I'll get back to this.Esotera said:What, you mean the biased third party source that has no explanation who's funding the website anywhere on the internet, and is commonly quoted by men's rights organisations?Lazier Than Thou said:Oh, Wikipedia disagrees. My bad, I was clearly wrong. No, you're right. The Center for Disease Control and Prevention probably lied about their statistics because they're clearly woman hating monsters. And the fact that those results have been duplicated by many different studies conducted at many different Universities is just evidence of systemic hatred for women.
Seriously, did you even bother looking into the link I provided?
You mean the website for California State University is just a "random [person]'s website?" Funny, I thought were an accredited University. My bad. Guess all those people that have degrees and diplomas have been conned. I mean, the study that came from that "random website" only contained the followingI read the first few studies and they were just random people's websites, and the only proper study had this:
But who is funding CSU!? Who knows? It doesn't say on their website! Oh, wait, no it does. They're funded by the government, tuition fees, and alumni.http://www.csulb.edu/~mfiebert/assault.htm said:SUMMARY: This bibliography examines 282 scholarly investigations: 218 empirical studies and 64 reviews and/or analyses, which demonstrate that women are as physically aggressive, or more aggressive, than men in their relationships with their spouses or male partners. The aggregate sample size in the reviewed studies exceeds 369,800.
Whatever, it's still very shady if you ask me.
So they're not the views of the CDC. What does that matter when what I posted had nothing to do with views and had everything to do with statistics?Note. The findings and conclusions in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Uh huh. Wikipedia is a better source than the government and multiple Universities(I decided not to go into the University of Pennsylvania as that would have just been beating your stupid point to death and beyond). I'll keep that in mind.I trust wikipedia far more than your link as it has multiple citations from journals, but most importantly, it is peer-reviewed and probably a hell of a lot more impartial.
Gender-specific campaigns are not a useful tool when you're fighting against something that is not gender specific. Why? Because you're cutting out half of the people that need help.I haven't shrugged anything off, I simply said that gender-specific campaigns are a useful tool & we should continue to use them.Lazier Than Thou said:Two things need to be addressed in that.
#1: In relationships where there was no reciprocity(also known as "hitting back") women were more than twice as likely to instigate violence. In relationships where there was reciprocity, women were more frequently violent
#2: Women sustain more damage in reciprocally violent relationships. Please note that this means "hitting back" and not "being a jackass and just beating someone for no reason." Please also note that men are physically larger than women on the average thus contributing to the degree of damage sustained.
The mere fact that you can shrug off the level of violence directed at men does nothing but make the point for the original poster. Violence against anyone(domestic or not) should not be tolerated. To suggest that men aren't as important as women is to propagate a sexist notion.
Are we striving for equality or not?
You want to use gender-specific campaigns to fight feminine itch and prostate cancer? Great, sounds like a fantastic idea. You want to use gender-specific campaigns that effect both men and women? Sounds like a great way to cut men out of getting recognition and funding, which is misandric and shows a complete lack of empathy for the pain and dignity of men in violent situations.
But back to your first "point." The "point" about you trying to discredit RADAR because it has no information about who's funding it and is commonly quoted by Men's Rights Organizations?
Why does it matter who's funding it? Does their stated goal of bringing to light the truth about domestic abuse somehow get tarnished if you find out someone bad is funding them? In what possible way could anyone have a problem with a group that's trying to end violence and lies in the media?
Why does it matter that MRA's cite it? Are MRA's inherently bad? Are MRA's liars and cheats? What possible reason would you have for connecting MRA's and RADAR?
You're a misandrist. I didn't want to say it in the beginning because I don't know you and there's no reason to call you out for your hatred of men and boys without at least dialoging a bit. But your adamant refusal to recognize the problem men face in Domestic Violence is proof that you don't care when men and boys suffer from violence. This is reprehensible and I hope everyone sees you for what you are.
Good day.