Friday, September 24, 2021

WHY RICHARD DAWKINGS DROPPED A BOLLOCK IN 2006 AND AFTER

 Dear Readers,


Many of my readers will have heard of Professor Richard Dawkins, an Oxford zoologist born in 1941, who made his name in 1976 with his book 'The Selfish Gene'.  Professor Dawkins was born and raised for the first eight years of his life in Kenya, when it was still a British colony. Interested in science but brought up with a Church of England (Protestant) culture, Professor Dawkins was something of a believer until deciding in his teenage years that Darwin's Theory of Evolution provided a more feasible explanation.

Years later, he returned to England with his family, studying primarily in Oxford, and eventually graduating from university in 1966. Lecturing in California and Oxford, he made his name with books on evolution such as 'The Selfish Gene' and pro-atheism publications such as 'The God Delusion' of 2006.

Sadly, Professor Dawkins had a stroke in 2016, but fortunately it wasn't fatal.

Personally, I was never a fan of Richard Dawkins. I liked some of the things he said - certainly some of his ideological opponents were just downright deranged - but generally I always found him to be rambling, pompous, snobbish, and with the charm and warmth of a blobfish in an ISIS costume (something lost on his more sycophantic then-teenage fans). Besides, I always found Stephen Hawking carried a much more interesting and convincing philosophy on atheism than Dawkins ever did, but that's another story.

Unfortunately, Professor Dawkins, has the occasional habit of saying things that aren't merely misinterpreted by moral hysterics, but are genuinely weird and actually quite disturbing. I'll start off with his quotes that he made on Eugenics in 2020.


"If you can breed cattle for milk yield, horses for running speed, and dogs for herding skill, why on earth should it be impossible to breed humans for mathematical, musical or athletic ability?"


I'll just let that sink in.


"I wonder whether, some 60 years after Hitler's death, we might at least venture to ask what the moral difference is between breeding for musical ability and forcing a child to take music lessons."


Because my parents getting me to do piano lessons with my neighbour didn't involve the cruelty of literal extermination of human beings considered "inferior".


"Intelligently designed morality would have no problem with negative eugenics,"


Pretty sure that's what they all say.


Perhaps because of the above point I made.


"Just because Hitler wanted to do something is not in itself an argument against it.


Except perhaps that we're not talking about the Nazi anti-smoking adverts or animal rights laws, we're talking about things like forced sterilisation and culling.

(Though you know I personally despise the "woke" crowd for their appalling treatment of male abuse victims and still do not condone their ham-fisted faux morality, in this case I actually agree with their reason behind disliking what Dawkins has to say here.)

This could all have something to do with the fact that Dawkins was brought up in a colonial farm in Kenya - then a British colony - in the 1940s. European colonialism made widespread use of the idea of eugenics, the modern version being conceived by half-cousin of Charles Darwin, Sir Francis Galton. Of course, this is open to interpretation, and it may be simply that Dawkins has taken his views on Eugenics from a distortion of the theory of evolution through his study of the latter subject.

In 2014, Professor Dawkins took another morally dodgy step on twitter in his response to a woman who admitted that she would have a "real ethical dilemma" if pregnant with a down syndrome child. This was Dawkins' response.


"Abort it and try again. It would be immoral to bring it into the world if you have the choice."


(Ironically providing an unintentional argument AGAINST abortion.)

When people started asking questions, this was his response.


"I can't help feeling that at least half the problem lies in a wanton eagerness to misunderstand."


"If your morality is based, as mine is, on a desire to increase the sum of happiness and reduce suffering, the decision to deliberately give birth to a Down's baby, when you have the choice to abort it early in the pregnancy, might actually be immoral from the point of view of the child's own welfare."


I'm pretty sure a lot of Down's Syndrome people would have something to say in response to that.


"Those who took offence because they know and love a person with Down's Syndrome, and who thought I was saying that their loved one had no right to exist, I have sympathy for this emotional point, but it is an emotional one, not a logical one. It is one of a common family of errors, one that frequently arises in the abortion debate."

 

That sort of argument may be the case for a scientist wearing a shirt with scantily-clad women on, college students wearing dreadlocks or Chinese dresses, but this is a different kettle of fish entirely. 

This isn't an argument for or against abortion, but Professor Dawkins unwittingly provides quite the ammunition for the "pro-life" side of the argument.


Some might think I'm a "snowflake" or a hypocrite for objecting to points of view. That is not the case. I'm not pointlessly losing my shit over trivial ideas, nor am I demanding a grovelling apology or for Professor Dawkins to be forcibly silenced, but pointing out that the "Professor" has said some things in the past that can potentially encourage and cause actual harm to others.

However, these quotes are here really to just set the scene, and aren't the relevant quotes that I'm focusing on. Rather they're here to highlight that this is a man who carries some rather dodgy points of view, to say the least, but now I'm going to focus on ones that, in the context of the purpose behind my blogging, are downright outrageous and actually quite damaging.


When Dawkins wrote 'The God Delusion' I decided to eventually take a look, and though I thought that there were some interesting points to be made, and 


Here is one of the quotes I read in the book:


"All three of the boarding schools I attended employed teachers whose affections for small boys overstepped the bounds of propriety. That was indeed reprehensible. Nevertheless, if, fifty years on, they had been hounded by vigilantes or lawyers as no better than child murderers, I should have felt obliged to come to their defence, even as the victim of one of them (an embarrassing but otherwise harmless experience)."


Bravo, Professor Dawkins. Being touched without consent is an "embarrassing but otherwise harmless experience". Would you care to tell that to the individuals I encountered during my therapy sessions waiting for their turn? Would you tell that to people silently staring at the walls or in one case, a woman who was crying bitterly into her hands? For me, my own experiences happened in 2001. I had a breakdown about them in 2014, 13 years later.


It doesn't end there though. Here's more.


"I look back a few decades to my childhood and see things like caning, like mild pedophilia, and can't find it in me to condemn it by the same standards as I or anyone would today."


To be honest, it's nothing new to see abuse victims like Professor Dawkins rationalise and underplay their experiences, I'm not going to hold that to him. It's up to him to interpret what happened to him personally. What I really take issue with is the suggestion - based on a quote from a single woman - that religion is more damaging than paedophilia.  

I may be an atheist and a skeptic myself, but I'm not so far gone that I'll kiss the ground that Professor Dawkins walks on like so many of his online followers do (or used to, particularly in the late 2000s). Sexual assault of children is a devastating crime on society, and it is 100% an insult to compare general religious teaching (which varies from place to place) with child molestation and downplay the pain of the latter. It's an insult to the victims of child sexual assault, it downplays their (our) pain that is much more devastating than religious teaching and indoctrination, and it's a grossly irresponsible thing to say.

Dawkins came under fire for this in 2013 and rightly so. The Atlantic rightly referred to his words as  https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2013/09/richard-dawkins-defends-mild-pedophilia-again-and-again/311230/

Once again, I'm not engaging in "cancel culture", in fact I think that if Professor Dawkins says things like this, he should be allowed to do so (especially to "give him enough rope to hang himself" as the saying goes), but I am entirely at liberty to criticise him for what he says here. And I am at liberty to say that I find him a deeply creepy and morally bogus man who makes my skin crawl. He shows contempt for people with disabilities, and he shows contempt for survivors of childhood sexual abuse.

This isn't just about Richard Dawkins, though. Even eight years on we see the same dismissive attitudes towards abuse victims. We see the innocent with lives ruined and their abusers given a free pass for various reasons. We see victims like Alex Skeel still accused of being the real abuser, of female abuse victims blamed for wearing "revealing clothing". (My own therapist told me he spoke to a woman who was raped as a schoolgirl, and her attacker blamed her for wearing a school uniform to which my therapist said "But you were a schoolgirl. What else were you supposed to wear?") 

In comparison, religious indoctrination in a free society can be actually quite easy to escape (though sadly this is not guaranteed). Sexual assault however, is a much tougher battle to fight.

Let's not forget that.



Sincerely,


The Invisible Man


(A) https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2013/09/richard-dawkins-defends-mild-pedophilia-again-and-again/311230/


(AA) https://www.theguardian.com/science/2014/aug/21/richard-dawkins-apologises-downs-syndrome-tweet

Monday, September 13, 2021

ON 'APPROACH ANXIETY' AND WHAT THIS MEANS FOR ME AS A MALE SURVIVOR

Dear Readers,


I've just got back from being on holiday yesterday, and I gotta say how much I enjoyed myself. I didn't want to travel abroad with everything having been so precarious during COVID. However, since my M.A has rather taken the wind out of my sails, and other job stresses getting in the way (summer is my busiest time), I felt like I really needed a city break.

Since I was away in another city, I decided to just relax and enjoy myself, have a wander around and despite some of the stifling heat giving me a colossal headache on my first day, everything else was great. One particular experience I decided to try was approaching women in the local bars. 

