@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel It seems you have been citing figures from a country (🇬🇧) that doesn't believe that it is rape for a woman to initiate sex with a man who doesn't consent to that sex. Needless to say that your figures are likely biased and, in some sense, false.
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel Consider "Intimate terrorism by women towards men: does it exist?" by Denise A. Hines and Emily M. Douglas published in July 2010 in Volume 2, Issue 3, of the _Journal of Aggression, Conflict and Peace Research_ (available at www2.clarku.edu/faculty/dhines…).
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel "Research showing that women commit high rates of intimate partner violence … against men has been controversial because [intimate partner violence] is typically framed as caused by the patriarchal construction of society and men’s domination over women" (Supra, p. 36).
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel "The results of this study indicate that the adherence to the theory that patriarchy is the foundation of [intimate terrorism] in Western, developed nations deserves reconsideration."
2 Journal of Aggression, Conflict and Peace Research 54 (2010).
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel The "study shows the existence of male victims of female-perpetrated [intimate terrorism]. These men sustained very high rates and frequencies of psychological, sexual, and physical [intimate partner violence], injuries, and controlling behaviours" (Supra, p. 54).
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel Note "Differences in Frequency of Violence and Reported Injury Between Relationships With Reciprocal and Nonreciprocal Intimate Partner Violence" by Daniel J. Whitaker, Ph.D.; Tadesse Haileyesus, M.S.; Monica Swahn, Ph.D.; and Linda S. Saltzman, Ph.D. (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/P…).
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel "Differences in Frequency of Violence and Reported Injury Between Relationships With Reciprocal and Nonreciprocal Intimate Partner Violence" was published in May 2007 in Volume 97, Issue 5, of the _American Journal of Public Health_ (available at ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/P…).
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel This study "sought to examine the prevalence of reciprocal (i.e., perpetrated by both partners) and nonreciprocal intimate partner violence and to determine whether reciprocity is related to violence frequency and injury."
97 Am. J. Public Health 941 (2007).
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel This study found "that among relationships with nonreciprocal violence, women were the perpetrators in a majority of cases, regardless of participant gender… [and] …both men and women reported a larger proportion of nonreciprocal violence perpetrated by women…" (Supra, 944).
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel This study also found "relationships with reciprocal violence resulted in more frequent violence (by women only) and a greater likelihood of injury caused by both male and female perpetrators."
97 Am. J. Public Health 945 (2007).
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel Consider "Rates of Intimate Partner Violence in the United States" by John Schafer, Ph.D.; Raul Caetano, M.D., Ph.D.; and Catherine L. Clark, Ph.D., published in November 1998 in Volume 88, Issue 11, of the _American Journal of Public Health_ (link: ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/P…).
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel The study found "5.21% [as the lower bound] and 13.61% [as the upper bound] for male-to-female partner violence, 6.22% and 18.2 1% for female-to-male partner violence, and 7.84% and 21.48% for any partner-to-partner violence."
88 Am. J. Public Health 1703–1704 (2007).
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel "Lower-bound estimates were calculated by counting only those violent behaviors that both partners reported or agreed on. Upper-bound estimates were formed by counting violent occurrences that either partner reported, whether corroborated or not" (supra, pp. 1703–1704).
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel This 1998 study was authored before it became clear that women were as violent as women, in fact, are (which took further research—such as above—to demonstrate) and the actual raw data supports, in general, greater amounts of domestic violence perpetrated by women against men.
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel Consider “The Sexual Victimization of Men in America: New Data Challenge Old Assumptions” by feminist Lara Stemple and epidemiologist Ilan H. Meyer published in 2014 in the _American Journal of Public Health_, volume 104, issue 6, on pages e19–e26 (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/P…).
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel "[F]ederal surveys detect a high prevalence of sexual victimization among men—in many circumstances similar to the prevalence found among women."
Am J Public Health. 2014 June; 104(6): e19.
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel "[I]n 2011[,] …the National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey (NISVS), …found that men and women had a similar prevalence of nonconsensual sex in the previous 12 months (1.270 million women and 1.267 million men)."
Am J Public Health. 2014 June; 104(6): e19.
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel "However unintentionally, the CDC’s publications and the media coverage that followed instead highlighted female sexual victimization, reinforcing public perceptions that sexual victimization is primarily a women’s issue."
Am J Public Health. 2014 June; 104(6): e19.
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel What Lara Stemple and Ilan H. Meyer are referring to can be seen in Table 1 from the September 5, 2014, Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (cdc.gov/mmwr/pdf/ss/ss…, p. 5). @CDCgov doesn't think men can be "raped."
Thanks, @melliflora, for collecting and editing the graphic.
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora Similarly, @CathyYoung63 writes: "[t]he CDC study … seems to support a radical feminist narrative that … America is a 'rape culture' saturated with misogynistic violence. But a closer look at the data … raises some surprising question[s] about gender, victimization, and bias."
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63 "…[I]f the CDC figures are to be taken at face value, then we must also conclude that, far from being a product of patriarchal violence against women, 'rape culture' is a two-way street, with plenty of female perpetrators and male victims" (time.com/3393442/cdc-ra…).
