;
Who must to her, his dear friend's secrets tell,
Who dreads a curtain lecture worse than hell.
Were such the wife had fallen to my part,
I'd break her spirit or I'd break her heart;
I'd charm her with the magic of a switch,
I'd kiss her maids, and kick the perverse bitch.

Feminist theory thus renders the idea of therapy for men who assault their female partners as implausible because such behavior is "normal" in a patriarchal society. That unproven feminist theory has been translated into laws that forbid mediation in cases where domestic violence is alleged and require the forced separation of the man and woman regardless of their desires.
Men who abuse their mates, the theory goes, act violently not because they as individuals can't control their impulses, and not because they are thugs, or drunks, or particularly troubled people, but because such behavior is inherent in a patriarchy. Domestic abuse, in feminist eyes, is an essential element of the vast male conspiracy to suppress and subordinate women. To keep men from abusing women they must be taught to see the errors of the patriarchy and to renounce them.

Patricia Pearson (p. 132) points out:
That men have used a patriarchal vocabulary to account for themselves doesn't mean that patriarchy causes their violence, any more than being patriarchs prevents them from being victimized. Studies of male batterers have failed to confirm that these men are more conservative or sexist about marriage than nonviolent men. To the contrary, some of the highest rates of violence are found in the least orthodox partnerships — dating or cohabiting lovers.
In short, correlation does not imply causation, a fundamental theorem of statistics. Yet on the basis of this fundamental error, a multibillion dollar domestic violence industry has arisen to the detriment of families and civilization.

More objective viewpoints

Dutton has examined the patriarch theory and rejects it for the following reasons:
• Battering in lesbian couples is much more frequent than heterosexual battering and lesbian relationships are significantly more violent than gay relationships.
• There is no direct correlation between how power is shared in a relationship and violence within couples.
• There is no direct relationship between structural patriarchy and wife assault.
Research to date indicates abuse and violence occurs in upwards of 50% of lesbian relationships compared to around 10-20% in other types of relationships. That would certainly not be true if domestic violence were in any way related to a patriarchal society.
There is evidence from a variety of sources that women are more violent in a domestic setting while men wage war globally. The Revs. Sewell point out in their recent report that:
"We think it is important to note that there have been the same kind of studies done in many countries. There is cross-cultural verification that women are more violent than men in family settings. When behavior has cross-cultural verification it means that it is part of human nature rather than a result of cultural conditioning. Females are most often the perpetrators in spousal violence in most cultures that have been studied to date. That leads many professionals to conclude that there is something biological about violent females in family situations. Researchers are now exploring the role of the 'territorial imperative' as a factor in women's violence against men. Women see the home as their territory. Like many other species on the planet, we humans will ignore size difference when we experience conflict on our own territory. So, the scientific results that reveal the violence of American women are not unique to our culture, and do not indicate a special pathology among American women. World wide, women are more violent than men in family settings."

Susan Steinmetz, Ph.D., a leading researcher in the field of family violence, has done a cross-cultural comparison of marital abuse. Using a modified version of the Conflict Tactics Scale (CTS), she examined marital violence in small samples from six societies: Finland, United States, Canada, Puerto Rico, Belize, and Israel. Her results suggest that "...in each society the percentage of husbands who used violence was similar to the percentage of violent wives." The major exception was Puerto Rico where men were more violent. She also found that: "Wives who used violence...tended to use greater amounts."
A 1988 survey of couples in Canada by Brinkerhoff and Lupri found the same pattern. They examined interspousal violence in a representative sample of 562 couples in Calgary, Canada. They used the standard Conflict Tactics Scale and found twice as much severe violence where females assaulted males, 11%, as male assaulting female, 5%. The overall violence ratio for men was 10% while the overall violence ratio for women was 13%. Their study found significantly higher violence in younger and childless couples, and that male violence decreased with higher educational attainment while female violence increased.