Thing is, I recently came out of a relationship that fell apart due to COVID separation (she lived in another country) and usually my handful of relationships have been because either I was lucky enough that one time in that the girl has approached me (something of a rarity in general for blokes), or it was someone I'd known for years and we started feeling physically attracted to one another and decided to capitalise on it.

As far as I know, approach anxiety is a problem for most men, fear of having your ego shot down in flames is not a pleasant thing to risk, and fear of being misunderstood in the post-#MeToo environment, this feels even more precarious. However, as a male survivor of a female abuser, this fear is tripled, then tripled again. What's usually held me back wasn't so much the fear of my ego being damaged (other than perhaps the girl saying something genuinely unpleasant) but the fear of being unsafe. Will she slap me? Knee me in the crotch? Throw a drink in my face? Will the entire bar start laughing at me as some creep or loser? Will some jealous and protective boyfriend I don't know about threaten me?

Then there were other questions. 'Some of these women are stunning, they wouldn't even want to give me the time of day.' This one evening, I'd actually managed to overcome most of my nerves by telling myself that I was excited, not nervous (and by having a beer with my pizza), and dressing fairly smart and stylish. When I got to the bar with my friend, I completely lost my nerve and started to freeze up. I started feeling genuinely scared of approaching a girl at the bar, in case something terrible happened. My friend noticed that I was completely frozen up and tried to reassure me, even though I was a gibbering wreck, and he just stepped back and let me to it.

Then I leaned against the bar and gently introduced myself - breaking the ice by asking the nearest girl if she had room to be served at the bar, or if the bar staff had noticed her yet. I wasn't so much trying to actually "score" so to speak, but rather get over that initial barrier that to approach an attractive woman was wrong or dangerous or both. I ended up speaking to about five of them, and you know what I discovered?

Everything was fine. They were just friendly and open to being talked to. If you think about it, it makes sense because women who seem hard to approach are probably not going to be approached at all by guys. Even if they're not into guys (lesbian/other LGBT etc), then 

Obviously as a male survivor, if your abuser was female, this may be difficult to overcome, and believe me, I found it incredibly tough. However, I would like to reassure you guys that there's nothing to be afraid of. I once did the same thing when I was on holiday in Sweden, approach a girl and talk to her at a bar, and while I was too awkward to successfully maintain a conversation, let alone attract the girl I spoke to, nothing terrible happened. She didn't set the bouncers on me or anything, but just made her excuses and left, which was kind of a relief.

This being the case, I'd like to offer a few pro-tips to guys who are recovering from abuse and want to learn to start interacting with women again.


1) Make sure you're looking after yourself. Wash and shower regularly, and make sure that you have a decent change of fresh clothes.

2) The past is not where you're going. Most women you approach in a bar are unlikely to be aggressive or hostile.

3) Make sure that you also look after yourself mentally. If you find that you're at risk of giving yourself a panic attack by trying this out then you're probably not ready to approach women yet.


What I started doing when I was on holiday was when I was in the bar, I made it my mission to approach at least one woman (in the end I spoke to five of them) and open up an interaction. That was it. I didn't feel ready to try and take it any further, and if you want to start trying the same exercise, here are my suggestions.


1) Remember, being out of your comfort zone is where you grow as a person. It may feel scary, but you'll feel dead brilliant afterwards.

2) If you want to talk to a woman, try and approach one who seems to be pretty sober, drunk girls are the ones more likely to act inappropriately, and make you feel uncomfortable.

3) Start off by something simple to break the ice. This could be introducing yourself, or asking if they have room at the bar to be served, something chivalrous is a great start.

4) Don't start by immediately launching into chat up lines as to why she needs to follow you home (women don't feel comfortable with this going 0 to 60).

5) Choose your time and place wisely. A bar or a club is a pretty obvious place, but this could be anywhere. However, there are some places that women will feel less comfortable with being approached, or they may just not be in the mood (say, if their heads are buried in a book). Also, some cultures may be more reserved than others so consider that depending on where you - and she - comes from. 'Read the room' and assess for yourself

6) Practice by just opening up conversations if you don't feel comfortable with escalating to something more intimate - these have to feel natural, such as asking someone for directions or if they know of a good restaurant to eat in. These can be in a queue in a shop or at the post office, and try opening these discussions with people in general, not just attractive women.

7) Usually if you get rejected, a woman will just probably say something like 'thanks but no thanks' and excuse herself. Obviously don't go chasing after her if you get rejected, or be rude or overly invasive, or try and touch her in a way that she feels uncomfortable with. If she says 'no' or 'no thanks' then leave it at that. Be respectful. Always treat others the way you want to be treated yourself. (I don't doubt that you would follow this golden rule, but I feel I have to put this just in case there's someone reading who didn't get the memo.)

8) Likewise, do not let her treat you badly either. If she behaves in a way that you feel uncomfortable with, whether she's being rude or too hands-y for your liking, then tell her 'no' and make it crystal clear that she's in no doubt, and end the interaction. You don't have to put up with being treated badly.

9) Have fun and relax! If you make mistakes, that's OK. None of the terrible things you suspect will happen are actually that likely at all. Hostility and aggression usually comes between drunk friends.


Obviously I'm saying this based on my own experience, but at the same time I'd like to pass on whatever information that might be helpful. As time goes on, I'll probably discover more and if anything can help you guys out, I'll let you know right away.

In the meantime, I hope that this helps!


Sincerely


The Invisible Man

Thursday, August 19, 2021

D.V. IN LESBIAN AND GAY RELATIONSHIPS

 Dear All,


So, it's been a chaotic 2021 so far, and now that we're 2/3rd into the year, a lot has happened.Recently I've been distracted by my dissertation, and an unfortunate bullying situation at work that I might tap into at some point. 

Here in the UK, COVID-19 while diminished, is still present, and is a problem being faced by other countries. Sadly, it has also proven to be disastrous for victims of domestic violence, who have found themselves shut in with their abusers and no means of escape.

As you all know, this blog is about spreading awareness to male D.V and S.A. survivors, particularly - though not exclusively - of female abusers. However, for now I'd like to start a conversation regarding another group that I feel is relevant.

LGBT domestic violence.

My reasons for this are twofold. Firstly, because these include male victims of abuse again.*

Secondly, because female victims of female abuse in lesbian relationships seem to have similar problems to male victims of female abuse.

(I have no information on "non-binary" people or other demographics of abuse victims that haven't been covered, but if anyone has any information I'd be very interested to hear it.)

Another reason that has occurred to me at this time of writing is that while male victims of sexual and domestic abuse have started to gain ground over the past few decades thanks to us and our supporters elbowing into the public consciousness bit by bit (e.g. Mankind Initiative, Johnny Depp & Alex Skeel), they still remain obscure and resistance against them still exists in mainstream for now.

However, while male victims of domestic or sexual abuse get little ground, lesbian victims of domestic abuse from other women seem to get no awareness at all - unless their abuser is a male rapist or an ex-boyfriend pre-coming out. While personally I'm no expert, I expect that for them it must be excruciating, to be forgotten, alone, and not feeling like abuse from a same sex partner must feel truly invalidating..

A few of my lovely followers on twitter have already told me about experiences and disclosures from third parties on the subject, but if anyone has any experiences of D.V. in LGBT relationships, particularly lesbian relationships, please feel free to D.M me directly on twitter. Let me know if there's anything you want awareness spread about the subject, what you wish people would understand, what organisations might help you. If you want to share any stories, I promise to be discreet, and I won't share them publicly unless you give me express permission to do so and I notify you first.

For victims of domestic abuse in LGBT relationships, there are organisations out there to help you such as galop (formerly brokenrainbow) and stonewall, links are below this article. There are sadly few of these, but this may be something that we can change.

If anyone thinks that I'm removing my focus from heterosexual male victims of abuse, this is not the case, no more than bringing up male victims of abuse takes away from female victims of male abuse. Like I said, this still includes male victims of abuse, but if female victims of female abuse are as neglected as I think, then that's another group worth helping. Compassion is not finite, and I think that COVID has shown that in many people.


Sincerely,


The Invisible Man


*Erroneously these are used by so-called "feminists" to tell people that male victims are only ever abused by other men, but I doubt that the numbers are truly high enough to justify this.


https://www.stonewall.org.uk/domestic-violence-and-abuse-resources-lgbt-people

https://www.escis.org.uk/community-and-living/broken-rainbow-national-helpline/

Thursday, July 29, 2021

WIKIPEDIA GUIDE TO GOALPOST SHIFTING AND LIES

Dear Readers


Wikipedia is a site in which a lot of information is available instantly at the click of a button for virtually anything. History, science, politics, literature, you name it. It's also a gold mine of further citations for other pieces of information on links its editors use to back it up.

Unfortunately, in recent years - as you will know - the site has gained a reputation for being unreliable, hence when I've been studying in university I was always urged not to use wikipedia for referencing. And it seems that when it comes to female on male abuse, it hasn't improved at all.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domestic_violence_against_men

When it comes to the subject "criticism" things start to go to shit right from the start.