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63 So this raises the question, why does the @CDCgov separate out male rape victims into a separate category of "made to penetrate" rather than including male victimization in the "rape" statistic proper? The answer relates to the @FBI's problems with data collection regarding rape.
Martin D. Schwartz wrote "Methodological Issues in the Use of Survey Data for Measuring and Characterizing Violence Against Women" which was published in August 2000 in volume 6, issue 8, of _Violence Against Women_ (journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.117…).
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63@FBI "North American researchers have tended to follow… Mary Koss's lead in dealing with sexual assault by asking behaviorally specific questions." Violence Against Women. 2000 August; 6(8): 816.
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63@FBI "[W]ithin the field of violence against women, there has been a great deal of controversy over the wording of questionnaires[, which] has consisted of attacks on Mary Koss's Sexual Experiences Survey (SES), which has been heavily used by other researchers…." Id. 829.
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63@FBI The work of feminist and American Regents' Professor, Mary P. Koss, Ph.D., has made a mess of the statistics kept by @CDCgov and @FBI involving raped men and that undermined a lot of the studies based upon those statistics (as the work of Lara Stemple and Ilan H. Meyer reveals).
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63@FBI American Regents' Professor Mary P. Koss, Ph.D., wrote “it is important to restrict the term rape to instances where male victims were penetrated by offenders. It is inappropriate to consider as a rape victim a man who engages in unwanted sexual intercourse with a woman.”
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63@FBI The above quote is from Mary P. Koss' "Detecting the Scope of Rape: A Review of Prevalence Research Methods" that was published in June 1993 in Volume 8, Number 2, of the _Journal of Interpersonal Violence_ on pages 206–207 (which is available at t.umblr.com/redirect?z=htt…).
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63@FBI To demonstrate what I am talking about hereinbelow is the federal rape statute I referenced earlier. Federal law uses "Sexual Abuse" rather than "Rape" as the term of art for the crime of rape (congress.gov/bill/99th-cong…) due to Senate Bill 1236 (in the 99th United States Congress).
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63@FBI 18 U.S.C. § 2242(2): “Whoever … knowingly … engages in a sexual act with another person [who] is… incapable of appraising the nature of the conduct; or… physically incapable of declining participation in, or communicating unwillingness to engage in, that sexual act….”
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63@FBI Compare that to the definition of rape the @FBI used to count rapes prior to 2012 (which the @FBI termed "forcible rapes," which seems to be similar to the common law definition of rape with which most people seem familiar), which sounds like Dr. Koss' definition.
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63@FBI "Forcible rape… is the carnal knowledge of a female forcibly and against her will. Assaults or attempts to commit rape by force or threat of force are also included; however, statutory rape (without force) and other sex offenses are excluded" (ucr.fbi.gov/crime-in-the-u…, p. 23).
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63@FBI In this context, the @FBI and @CDCgov using an alternative definition of rape from the rest of the federal government, Congress, and the states is really weird, but in line with the scholarship of feminists like Dr. Koss (whose contributions are well documented).
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63@FBI The @FBI and the @CDCgov using these alternative definitions to count rapes fuels feminist propaganda supporting falsities (like men are "abused and raped …mainly by other men") as noted by Lara Stemple and Ilan H. Meyer. Am J Public Health. 2014 June; 104(6): e19.
As Lara Stemple and Ilan H. Meyer point out, Dr. Koss' scholarship negatively impacts the equality of men.
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63@FBI "[T]reating male sexual victimization as a rare occurrence can impose regressive expectations about masculinity on men…. The belief that men are unlikely victims promotes a counterproductive construct of what it means to 'be a man.'"
Am J Public Health. 2014 June; 104(6): e20.
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63@FBI "[F]actors that perpetuate misperceptions about men’s sexual victimization [include]: reliance on traditional gender stereotypes, outdated and inconsistent definitions, and methodological sampling biases that exclude inmates."
The Office of the Inspector General for the Justice Department considers rape (pursuant to 18 U.S.C. §§ 2241, 2243, and 2244) of federal inmates a huge problem (oig.justice.gov/special/0504/i…).
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63@FBI “As the statistics below indicate, the scope of the problem also includes female staff with male inmates, male staff with male inmates, and female staff with female inmates. … The following chart describes the gender breakdown of allegations investigated by the OIG…:”
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63@FBI Having finished my digression on the prison rape statistics, let's return to the study by feminist and @UCLA Law School Assistant Dean Lara Stemple and psychiatric epidemiologist Ilan H. Meyer.
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63@FBI@UCLA "Overreliance on [male rapist/female victim model] stigmatizes men who are victimized, risks portraying women as victims, and discourages discussion of abuse that runs counter to the paradigm, such as same-sex abuse and female perpetration of sexual victimization." Supra, p. e25.
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63@FBI@UCLA "[S]ome contemporary gender theorists have questioned the overwhelming focus on female victimization, not simply because it misses male victims but also because it serves to reinforce regressive notions of female vulnerability." Supra, p. e20.