As she did with many issues, Erin Pizzey recognized very early that domestic violence had nothing to do with the patriarchy. In her book Prone to Violence, she compares violent men from the patriarchal society of Nigeria and the matriarchal society of West India and finds no basic differences. She has also argued that the feminist movement's intent is to destroy families as we know them.
The cross-cultural studies referenced above yielded results very similar to family violence studies done in the United States and other nations.
Conversely, there is considerable evidence that the feminist matriarchy has had considerable negative influence on domestic tranquility in the form of draconian Big Sister laws that forcefully separate men and women and are destroying families regardless of the individuals wishes.
We are not aware of any matriarchal society that has independently developed beyond the Stone Age. While such societies readily use technology borrowed from patriarchal neighbors, if left alone matriarchal enclaves appear to quickly revert back to a Stone Age level. Haiti, and any inner city ghetto, would be modern examples.

The studies referenced find no evidence that a patriarchal society has any direct influence on family violence.
Are we the only ones who regard the present unsubstantiated, radical social engineering based on destruction of the patriarchy as extremely dangerous?
Are the lessons of the previous century so quickly forgotten?
Perhaps George Orwell's 1984 was simply premature and it is really a matriarchal Big Sister that is our danger?


Before I continue, allow me to clarify my position. I do not post this article or anything else that I write in this blog to further the current war of the sexes. Quite the contrary. I assert that the family is integral to society and the family unit needs to consist of a man and women who are united. The reason I post this article is to disclose the lies of feminism.

Feminists would have you believe that women are perpetually victimized by men. They would have you believe that they are fighting a righteous battle to end the abuse and oppression of women. In fact, their fight has nothing to do with truth or righteousness. Their fight is about lies, separating the sexes and destroying the family.

What better way to divide men and women than to convince women they are the victims of men? You can not trust those who oppress you. You cannot be open, loving and giving with those who would seek to abuse you. When you're 'sleeping with the enemy', you must at all times be on guard and suspicious. Feminists have clearly defined to women that men are the enemy as we can see in Gloria Steinem's quote,

"The patriarchy requires violence or the subliminal threat of violence in order to maintain itself...The most dangerous situation for a woman is not an unknown man in the street, or even the enemy in wartime, but a husband or lover in the isolation of their own home."

The facts are that women and men are both capable of violence. They are both capable of murder and of hate and of every other evil act and emotion within human capacity. Neither gender has a monopoly on evil or, for that matter, on goodness.

Human beings are the sum of their actions, not their sexual organs. The myth of the evil patriarchy, that men are prone to violence and, perhaps the greatest myth of all, that women are perpetually victimized by men is nothing more or less than a lie; a destructive, corrosive lie, promoted by feminists to erect a wall between men and women.
 
Thanks you for posting this, Fairlight. Good one!

I found it a big help, and a validation of my own observations.
 
MOST EXCELLENT :!:

so many points that it makes :)
 
Oh girl,
You knocked it out of the park on this one!! :D Outstanding.

You might be interested in a study done by a guy named Gottman from the University of Washington in regards to the incidence of women who are the instigators in domestic violence situations. Needless to say, back in the day, it didn't go over well, and I am glad to see that someone like you still has the guts to speak and corroborate the truth.

I hope God opens more doors for you to share this message, dear. Indeed your light is fair. ;)
 
alit53 said:
Oh girl,
You knocked it out of the park on this one!! :D Outstanding.

You might be interested in a study done by a guy named Gottman from the University of Washington in regards to the incidence of women who are the instigators in domestic violence situations. Needless to say, back in the day, it didn't go over well, and I am glad to see that someone like you still has the guts to speak and corroborate the truth.

I hope God opens more doors for you to share this message, dear. Indeed your light is fair. ;)

I'm glad you enjoyed it. I thought it had a lot of good information in it. :)
Blessings,
Fairlight
 
I found this article AWESOME...thanks:)
 
Back
Top