"Many critics have rejected the research cited by men's rights activists and dispute their claims that such violence is gender symmetrical"

"Many critics". Not much of a citation.

"arguing that MRAs' focus on women's violence against men stems from a misogynistic political agenda to minimize the issue of men's violence against women and to undermine services to abused women"

Isn't that convenient? The idea that anyone wanting to help male abuse victims is the ever-present "MRA" boogeyman who simply wants to hurt women out of spite. What an erroneous crock of shit.

A 2008 review published in journal of Violence and Victims found that although less serious situational violence or altercation was equal for both genders, more serious and violent abuse was perpetrated by men. It was also found that women's physical violence was more likely motivated by self-defense or fear while men's was more likely motivated by control.

PROFILE OF AUTHORS The authors are Ravneet Kaur and Dr Suneela Garg. It's difficult to say who Ravneet Kaur is but Dr Suneela Garg is likely to be this person:

https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Suneela-Garg

She's published several articles on domestic violence, and virtually none of them acknowledge male abuse victims.

Thing is, India has also already seen women's groups dismiss male abuse and rape victims as to be taken seriously, as happened in 2013:

https://www.deccanherald.com/content/309399/womens-groups-reject-ordinance-threaten.html

Whether or not she was part of this is another matter. Unlikely, but it shows the atmosphere present among the professional class here as well as in the western world.

Also, note the phrase "Less serious situational violence or altercation was equal for both genders". This is basically what we call goalpost shifting.

They also make good use of weasel words to basically minimise the actions of female abusers.

Also, isn't it interesting that they say "women's physical violence was more likely motivated by self-defense or fear" as if to protect a pre-conceived idea?


"Another 2011 review published in the journal of Aggression and Violent Behavior also found that although minor domestic violence was equal, more severe violence was perpetrated by men."

Note the use of "minor domestic violence was equal". There's a sense of desire to minimise here.

A 2011 systematic review from the journal of Trauma Violence Abuse also found that the common motives for female on male domestic violence were anger, a need for attention, or as a response to their partner's own violence.

You hear that? If your girlfriend or wife slashes you with a kitchen knife, she just wants your attention and it's all your fault. How sweet and adorable.

Another 2011 review published in the journal of Aggression and Violent Behavior also found that...men were more likely to beat up, choke or strangle their partners, while women were more likely to throw things at their partner, slap, kick, bite, punch, or hit with an object

Again, there's the damaging implication that being slapped, kicked, bitten or having things thrown at you is harmless. Anything to protect the concepts of "toxic masculinity".

Researchers have also found different outcomes in men and women in response to intimate partner violence. A 2012 review from the journal Psychology of Violence found that women suffered disproportionately as a result of IPV especially in terms of injuries, fear, and posttraumatic stress.The review also found that 70% of female victims in one of their studies were "very frightened" in response to intimate partner violence from their partners, but 85% of male victims cited "no fear". The review also found that IPV mediated the satisfaction of the relationship for women but it did not do so for men

They're setting the bar REALLY high for male abuse victims here. If you're not suffering from PTSD or afraid for your life, you don't count as a DV victim. If you're not outright murdered or in danger of being as such, you don't count as a DV victim. If you don't realise that what's happening to you is abuse, you don't count as a DV victim. The ideas of the researchers seem to be preying on the ignorance of female on male abuse and the fact that many of these men might not realise that it's happening.

So who is writing the 'psychology of violence' then? Well, apparently, the current editor is Professor Antonia Abbey from Wayne State University. "I have a longstanding interest in women's health and preventing violence against women.  Most of my recent research focuses on understanding the etiology of men’s sexual aggression," 

https://clasprofiles.wayne.edu/profile/ab8222

Clearly someone who has a vested interest in male on female violence, but none in violence vice versa.

Gender asymmetry is also consistent with government findings. According to government statistics from the US Department of Justice, male perpetrators constituted 96% of federal prosecution on domestic violence.

Prosecution. It's not common for women to be prosecuted for abuse as shown above, so to use prosecutions as proof for their theories is more than a bit dishonest because it totally discounts crimes in which the perpetrator has got away with it.

Another report by the US Department of Justice on non-fatal domestic violence from 2003–2012 found that 76 percent of domestic violence was committed against women and 24 percent were committed against men.

There is another problem with this report, which seems at odds with the 2011 findings anyway, but James Landrith, SA survivor says it best on the Good Men Project in April 2012:


https://jameslandrith.com/2012/01/25/why-yes-rape-can-be-gendered-against-men-and-by-women/ 

This is of course depending on the statistical model. These models, with all of their obvious built-in bias, are then parroted around as if they are apples to apples comparisons of male and female predation. As such biases and outright distortions are often used to eliminate them from from data sets or intentionally isolate such data in lesser or hidden categories, we have no real idea of just how many female predators exist today.

Dr. Ruth M. Mann of the University of Windsor, an expert on sociology and criminology, stated her opposition to the gender symmetry theory of domestic violence on the grounds that women as well as children are the main victims in the "annual pile up" (Coyle, 2001) of victims being murdered by intimate partners and fathers throughout Canada (AuCoin, 2005; Ogrodnik, 2006)

Once again we get to the active opposition to the idea by Dr Mann on the grounds of bad faith, again setting the standard for male abuse victims to be so high that it cannot be reached, and male victims of female abuse are again invalidated by these same old lies.

And somehow this seems to be at odds with the "women are strong and equal to men" message. It's seems this only applies when it suits them. Suddenly, when it comes to DV, men are the stronger ones. One minute they bravely battle against "gender roles" then bravely get into bed with the same "gender roles" when it suits their own bias.

In an open message to these "activists" and "academics" I say this.

Our stories are real and deserve to be heard. We are NOT "All lives matter". We are NOT, as you imply, abusers getting our just desserts. We are NOT overstating abuse, if anything we fail to recognise it when it happens. If we discredit your ideas and careers by existing, then that's tough. We are NOT here to disappear for you and your careers' convenience.

We are NOT going away, get used to it.



Sincerely,

The Invisible Man

Thursday, June 10, 2021

MINIMISING LIES USED AGAINST MALE ABUSE VICTIMS

Dear Readers,


Please excuse the long absence, I've been having a bit of a rough time with a few personal trials, and with a M.A. course to catch up on, all while I've adopted a new dog, so life has been very busy.

However, I decided to come back to help arm most of you folks if you come across the all too frequent myths and lies and dismissals used on male abuse survivors and advocates of, usually by concern trolls, abuse apologists and extremists and just morons of various stripes.

Luckily, these are pretty easy to debunk so I urge you all to use these arguments if confronted by them.


"The vast majority is done by men to women but it does happen to men as well"

This is the most common minimising language, usually aimed at minimising the presence of male abuse victims. For a while, every single article on male abuse victims seemed to start this way. The authors seem to be under the impression that bringing up the subject takes something away from female abuse victims (such as resources or attention). There is no evidence whatsoever to prove this paranoid fear.


"We don't deny women can abuse sometimes"

We can all hear the "but" coming. "I'm not racist but." Usually the person writing this will argue that female abusers are as rare as a unicorn, and so irrelevant to the wider picture, and will almost certainly use one of the usual excuses you see down below.


"Patriarchy hurts men too"

This is basically concern trolling, pretending to be concerned about the same subject matter, but actually selfishly manipulating. "Give me power and I'll pretend that I'm going to help you." Rest assured, the person in question has no intention of helping male abuse victims, and is more interested in manipulating the target of their rhetoric. The conspiracy of patriarchy is based on assumptions rather than an objective way of looking at the world. It assumes that every man is powerful and every woman is disenfranchised, and again, it's nonsense, or male abuse victims wouldn't exist, simple as.


"Any man abused by his partner is weak."

This may be based on fear, but it's bullshit. Being abused doesn't make you a weak person, man or woman. Abusers target people out of their own insecurity, desire to control, in other words, out of their own weaknesses. Being abused can make you feel weak, believe me I know, but it's not a fault of yours that they target you. Nobody makes anyone abuse them, it's the abuser's fault 100% every time.


"Abuse of men is rare"

An old fashioned trope that's based on old fashioned ideas. Firstly, it's based on either forgetting or omitting the fact that an abusive action by a woman (such as forced sexual activity) aren't counted in the same way as an abusive action by a man, even if the action is identical. 

https://jameslandrith.com/2012/01/25/why-yes-rape-can-be-gendered-against-men-and-by-women/

With this technical bias, it's not possible to use those unreliable and useless statistics to accurately work out the correct number of female abusers. According to figures from 2018, over 690,000 men in the UK have been victims of domestic abuse. Not exactly a small number in and of itself.