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63@FBI@UCLA@TheJusticeDept "This study finds dramatic unexplained gender gaps in federal criminal cases. Conditional on arrest offense, criminal history, and other pre-charge observables, men receive 63% longer sentences on average than women do." Research Paper 12-018, p. 17.
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63@FBI@UCLA@TheJusticeDept "However, if family hardship is a legitimate consideration, one might expect it to play at least some role in men’s cases as well [but it does not in the sense of reducing sentences as it does for women]." Research Paper 12-018, p. 15.
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63@FBI@UCLA@TheJusticeDept Ann Martin Stacey and Cassia Spohn write "[t]he fact that we found a consistent pattern of preferential treatment of female offenders… suggests that federal court judges evaluate female offenders differently than male offenders…." 11 Berkeley J. Crim. L. 76 (2006).
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63@FBI@UCLA@TheJusticeDept Consider "The Role of Gender in a Structured Sentencing System: Equal Treatment, Policy Choices, and the Sentencing of Female Offenders under the United States Sentencing Guidelines" by Ilene H. Nagel and Barry L. Johnson published in 85 J. Crim. L. & Criminology 181 (1994–1995).
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63@FBI@UCLA@TheJusticeDept "[W]hen these [criminal justice] decision-makers [such as police, prosecutors, and judges] are free to exercise discretion, they systematically favor female offenders over similarly situated male offenders." 85 J. Crim. L. & Criminology 182 (1994–1995).
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63@FBI@UCLA@TheJusticeDept Ann Martin Stacey and Cassia Spohn "found a consistent pattern of preferential treatment of female offenders [and] …neither the offender's marital status nor childcare responsibilities affected any of the three indicators of sentence severity…." Id. at 76.
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63@FBI@UCLA@TheJusticeDept "[O]f the 143 unique statistical estimates of the gender and sentencing relationship, 65% indicated that female offenders are less likely than their male conterparts to come under the jurisdiction of state and federal penal systems." 16 Journal of Gender, Race, and Justice 364.
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63@FBI@UCLA@TheJusticeDept The "Chivalry… perspective[] aregue[s] that a variety of practical and extralegal factors weigh upon criminal justice decision-making, creating greater leniency for female than male offenders." 16 Journal of Gender, Race, and Justice 352–353 (2013).
@LunarRoot@NeuroRebel@CDCgov@melliflora@CathyYoung63@FBI@UCLA@TheJusticeDept "Overall, 65% of the estimates indicate that women have better sentencing outcomes than men, supporting the Chivalry hypothesis theory. Empirically-sound studies are more likely to support this hypothesis…." 16 Journal of Gender, Race, and Justice 366 (2013).
@RyanWokeFather With respect to the Equal Rights Amendment, I am okay with either the Lucretia Mott Equal Rights Amendment formulation or the Alice Paul Equal Rights Amendment formulation (both actually written by Alice Paul) so long as the Hayden rider is excluded.
@RyanWokeFather The Lucretia Mott Equal Rights Amendment formulation reads: "[m]en and women shall have equal rights throughout the United States and every place subject to its jurisdiction" (history.hanover.edu/courses/excerp…).
@RyanWokeFather The Alice Paul Equal Rights Amendment formulation reads: "[e]quality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex" (history.hanover.edu/courses/excerp…).
@HallAnderson14@hollowlegs@threadreaderapp@StoneyGuardian@Pegster69@EoinPoil "[W]hen the wife earns more than the husband, the likelihood of divorce increases by about 6[%]… [and s]ince 12% of couples in the sample get divorced, this … implies that having the wife earn more than the husband increases the likelihood of divorce by 50[%]" (Id., 25).
Let's check the data to see how privileged men are.
You may find that it's women who aren't "allowing [men] to express their experiences without trying to shout over them" (archive.ph/wexCf).
@jackruamusic Consider “The Sexual Victimization of Men in America: New Data Challenge Old Assumptions” by feminist Lara Stemple and epidemiologist Ilan H. Meyer published in 2014 in the _American Journal of Public Health_, volume 104, issue 6, on pages e19–e26 (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/P…).
@jackruamusic "[F]ederal surveys detect a high prevalence of sexual victimization among men—in many circumstances similar to the prevalence found among women."
@HolstaT There are academic studies that don't support your contention, @HolstaT, that "the vast majority of domestic violence is committed by men towards women" (archive.ph/k3yNE), but rather suggest that women abuse more than men.
Let's look at those studies, shall we?
@HolstaT With physical aggression, "studies consistently find that as many women self-report perpetrating this behavior as do men; some studies find a higher prevalence of physical aggression committed by women" (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/P…, p. 2), but only a minority of women are arrested.
@HolstaT Notes @TheJusticeDept: "[w]ife defendants had a lower conviction rate than husband defendants…. Of the 222 wife defendants, 70% were convicted of killing their mate. By contrast, of the 318 husband defendants, 87% were convicted of spouse murder" (bjs.gov/content/pub/pd…, p. 2).