By Attorney Lisa Scott August 24, 2005
NewsWithViews.com
The federal
Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) is up for reauthorization in 2005. VAWA funds billions of taxpayer dollars to combat violence
against women, principally domestic violence (DV). The definition of DV touted by victim advocates runs the gamut from jokes
and insults to murder, with "power and control" being the overriding characteristic of the man's behavior towards
the woman. Real violence is rarely at issue.
When
women commit violence against men, VAWA and the DV industry go AWOL. Despite the federal government's own statistics showing
nearly 40 per cent of domestic violence victims are men, VAWA persists in its monolithic response.
In the same way that some minority groups argue they cannot be racist because
they aren't in power in society, gender feminists contend women cannot commit DV because they can't assert power and
control over men. Any violence committed by women is, by definition, either de minimus (it could not possibly have hurt him),
or self-defense (SHE is the victim of HIS abuse).
All interactions between partners are subject to this twisted logic. When the relationship sours, the woman has an
easy out: "I am a victim of domestic violence and can do no wrong." VAWA supports and maintains female supremacy.
It should be re-titled Victory Assured for Women Act.
VAWA's gender bias permeates law enforcement response to domestic conflict. All it takes is a woman calling 911
to summon three squad cars, teeming with police officers eager to carry out today's "tough" domestic violence
laws. The centerpiece of the system is "mandatory arrest." Every domestic disturbance call must result in arrest,
usually the man.
Domestic violence is whatever
the man does that the woman doesn't like. Declaring he is going to file for custody of the children is a "threat."
Finding out she is having an affair and demanding she stop is "abuse." Unknown to most men, such interchanges often
precipitate false charges of DV. In my 17 years as a family law attorney, I have seen this pattern occur over and over.
Even when the facts clearly show the man is not an abuser
(and perhaps the woman is), prosecutors refuse to drop charges. "No-drop" policies are a great publicity tool, and
a way to ensure more funding. Charges that would never see the light of day if they happened between strangers on the street
(accidentally bumping against someone when walking by), are routinely charged as DV "assault." (But only if the
man does it to the woman; a man can be bleeding from a head wound and he won't be considered a victim).
Indiscriminate charging clogs the system with minor transgressions,
yet ensures a steady stream of cases justifying more taxpayer money at budget time.
Both spouses are usually at fault when a marriage ends. Many women have discovered a surefire
antidote against taking any responsibility: playing the domestic violence victim. While the husband is reading the newspaper
and relaxing after work, the wife is contacting the domestic violence hotline, getting step-by-step instructions on what to
say: "His abuse is escalating," "I'm fearful for my safety."
VAWA funds battered women's shelters and their misandrist staff, always ready to welcome
another customer for their anti-male, anti-father and anti-family agenda. Ask a victim advocate what causes domestic violence,
and she will immediately blame our "patriarchal society," ensuring that only men get the blame. One might ask what
causes women to abuse children. Presumably, the patriarchy by proxy. VAWA gives short shrift to child abuse, which is most
often committed by women. Indeed, VAWA earmarks a paltry $7000 per year to develop home visitation projects to look for signs
of child abuse or neglect.
To assure victory
in the divorce/custody case, the woman claims the man is an abuser, no matter how good a husband and father he is. Whatever
wrongs he has committed, from leaving the toilet seat up to not making enough money, failure of the marriage is his fault.
"No-fault" divorce laws really mean "no fault unless it's the man's fault." In other words, the
Oprahization of family law.
What we really
have is MAWA: Men Annoying Women Act. The man is either a relentless abuser or a hopeless wimp. Any modern man not terrified
of being in a relationship with a woman has not been paying attention.
The government seems unable to define gender bias except as "bias against women." Title
IX forces college sports programs to spend equal amounts of money on men's and women's sports, despite the fact that
the vast majority of athletes are men. Even though 1/3 of domestic violence murder victims are male, not one dime of VAWA's
largesse is devoted to prevention of violence against men.
Men are far more likely than women to be victims
of violence overall, yet there's no Violence Against Men Act. Men also comprise nearly all workplace injuries and deaths,
but try to find a Male Workplace Injury Prevention Act.
VAWA is not about stopping violence. It is about greedy special interests slopping at the federal trough, perpetuating
gender supremacy for women. If proponents were truly concerned about helping victims, they would demand that all intervention
and funding be gender neutral and gender inclusive.
The existence of male victims threatens gender feminists
because it knocks the underpinnings out of their theory, that the "patriarchy" causes men to abuse women. The DV
industry has succeeded in creating the "victimarchy." With VAWA in their corner, women win no matter what: victim
or abuser, they can do no wrong.