Secondly, it's the neo-Victorian premise that women are all entirely childlike and delicate creatures who can do no harm to a man, which is a strange anachronism in a time when the same people who say this are also saying that women are just as capable as men in combat and the police. Which leads me to:


"Men who are abused by their female partners aren't in fear of their lives"

This is what we call "shifting the goalpost". As soon as stats show even middling to high levels of abuse of males, there's always some dullard who comes up with this argument. Unfortunately for them, abuse isn't restricted to lethal actions. According to the UK government, domestic abuse includes: 


  1. Emotional abuse 
  2. Financial abuse
  3. Psychological abuse
  4. Physical abuse
  5. Sexual abuse


Nothing in that list suggests that abuse has to be lethal violence to count as abuse. If you're emotionally tormented or controlled by a partner and you're not in danger of death, you're still being abused.


"As patriarchal oppressors, men can't be properly abused the same way women are"

Conspiracy theories are unfortunately all too common, and this statement is based on an idea, not a fact. The truth is that the idea of patriarchy has about as much weight as the 'Protocol of the Elders of Zion'. It assumes that every man is powerful and every woman is not, forgetting the existence of female lawmakers, judges, millionaires, politicians, etc. This makes zero difference when someone is pouring a pot of boiling water on you while you sleep: https://www.itv.com/news/anglia/2019-03-07/were-still-so-far-behind-says-domestic-abuse-survivor-as-government-pledges-500k-to-help-male-victims

One of the funniest examples I once came across on one blog was "I can't hurt men, the patriarchy would destroy me if I harmed a hair on their heads" (which comes across as a good argument for the mythical "patriarchy"). This is self-evidently laughable nonsense, because if it were true, there wouldn't be a single male victim/survivor of domestic or sexual abuse.


"Any guy who gets raped by a woman should be grateful. What is he a pussy?"

Rest assured, the sort of morons who use this worthless argument haven't a clue. I almost didn't want to bother with this one, it's so stupid, but I'll use the analogy that there's a difference between drinking a beer, and drowning in a vat (or eating a bar of chocolate and having the whole thing forced by someone else into your gullet without being unwrapped).


"Men who are abused don't speak up about it because of toxic masculinity"

This shortsightedness is unfortunately typical of modern discourse. True, one of the reasons male abuse victims don't speak up IS because of fear of being seen as not masculine enough (for status among peers, among women, etc). However, this is part of the bigger picture.

Discourse does not include male abuse victims to the extent that they exist in the public conscious. Abuse is most often being defined by the very same people as something men do to women to a lethal degree. Rape is defined as being forced penetration by a man, and yet these assumptions conveniently forget that in the UK, forced sexual activity by a husband on his wife wasn't considered rape until 1992. Male rape wasn't on the statute books until 1994. Would we call forced sexual activity that happened before those dates rape just because they weren't legally defined as such back then? No. So why do we do the same thing here?

Let me also remind people that Amber Heard said to Johnny Depp "tell the world, I, Johnny Depp, a man, am too an abuse victim, and see how many people believe or side with you". Oh, how telling!

If we live in a society that is NOT accepting of male abuse victims and shows not nearly enough sympathy or support to them, we can't by definition expect male abuse victims to speak up on their own part because what's in it for them?


"I wouldn't let myself be abused by a woman/he could've defended himself."

That's a broad assumption based on nothing. Abuse doesn't happen because someone is weak, but because the abuser is at fault. Besides, if a man is being slapped by his wife in public and he does defend himself, what do you imagine will happen? Most likely he'll be confronted by bystanders or even attacked.


"Women commit abuse in self defence"

By definition, abuse is NOT the same thing as self defence. There is little to no evidence for this either, and is based on ugly prejudices and unbelievable ignorance and stupidity by the writer.


"Most statistics that show parity are cited by MRA misogynists"

The favourite boogeyman, the "MRA misogynist". Unfortunately for them, the evidence goes quite a long way beyond the depths of reddit and Paul Elam &c.

Actually, stats are changing as time goes on and as we learn the ugly realities of abuse. Stats like these are changing. According to the CDC in the U.S. if we exclude rape for a moment (again, defined solely as an action performed by penetration by the legal statutes) and stalking, all other forms of violence against males were perpetrated by females.

http://www.cdc.gov/violenceprevention/pdf/nisvs_report2010-a.pdf,

To wantonly blame some imaginary "MRA" (or better still "incel") conspiracy is frankly, pathetic.


"Male abuse victims take resources and attention away from the more urgent plight women who are killed every year"

It is a tragedy what happens to these victims.

Having said that, you don't have to be left a literal corpse to be classed as an abuse victim. There is absolutely no evidence that male victims of abuse take away attention or resources (particularly in one of the richest countries in the world). Beating male abuse victims over the head with the corpses of dead female victims isn't just disgusting, it isn't just damaging to male abuse victims, it's an insult to the women who've been killed. It's crass and disrespectful to both parties, and shows nothing more than a selfish and fragile ego on part of the speaker.


"Most studies showing male abuse victims don't ask how many of them are in same sex relationships."

Considering how much smaller the LGBT community in the U.K or the U.S is compared to the non-LGBT population, this would have to rely on the idea that there is a lot of violence in LGBT relationships. I believe that abuse among same sex couples doesn't get nearly enough of a look-in, but there's just not enough same sex couples to account for that idea. 


"Men are abused by other men, not women"

See above the CDC. Also, when it comes to rape, it seems that even changing the law to include forced to penetrate cases, there is opposition in some places that is quite telling:

https://www.jpost.com/israel/womens-groups-cancel-law-charging-women-with-rape

https://www.deccanherald.com/content/309399/womens-groups-reject-ordinance-threaten.html


Again, I'd like to remind people of the shocking fact that male rape and marital rape weren't even on the statue books in my country until the early 1990s. 


"Men who are abused by women have probably done something to deserve it."

Now we're going down 4th and Amber Heard street. This is victim blaming, pure and simple. Nobody deserves to be abused, and anyone who says disgusting crap like this is part of the problem. Dismiss it.


If you come across these bullshit arguments yourself, hopefully this will help. Certainly they'll probably double down on their arguments, but don't let that sway you. You probably won't change their mind, but if it changes the mind of someone else listening to you, then all the better for it.



Sincerely,


The Invisible Man

Wednesday, June 9, 2021

REVELATION ON JOHNNY DEPP

 Dear Readers,


I've been away for a while, and this is likely to continue for now since I have a dissertation and three essays to complete for my master's degree, while at the same time holding down my job, so I've been rushed off my feet and am likely to continue being so, but I've managed to find a quiet moment to get back to you guys. Don't worry, normal service will resume, but for now, let's get into the blog subject. 

As many of you are aware, and just like many of you, I'm a supporter of Johnny Depp, and as a survivor of a female abuser myself, it never fails to aggravate me to see mainstream feminists completely dismiss, ignore, slander, or deride male abuse victims and their (our) supporters, while at the same time maintaining a stranglehold on public discussion and action on domestic and sexual abuse (e.g. #metoo), resulting in male victims of abuse being discarded and continuously left to rot by society.

Recently I came across a thread on the subject, and since some of you Depp supporters are feminists yourselves as such, I thought I'd take a look.

https://www.reddit.com/r/AskFeministWomen/comments/hs2ueg/why_arent_feminists_outraged_about_amber_heard/

The thread fortunately seems to be supportive of, or at least sympathetic to, Johnny Depp.

although I think feminism needs to speak out more on male victims of abuse, and men being falsely accused of abuse and rape, I think the genuine reason is that... they/we are afraid of the consequences of us making it a big deal.

at a glance, it might seem like its because we care less. thats not the reality. we do care, a lot. but there are anti-feminists who continuously invalidate feminism and victims of abuse by bringing up victims of false accusations. you can go on ANY youtube video regarding abuse or rape, and you will find comments of people bringing up false accusations. i have unironically seen people believe that up to 90% of all rape cases.... are false!

i think some of us fear that if we get outraged about cases like these, we invite anti-feminists to continue their hateful agendas


This surprised me, since I was mostly under the impression that denialism among feminists was based on agendas of huffpo journos, womensaid and politicians such as J*ss Ph*llips trying to protect their livelihoods (or some, out of mere spite and in the name of petty revenge). 

I'll be blunt though, this isn't good enough.

An innocent man has had his name tarnished and his career ruined publicly, after being violently assaulted and emotionally abused by his wife. It's a disgrace, and to blame antifeminists is a cop-out.

Helping male abuse victims doesn't take away from women's rights. A man being abused by his girlfriend or wife does nothing to help women's rights. Indeed, it's often feminists who tell men that "equality isn't like a cake, just because someone has greater rights than you doesn't mean you lose yours". So why does it change in these circumstances?

It won't set back the progress made for female abuse and rape victims, there's no evidence for that. If some male abusers pretend they're the wounded party, unfortunately female abusers do that too, so that's generally an abuser thing. If you want to prevent abusers playing the wounded animal (as Heard did), you have to educate yourself on the subject, before educating anyone else.

Telling the truth, if anything, strengthens your position. Let me give a personal example. When I was 16, after a long period of abuse, I punched a bully in the face enough to give him a severe nosebleed. Afterwards, I owned up to what happened, and I was completely honest about it, I didn't get punished for it. If anything, the guy I punched and I both made up and that was it.

The consequences of supporting male abuse victims of female abusers may disrupt and discomfort those who are wedded to the dogma of "men bad women good" but since these are people's lives we are talking about, that's a small price to pay. If you truly DO want a world in which people don't care about gender, then have the spine to stand up and be counted, and prove that you DO care about both false accusations (also a weapon used by female abusers), and male abuse victims of female abusers.

If as a feminist you support male victims of female abuse and do so without inhibition, you show yourself (and your movement) to be courageous, honest, and full of integrity. If as a feminist however, you continue to allow or encourage society to leave male abuse victims to rot, then you will expose your true colours as being without courage, moral fibre or integrity.

The choice is yours.


Sincerely,


The Invisible Man

Friday, March 26, 2021

ANOTHER DAY, ANOTHER FISKING

 Dear Readers,


So this is a pretty old article from back in 2013, but it has the age-old lies and garbage that desperately needs to be undone if male victims of abuse have any hope of forward progression. This was written by someone called "Karen Ingala Smith" (a literal Karen - I know, right?).* If you don't know who she is, she runs a twitter profile 'Counting Dead Women' in reference to female abuse victims who have suffered fatal abuse experiences.


Such deaths are undeniably tragic, and I applaud her efforts to help them. Having said that, if she had stuck to helping women in abusive situations and escaping from dangerous abusive partners, we wouldn't have a problem. Unfortunately, she seems to see male abuse victims as real abusers, competing with abused women, and a threat to her rhetorical view of the world (and probably her wallet too). Therefore, she sees fit to unnecessarily deny the existence of our experiences and silence us again.


So, for the sake of my fellow male survivors, I'm going to get down and dirty. Time to get messy!


A couple of weeks ago, The Independent ran an article on male victims of domestic violence. There were some factual inaccuracies in the report along with the use of the statistic that one in three victims of domestic abuse in Britain is male. I challenged these on twitter. I received the response below from a professional referenced in the article.

But I'm not going to move on. I'd prefer to talk about this statistic because it is unhelpful at best,


No it is not.


[And] it is derailing and dangerous at worst.


Again, no it certainly is not.


The claim of gender parity in domestic violence, or at least of much less difference than is conventionally believed, is nothing new, in fact it's been popping up - and out of the mouths of Men's Rights Activists - since at least the 1970ies (???). No matter how often or how robustly 'gender symmetry' claims are rebuffed and refuted, its advocates continue to regurgitate their position.

Ah, the famous 'MRA' boogeyman of MSM so-called "feminists". It's pretty easy to understand this, it's basically shorthand for "someone who looked at me funny.' And in response, we keep "regurgitating" our position because people like Karen here insist on doubling down on their web of lies to protect their privileged positions of power and status over the issue of domestic violence.


'A third of all victims of abuse are male'

Obviously, that's about 33%, and in recent years the figures have been recorded as much higher, but that's another story.

The data referenced, that approximately a third of victims of domestic abuse in the UK are male comes from the data from the British Crime Survey. It contrasts significantly from data from police crime reports which estimate that between 80-90% of violence against the person reported is by women assaulted by men.


You know why that is, Karen? Because most men do not report. This is common knowledge. In fact, they underreport more than women, which is saying something because women underreport already. A lot. This is an elephant in the room that is easy to acknowledge, unless you're a Karen of course.


The main problems with the statistic that a third of the reports are by men are

  • It is about domestic abuse and/or conflict, not domestic violence.

They're the same thing, Karen.


The data does not differentiate between cases where there is one incident of physical conflict/abuse/violence or those who where violence is repeated. If we look at the data for where there have been four or more incidents, then approximately 80% of victims are women.


This is what we call 'goalpost shifting'. Karen makes a sneaky sleight-of-hand by suggesting that male victims of abuse don't count if it was a "one-off" (not a standard she'd applied to a wife slapped once by her husband, because it's abuse too). Note the way that she starts it by describing certain assault incidents as "conflict" as if to downplay the action of female abusers.

  • The data does not differentiate between incidents where violence and abuse are used as systematic means of control and coercion and where they're not.

Another textbook example of abuse apologia. ALL domestic violence and abuse is used for control and coercion. Karen has got it disastrously wrong. And you know what the funny thing is? We've barely even started on this article, I'm not even halfway through.

  • The data does not include sexual assault and sexual violence.

In 2013, there was little data for female-on-male sexual assault, and progress on further research in this field is intolerably slow. One big reason for this is likely because people like Karen keep trying to stifle it with their lies as we see here.

  • The data does not take account of the different levels of severity of abuse/violence, 'gender symmetry' is clustered at lower levels of violence.

Again, we have the dishonest use of downplaying violence against male partners. What Karen is basically telling us is "lower levels of violence is not domestic abuse". Frankly, this is a pathetic argument of minimisation to make at best, and is morally abhorrent abuse apologist writing at worst. The truth is that even one incident of violence against a partner is unacceptable, and this is at the same moral and logical level as in the past where it might've been once considered societally "acceptable" for a man to slap his wife to "put her in her place". Either way, like the latter scenario, it's abhorrent.

  • The data does not take account of the impact of violence, whether the level of injury arising from the violence or the level of fear. Women are six times more likely to need medical attention for injuries resulting from violence and are much more likely to be afraid.

I've heard this argument before, and here we see more goalpost-shifting from someone who basically is claiming that "level of fear" and "risk of injury or death" discounts anything outside that category as domestic violence. This is a blatant and utter lie, since domestic abuse does not have to be violent or lethal to be abuse. There are multiple types of abuse, including emotional and financial abuse. Would Karen argue that women suffering these experiences are not real abuse victims? I doubt it.

This sort of rhetoric maintains public ignorance about the realities of what abuse really is.

  • The data does not differentiate between acts of primary aggression and self-defence, approximately three-quarters of violence committed by women is done in self-defence or is retaliatory.

Karen here has sunk as low as it is possible to get. It's not uncommon for "feminist" theorists like this to strive to maintain their cherished theories about the world by just subtly (or not so much subtly) accusing male abuse victims of being at fault or being the real abusers. For example, "retaliatory" is pretty ambiguous. In retaliation to what? Forgetting to pick up milk from the shop? Not being listened to? This is victim blaming and abuse apologia in one go, and it is not acceptable.


In fact, if these issues are taken into account, research consistently finds that violence is overwhelmingly perpetrated by men against women and levels are consistent with data of reports from the police.

"These issues being taken into account" is basically shifting the goalposts so much that they forget that there's even a football match. It's intended to deliberately set the bar so high, that incidents of abuse of males have to be on the same extreme level as females to count as abuse at all (unlike incidents of abuse of females, less extreme incidents undoubtedly still count). And even then, in the mind of Karen in all her rhetoric, she sees the male abuse victim as having to prove that he's not the "real abuser". So no, we won't take these lies or weasel words of yours into account, Karen.

This is supported by data from the Crown Prosecution Service that shows across the five years between 2007/8 and 2011/12, 93.4% of those convicted for crimes relation to domestic violence were men.


Karen, just stop. You're using data from before people even started to consider female on male abuse as a problem at all. Note also that she used the word "convicted", taking advantage of male under-reporting. (MORE RECENT DATA) I'd also like to remind Karen and her ilk that the first woman to be convicted of coercive behavior towards her partner was Jordan Worth in 2018. It's like estimating the population of England based on a census from 1595.


  • Looking at sexual offences.

43,869 sexual offences were recorded by police in England and Wales in 2011/2012.

In the same year:

96.7% of cautions issues for sexual offences were to males
98.2% of prosecutions for sexual offences were against males
99% of convictions for those found guilty of sexual offences were male.

There's a pretty easy answer to this antiquated data. It's rubbish. Why do I say this? Because basically it refers again to convicted cases, and imagines that there aren't any cases of abuse against males that people do not know about. It's like arguing that no other women get abused because none are convicted. James Landrith, an American male rape victim (of a female attacker) who courageously spoke up about his experiences, never got justice or a conviction. The law is stacked against him because it doesn't acknowledge female forced-to-penetrate as rape (which is the same in the UK). Personally, my own abusive experiences I never reported, but does that mean that they never happened? Of course not. This argument is wafer thin and as flimsy as a chocolate chip cookie in a swimming pool.

54% of UK rapes are committed by a woman's current or former partner.

If sexual offences are excluded from consideration, then no gender parity.


'It's harder for men to report, there's much more of a taboo for men'

Spot on.

Exactly the opposite:

  • Men are more, not less likely, to call the police

Where is her evidence? There is none, because this is a total and utter lie. As pointed out before, Alex Skeel's abuse by Jordan Worth was the first convicted case of a male victim of coercive abuse in 2018. Did he just magically pop out of the ground like a gnome, separate from all other men? I don't think so. 

  • Men are more likely - not less - to support a prosecution.

Utter bullshit. There isn't a shred of credible evidence presented here by Karen to prove that.

  • Men are less likely - not more - to withdraw their support of charges.

See my point above. Then Karen cites her claim, one of only two citations. Who did she cite? Michael Kimmel, a biased and ideologically driven professor, chair for NOMAS (National Organisation of Men Against Sexism) who anonymously posted a revolting article called "Not a Two Way Street" outrageously claiming that "Men are NOT victims of what's meant by domestic violence and abuse". What's more, this is a man accused of sexual harrassment in 2018, a man who filed for retirement to avoid being held accountable for his actions, so I'd really consider anything he says to be suspicious.

https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2018/aug/15/us-womens-rights-campaigner-accused-of-sexual-harassment

Another way to get round the issue of unrepresentative reporting is to look at who gets killed

No it most certainly is not.

Dead people don't get the voice of whether or not to inform the police. UK Homicide records between 2001/2 and 2011/12 (11 years) show that on average 5.7% (296 total) of male homicide victims and 44.2% (1066) of female homicide victims are killed by a partner or ex-partner.

So she admits that those 296 men were likely murdered by their partners at least (I doubt that most of them were gay men somehow).

Expressed as an average of those killed by a partner or former partner over 11 years, 22% were men, 78% were women.

Again, refer to what I said about how you don't have to be a stiff to be abused.

Note, the domestic homicide figures do not tell us the sex of the perpetrator, nor is the sex of the perpetrator revealed for all other types of homicide.

Funny that she says that.

Men are overwhelmingly killed by other men - regardless of the relationship between victim and perpetrator.

And now she's completely derailed her line from general domestic abuse into outright murder, suggesting that you have to be dead as a doornail to count as a domestic abuse victim. Like I said before, with things such as emotional abuse and financial abuse, it does not have to be lethal or cause physical damage to count as abuse.

Women are overwhelmingly killed by men - regardless of the relationship between victim and perpetrator.

Regardless? That's a bit of an odd thing to state. I was under the impression that we were focusing on domestic abuse. Perhaps not. Either that or her article is so poorly focused that it takes the readers to nowhere at the drop of a hat.

'Maybe the police see what they expect to see, gender stereotypes mean that men are more likely to be perceived as the aggressor'

Absolutely. Many police officers will testify to that, as would the Duluth model in the U.S.

Except that they're not. Research by Marianne Hester (2009) found that women were arrested to a disproportionate degree given the fewer incidents where they were perpetrators.

Either that or they turn out to be abusers more than you or Marianne Hester would care to admit, especially since back in 2009, female on male abuse was recognised even less so than today.

During a six year study period men were arrested one in every ten incidents, women were arrested one in every three incidents.

Interesting that Marianne Hester is cited as the only one of two resources (the other being alleged sexual harasser Michael Kimmel). Who is Marianne Hester, you might add? Well, it turns out that she's not an unbiased source either. She's in fact a Professor at Bristol University, the Chair in Gender, Violence and International Police in the Centre for Gender and Violence Research at the School for Policy Studies, University of Bristol. Hardly an unbiased source again, a rather inconvenient fact dishonestly left out by Karen, the fact that much of her cited so-called "evidence" is little more than a confirmation bias circle jerk.


When women do use violence, they are at risk of greater levels or retaliatory violence.

So what? This means that it never happens? It is a blatant, undeniable fact that our society looks down on males hitting females. Even thuggish characters who love violence such as 'Marv' in Sin City consider that taboo. And how often has this trope come up? TW: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pyJXAallsyY

Karen here has come up with a simplistic, Victorian era argument, the idea that all females are small, delicate creatures (when it becomes convenient for people like Karen and harasser Michael Kimmel), and men are unanimously muscled hairy brutes. This is blatantly untrue (though try telling people like Karen they'll pretend to agree with you until it's inconvenient).

Women are penalised, not excused, not invisible, if they transgress gender stereotypes.

Are you kidding? Take a look at how "actresses" Amber Heard and Asia Argento were completely given a free ride by the #MeToo movement. Or Missing White Woman Syndrome that focused less on the crimes that Jodi Arias and Hope Solo committed, in fact Hope Solo seems to be getting treated as a heroin of women's equality by the press: http://www.insideworldfootball.com/2021/01/14/hope-solo-says-action-needed-close-gender-wage-gap/

'Women make false allegations'

Except when they don't and in the vast majority of cases they don't.'

Two words. Johnny Depp. 
And again, I point to James Landrith, whose attacker threatened to falsely accuse him if he didn't comply with her assault. On a personal note, my own abuser blatantly used the threat of false accusations against me if I didn't comply with her sexual wishes. This is a textbook method for female abusers. Some male abusers do it too, but if we listened to drivel like Karen's, then we'd likely believe that all males lie about abuse and are actual abusers, but all women are not abusers, which is bunkum.

The Crown Prosecution Service recently released data for a 17 month period in which there were 5,651 prosecutions for rape and 111,891 for domestic violence in England and Wales.

Again, bad example to give considering that the law doesn't even consider women as capable of committing rape anyway, even if she forces her partner to have sex (forced envelopment), and like I said, please refer to the fact that she only uses convicted cases.

Over the same timescale, there were only 35 prosecutions for making false allegations of rape, six for false allegations of domestic violence, and three that involved false allegations of both rape and domestic violence.

So I guess that men don't lie about domestic violence either, huh?

'Women exaggerate'

Women overestimate their own use of violence but underestimate their victimisation

Seems unlikely given the content of this entire excuse for an article. OK, flippant comment aside, I'll get to this in a moment.

Women normalise, discount, minimise, excuse their partners' domestic and sexual violence against them. Women find ways to make it their fault.

Indeed, they do. Do you know why? Because most victims do that. It's very common for men and women subjected to domestic violence and sexual abuse to blame themselves, but it's not just women, though judging by what comes next, Karen would like to pretend that's not the case.

In contrast, men overestimate their victimisation and underestimate their own violence.

Oh do fuck off. It's pretty blatant to anybody with a working brain that male abuse is underestimated by men, even those to whom it happens. (EXAMPLES) Me personally, I remember when a boy in class said to me that "women do rape men", I fervently denied it, even though I'd already been sexually assaulted by a girl by that point, who was in the same class as me.

True to form, Karen cites work for this from Russell P Dobash, who wrote other works such as "Changing Violent Men", "Rethinking Violence Against Women", "Gender and Crime". Again, Karen is blatantly performing an idealogical mutual masturbation at the level of American creationists, and using outdated work from as far back as 1998 (much like alleged sexual harasser Michael Kimmel using citations from the 1980s). This means that the data Karen presents us is so far past its sell-by-date that it's absolutely useless.

But there's more.

Men are more likely to exaggerate a women's (?) provocation or violence to make excuses for initiating violence and, where retaliation has occurred, in an attempt to make it appear understandable and reasonable.

Here we see yet another piece of blatant lies and weasel words. Allow me to show the correct way of doing this. 

Abusers are more likely to exaggerate a victim's provocation or violence to make excuses for initiating violence and, where retaliation has occurred, in an attempt to make it appear understandable and reasonable.

You see the difference? Karen in the previous article has cunningly used weasel words to equate abusers solely with males, and suggest that male abuse victims and male perpetrators are one and the same because apparently, male abuse victims according to Karen are just lying perpetrators, wolves in sheep's clothing. This is quite obviously not true as we have seen in recent years.

Paul Keene, used the defence of provocation for his killing of Gaby Miron Buchacra. His defence claimed that he was belittled by her intellectual superiority and that he lost control after rowing with her by text over a 12 hour period.

Given that this article is awash with intellectual dishonesty and moral bankruptcy, I have a sneaking suspicion that Karen uses Paul Keene and Gaby Miron Buchacra as textbook examples of what every man and every woman is like. Again, almost every abuser male or female has an excuse that they come up with as to why they feel justified in assaulting their partner. "She's being a bitch" or "He's an asshole that doesn't listen to me." This is not exclusive to male (or indeed female) abusers, but Karen would have you believing that it is in regards to the former.

That a jury accepted his defence is a further example of how men's violence is minimised and excused.

**Quick disclaimer.** What happened to Gaby Miron Buchara was tragic. It was a waste of life and should never have happened. There is no denying that. What is strange is that there are a few facts omitted by Karen in the article on the BBC about the case. I took the liberty of looking it up myself, and the BBC provided an article on the case. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-somerset-20813685

According to the article, the judge and jury gave the sentence because of the suggestion that she'd been emotionally abusing him and that he retaliated.  Obviously, that's not justifiable reason to do what he did, certainly not in my eyes. What's also obvious is that this is exactly what Karen here has said that women who abuse their partners commit abuse for. "Retaliation."

What I found surprising about this particular case, is how the family responded. 

'The family of Gaby said there was no right or wrong in the decision taken.'

A statement said: "We must respect what the justice system has ordered because at the end of the day, each one of us will have to live with the consequences of our own actions."

Now, that is a surprise. Was Gaby actually guilty of abusing her boyfriend? Not that it justified what was done to her, like I said. It just seems strange that the family aren't baying for his blood like one might expect. You see, "minimising male violence" in cases of a woman being killed by her boyfriend or husband doesn't usually extend to the families.

Given how Karen has spent this entire article subtly lying to its readers that female abusers don't exist, how females only abuse in retaliaton and self defence (i.e. While it's wrong for a man to do it, it's OK when a woman does it.), this smacks of the dog calling the cat hairy-arsed.

Not only by men and the women they assault, but by the legal system. The right to claim abuse as a mitigating factor in domestic violence homicide cases was vitally important for women like Kiranjit Aluwahlia, Emma Humphreys, and Sara Thornton, all of whom had suffered years of violent and abuse at the hands of the men they killed. (LINKS TO THESE CASES)

That such a defence could be used in Paul Keene's case only illustrates how differently women and men who use violence are treated.

Again, see my above point. And actually, that's something of a contradiction considering that she's arguing against these cases being treated the same.

Of course, now we hear the usual waffle and drivel from Karen and her ilk that we are used to, concern-trolling about "patriarchy hurts men too" and "gender roles". I'm trying not to yawn, but there you go.

A feminist perspective, based on an understanding of socially constructed gender roles and differences within the framework of patriarchal society does not mean that all men are violent to women, or that men are genetically pre-disposed to violence. It means the opposite.

Except you spent the entire article suggesting that "yes, all men accused of abuse are indeed violent to women" in the most brainless, drawn-out way. And there is mountains of evidence that the mainstream feminist movement has failed, and continues to completely fail, at responding appropriately to the problem of female-on-male abuse.

It means that women and men are socialised and that - within the limits of choice permitted by the social environment - we can choose to be different.

Basically "if men were more like women they wouldn't hurt women and if women ran everything and acted like men, we'd be in paradise". To be honest, she's saying a lot while saying absolutely nothing as well, like a politician, verbal diarrhea. 

Whether coming from an anti-feminist Men's Rights Activist perspective,

There's that strawman again,

Or from a genuine desire to support those men who are victims of domestic or sexual violence, those who use statistics that overstate similarities between male and female violence are either doing so wilfully, to pursue their own agenda, or because they genuinely haven't taken time to - or have failed to - understand the statistics.

And now, we come to Karen's latest bad faith argument, tacitly implying that "advocates of male victims of abuse are the same as MRA misogynisy woman-haters". We've already been over her dishonesty, projection, hypocrisy, goalpost-shifting and weasel words to minimise and justify domestic and sexual abuse of males. She's even descended down into the depths of downright abuse apologia. We understand the statistics Karen (many of which aren't designed to show male abuse victims and are therefore outdated). We understand them a lot more than you do, clearly, otherwise you would never have written this pathetic excuse for an article.

I have no desire to deny any man's reality.

And yet you have blatantly done just that, so stop lying and pretending that you care. You don't. We know.

Denying women's much greater suffering as victims of domestic and/or sexual violence is a political act.

More of this "personal is political" bollocks so it seems. Karen appears to love her bad faith arguments, which equate to "advocating for male abuse victims denies what happens to women, so male victims should shut up, and suffer as they deserve."

The differences between men and women's use of violence and experiences of victimisation do not need to be denied or minimised for all victims to be deserving of safety and support.

For the love of God, Karen - you spent the entire article denying and minimising a whole swathe of victims (male victims) in the name of the paranoia that giving us male survivors the support that we deserve like anyone else is somehow robbing women or something (it's not). Don't even think about pretending that you care about all victims, because it's obvious that you do not.

It's quite possible to believe that no woman, child, or man deserves to be a victim of sexual or domestic violence (or indeed of any other type of violence) whist (???) maintaining a feminist agenda to end women's oppression.

Except no. No you can't have your cake and eat it. You've wasted your effort on an entire article trying to minimise and silence male victims of abuse in bad faith, using dodgy rhetoric, dubious sources, and all to protected your cherished ideas and comfortable theories of how the world works. We male abuse victims don't have the luxury of being able to pretend that our experience didn't happen.

So judging by what you've written here, no it really isn't.

Footnotes.

1 Kimmel 2002

2 Dobash et al. 1998

Any man experiencing domestic violence can contact the men's advice line.

"Here, have the scraps from the table you little worm"

So there we have it. Karen Ingala Smith engaging in a long-winded and pompous stifling of male abuse victims (I do apologise for the long response). This is unfortunately typical of MSM feminism, and now with the recent Johnny Depp case out in the open, the rock has been lifted for all the world to see.

For the rest of you, I hope you enjoyed by rather lengthy fisking of this feeble little article, and that you'll take away some ammunition to use against more lies, dishonesty and bad faith arguments like hers.

Finally, I want any and every feminist who thinks like Karen - in fact, anyone who agrees with her at all, to understand this. Male abuse victims blow the conspiracy theory of "patriarchy theory" out of the water, and that makes us an inconvenience to you. You may not like it, but that's tough.

I've said it before and I'll say it again, we male survivors are not and will never be here for you and your movement's convenience. It's time for you to wake up to this fact, the fact that we do exist, that we do experience abuse, that we do hurt and suffer for it even if you can't take it in.

It's time for you to adapt and do better. We will be acknowledged by society, whether you like it or not.


Sincerely,


The Invisible Man


*Admittedly I'm not always fond of the Karen meme like when that woman was aggressively being filmed outside her house and she was having a panic attack, but sometimes it is justified.

Thursday, March 25, 2021

HITTING THE NOTE PART 3

 Dear Readers


Here's another bit of music that I think you might find at least raises your spirits if you need it (and trust me, having had a bit of a bad couple of weeks recently, this has been just what I needed).

For those who have seen the 'Lord of the Rings' movies, this is the party music song being played in the first film. It's called 'Flaming Red Hair' and it's a great little tune.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=exDcam6hcv0

Enjoy!


Sincerely,


The Invisible Man

Friday, March 12, 2021

TW: THE TRAGIC CASE OF SARAH EVERARD AND MISSING WHITE WOMEN SYNDROME

I want to put out a disclaimer that this is not in any way aimed at Ms Everard or her family. It is an awful, horrible, tragic thing that happened to her, and I can't imagine how awful it must be for her family. My heart goes out to them, and the perpetrator, be this suspect or anyone else even, must be brought to justice to the fullest extent of the law. I intend no disrespect to them whatsoever, and this is aimed neither at them, nor at Ms Everard herself. What I take issue with is the inappropriate reaction.


Dear Readers,


Those of you living in the UK will have heard of the case of Sarah Everard. I have read only a few bits of information about this case, but as far as I know, she's a young who went missing and whose remains were recently discovered.

Someone has been arrested, and it's even been commented on by Prime Minister Boris Johnson, and I heard that someone (allegedly Mark Drakeford from the Welsh Assembly and a woman from the Green Party) in the House of Lords absurdly suggested an all-male curfew (go to sleep and have another dream why don't you) and the verbally incontinent and frothy, of course, saw fit to come up with the "men bad" rhetoric, in their infinite lack of wisdom. (Obviously a slap in the face, not just to ordinary decent men, but to those who are male victims of female abusers, big time. Also impractical if the killer or abuser is a friend, family member or partner since, you're living with them. Duh.) So far so Yorkshire Ripper case.


The thing is, we've been here before.


(For any MRAs reading this, don't blame feminism for this, this is a very old trope that pre-dates feminism by centuries, so it'd be unfair to solely blame feminists or feminism for this. Also, any feminists reading this, don't blame 'patriarchy' for this either, other feminists are guilty of endorsing this trope. More it has some anti-male "men are the expendable gender" tropes in it.)


If you haven't seen the pictures before, Ms Everard is young, pretty and from a white middle class background. Another couple of victims who fit this description were 11 year old Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman, two girls who went in 2002 out on an errand and were lured into the home of a janitor at their school, who later killed them and dumped them a few miles away.

Sarah Payne was another example, an 8 year old girl who was abducted by a local man in the UK, and was raped and murdered back in 2000. The murder was a local man who was later imprisoned for life in 2001. 

A year later, 13 year old Milly Dowler went missing in 2002, and six months later her remains were found dumped in a woods, the murderer was a serial sex offender later imprisoned for life (incidentally, the disgusting hacking of her family's answering machine by the press was enough to block communication between her family and the police or the killer, and the revelation brought out a scandal that ended the newspaper 'News of the World' in 2011 but that's another story).

In South Africa, another example was Rebecca Reeva Steenkamp in 2013, shot to death by her, at best, unstable and trigger-happy (and at worst, violent and abusive) boyfriend Oscar Pistorius, who presented a rather pathetic figure at the trial.


These murders were deeply tragic. These were innocent people completely undeserving of a fate that really, nobody deserves. There's no denying that, nor the pain and suffering delivered to their families, and the murderers deserve to rot in jail for the rest of their natural lives.

What is also striking is how others who aren't middle class, pretty, white women don't get nearly the same treatment. If you're male, or non-white, or poor, the press doesn't give a shit.


Did people react the same way to Danielle Jones? She was a woman who was disappeared in 2001, and yet the press interest was lower because she was from a lower social class and estranged from her parents. Nothing close to the same coverage as the other examples.

Or Damilola Taylor, a black boy whose killing shocked the UK, but didn't get the near hysteria as Wells and Chapman, (which also featured the ugly spectacle of people standing next to their graves to take pictures of them crying, without saying a word to their families). (1)

Or little Liam Fee? A young boy who was caged, forced to live with snakes and rats, force-fed vomit and dog-turds and later beaten to death by his female guardians. (2) None of the same outrage in response.


Prostitutes, black (or general non-white people) also get short shrift, (the Jack the Ripper murders of 1888 are treated less as a tragedy and more as a curious 'whodunnit?' by amateur sleuths) and this isn't even something I've made up. It's called "missing white woman syndrome" and it's actually been documented since the 1890s. (3) Basically, it's the "poor, pure white maiden destroyed by the terrible male brute", a positively Neo-Victorian point of view that's more patriarchal than feminist, another off-shoot of the damsel in distress trope.


Kim Pasqualiani, President for the National Center for Missing Adults in the U.S has also documented this phenomena as to how the media seem to be curiously picky as to who gets to be a worthy victim, and who doesn't, and how the media prefers the "damsel in distress" trope. (4)


Journalist Tom Pasqualiani also noted much the same in 2016, Quoted as follows: "Media outlets are ruthlessly selective, and they tend to prefer women who are white, pretty, and above all, innocent." Certainly the case of white working class heroin addict Tiffany Whitton in the U.S in 2013 didn't get nearly the same level of outrage. (5)


Or another male example. Jolene Doherty, a Scottish girl previously going viral for violently assaulting a male acquaintance on camera in 2013, later murdering Connor Cowper at a party, and bragging about being a "man-hater" in prison after the murder. (Yeah, please all wokester trash, continue to tell us male survivors how "it only hurts men's feelings it doesn't do anything to them".) (6)


Even the acid attack in Zanzibar on Kirstie Trupp and Katie Gee, two North London (working class Jewish) girls (7), again, virtually nothing in the way of the hysterical outrage as with their middle class counterparts from Christian cultural backgrounds.


Naomi Oni was another example (8) of an acid attack in East London in 2012, a black woman assaulted and disfigured by another woman, little to no outrage compared to white female middle class women.


Even when it's a high-profile woman the difference is clear. UK royal, philanthropist and aristocrat Princess Diana, a woman of huge international reputation was killed in a car crash in 1997 in Paris. She was regarded with hysteria by people who'd become obsessed with her in the soap opera of Royal family life, never met her, and responded with a giant outpouring of grief that wasn't seen in the same way after the murder of actual working class soap (Eastenders) actress Gemma McCluskie in 2012. (9)


We even see examples of this when rich, white, middle class women are the perpetrators of crimes (including heinous, evil ones). Examples are Jodi Arias who murdered her boyfriend Travis Alexander in 2008 (10), American Amanda Knox who murdered British female exchange student Meredith Kercher in 2007 (11), and Casey Anthony (12) who murdered her own daughter and dumped her remains in a nearby woods in 2008. 

Even the tragic suicide of Caroline Flack in 2020 forgets that she was in court for violently assaulting her boyfriend (who had been through a hideous ordeal of alleged assault, public scrutiny, and the death of his girlfriend) was covered in this way. In regards to the press coverage, the circumstances that lead to the court case needed to be scrutinised and if she was innocent, allowed to clear her name in court. Assault in the way described is a serious accusation, and her boyfriend could well have been killed if it indeed happened the way described. And yet the later press story seemed to be ambiguous about whether she was a victim rather than accused of an assault.


Personally, I see homeless people in town - immigrant men and women - where I live almost every day. I do what I can for them, but there's only so much you can do, especially since I suspect they're getting trafficked, and though I've alerted the authorities on them, I can't approach them directly to help. However, I can guarantee that if they disappeared, the press wouldn't give a shit.


(The only counters to this example are the murders of James Bulger in 1993 and the case of Alex Skeel in 2018, but I think this is because the culprits were caught on CCTV with their victim before the murder took place, and that was a shock to most people, and the brutality that Jordan Horner had enacted on Alex Skeel was undeniable and there for all to see, and even then the latter didn't receive much outward revulsion.)


This isn't a conspiracy theory, having its own documentation (look it up, seriously) and has also been a trope featured in shows such as 'Broadchurch', 'Family Guy', 'Scary Movie', 'L.A. Confidential' and so on.

Also, isn't it curious that the main protagonist and survivor of many (if not most) slasher flicks is a beautiful, blonde white teenager from a middle class background who doesn't drink, smoke, take drugs or have premarital sex? (If you're noticing the unfortunate implications of this, you're not alone.)

In other words, what happened to Sarah Everard, Sarah Payne, Holly Wells, Jessica Chapman et al, is undeniably tragic. But is it any less tragic than the deaths of Damilola Taylor, Liam Fee, Tiffany Whitton or Connor Cowper? Are they no less human or valuable to society? Didn't they have hopes, dreams, feelings, friends and families as much as their white, affluent female counterparts?

I may focus on male victims - as is my personal experience - but in this article I'm doing things a little differently. I'm actually advocating for all these other demographics of victims of murder too. The press and its lapdogs, and those who constantly devour its content and jump on the bandwagon have constantly engaged in both racist, misandrist, and snobbish hypocrisy.


Don't fall for the hypocrisy. See every victim of murder as a human being and worthy of compassion, and every murderer and abuser as needing to be brought to justice in a court of law.


If Sarah Everard or any of her counterparts I've highlighted fitted into any of the other tropes, people wouldn't have cared. Anyone who expresses outrage and responds in a stupid knee-jerk reaction is a hypocrite, possibly a racist or misandrist or snob or combination thereof who never gave a damn for the humanity of the victim, and never will.


In 2017, the morally useless Nick Jack Pappas crassly compared #MeToo male victims to "All Lives Matter", the trope used to shout down "Black Lives Matter", an important and crucial message (and much more important and relevant than the organisation under the same name). However, I'd like to take the message and use it in a different context.

"All Lives Matter" when it comes to murder victims, and that also means that when it comes to murder victims, "Black Lives Matter" as much as white affluent women. Male lives matter just as much as female lives, lower social class women's lives matter as much as middle and upper class women's lives.

See one another as human, and see this double-dealing snake-in-the-grass unequal manipulation for the prejudice, selfishness, arrogance and hate that it truly is. And show up the useless donkeys who engage in this selective behaviour for their double-standards.


Because at the end of the day, we're all human.


Sincerely,

The Invisible Man.


This article is dedicated to the memories of Damilola Taylor, Sarah Everard, Liam Fee, Holly Wells, Tiffany Whitton, Connor Cowper, Milly Dowler, Travis Alexander, Sarah Payne, Danielle Jones, and Meredith Kercher.


(0) Jewkes, Yvonne, (2004). Media and Crime. London: Sage Publications. pp. 52-53 ISBN 0-7619-4765-5.

(2) https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/liam-fee-murder-sickening-catalogue-8359146

(3) Earle, S.; Komaromy, C. & Bartholomew, C. (2008) Death and Dying: A Reading. SAGE Publications Ltd., 276 pages

(4) Krajicek, David. "Damsels in Distress". TruTV.com. p. 3. Archived from the original on July 28 2011.

(5) Junod, Tom (April 29, 2016). "Missing: The Curious Anomaly of Tiffany Whitton's Disappearance". Esquire 

(6) https://www.glasgowtimes.co.uk/news/17526816.conner-cowper-murder-killer-jolene-doherty-brags-callous-crime-amid-man-hater-claims/

(7) https://www.thejc.com/news/uk/two-men-charged-over-zanzibar-acid-attack-on-jewish-girls-1.58197

(8) https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/uk-26689194

(9) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gemma_McCluskie Jones, Cass (10 March 2012). "Gemma McCluskie's brother charged with her murder" The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077

(10) Jodi Aria Trial: Jury Gets Graphic Details of Travis Alexander's Slaying".

(11) Follain, J. (2012). Death in Perugia. pp 61-62, 25 and 71. ISBN 978-0-340-99309-5

(12) Edwards, Amy L.; Lundy, Sarah (December 19, 2008). "Remains identified as missing toddler Caylee Anthony" Orlando Sentinel