Jump to content

Recommended Posts

I always think that, while it's not always possible given the structure of some questions, such surveys should also be put to groups of women - if nothing else as a form of control group. How many women would answer yes to ??Have you ever coerced somebody to intercourse by holding them down?? or 'in a consequence-free situation, would you force someone to have sexual intercourse?'. Without that information you cannot tell what is male 'opinion' versus what is societal opinion. Or even that you've phrased the question that it covers too broad an interpretation?


Sometimes I suspect the researcher doesn't want to know as such extra information would only upset their pet hypothesis.

Well, I think it does, really. If they are asking questions like "in a consequence-free situation, would you force someone to have sexual intercourse", that makes someone as rapey as asking "in a consequence-free situation, would you take ?10000 from a bank" makes them bank robbers. Without some sort of control to compare the answers to and to regulate the questions, how can you understand the data?


Can you imagine if someone did a similar study with my bank example using only a certain ethnic group and then wrote up the report with the headline "Lots of people from [x] ethnic group don?t think stealing is stealing". The study would, quite rightly, be derided.


In fact, the only solid conclusion from the study is reflected in the opening words of the article - "pollsters have long known that the phrasing of a question can significantly affect how respondents answer it". This is more an inadvertent study on how researchers can get whatever answers they want from a survey.

Loz has told me before that he hates feminists. And since I identified myself as one (as do all of my friends, including the men), he seems to take joy in jumping on everything I say and parroting: "It happens to men too you know!" every time I appear on the forum and mention females. I'm all for debate. And equality (hence being a feminist.) But it IS a bit wearing.


Sigh.

It is a point, there IS abuse against men,but to try and say they are the same thing is just wrong


It's wrong on numbers

It's wrong on levels of strength


Create a facebook account as a woman. Join some of the groups where males might dominate (and which you wouldn't think twice about if you were a man) . Express fesity opinion.


THEN you will see how different abuse is for women

legalbeagle Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Loz has told me before that he hates feminists.


That is not true at all and I'd like you to withdraw that. I said I hate the Guardian's warped version of feminism.


I believe in equal rights and, for those feminists that also do, I'd happily stand side by side with.

StraferJack Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Loz. Sometimes you do talk as if, in the case of sexual and domestic abuse, men and women are on an

> equal footing


Not an equal footing at all. But, to me at least, I just do not get, why in so many cases, there is an unnecessary gender separation when discussing it.

I've worked with some transgender people before through a charity. One of the things ALL of the male to female people said was that when they became women, they were immediately treated as though they were less intelligent.


In the UK, seven women a week are killed by partners or ex partners (and two men).


Around 85,000 women a year are raped (and 9,000 men).


One in five women in the UK will suffer some form of sexual violence.


One is six women in the US will be the victim of an attempted or completed rape during their lifetime.


"Revenge porn", "honour" killings, stalking, are almost exclusively done to women. Read the twitter streams of the women who asked for Jane Austen to be on a bank note, or who stood up for Ched Evans' victim or who complain about "revenge porn" or who simply utter the word "feminist" and then find me some men who have had that same level of abuse. Just a handful will do.


Yes it happens to men, and nothing should detract from or belittle the suffering it causes them.


But the simple fact is it happens to women in a far far greater scale.


It depresses me beyond belief that we still have to protest this shit, and engage with "but it happens to men too!" as though that were some kind of answer.

legalbeagle Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> In the UK, seven women a week are killed by partners or ex partners (and two men).


Actually, that is per month.


> It depresses me beyond belief that we still have to protest this shit, and engage with

> "but it happens to men too!" as though that were some kind of answer.


Who said it was an answer? But why not seek to understand the full scale of the problem? Look at, say, how domestic violence is discussed. Why genderise a problem that is actually a serious issue across genders?


What does it really achieve?

StraferJack Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> @loz - Because one gender is far and away the victim in the majority of cases


Murder victims are male in far and away the victim in the majority of cases. Yet it would be silly to just concentrate on the male victims, no?

The point Loz is one of cause and effect.


If you want to reduce the incidence of anything, you have to look at its underlying cause.


The underlying cause of violence against women is not the same as against men.


This does not mean that you do not study violence against men.


It does mean that studies about sexual violence against women are unlikely to translate to the opposite gender.


That does not mean that we do not share learning.


It does mean that there is great value in researching each group independently.

I disagree - it's not obvious at all.


Surely you'd look at the whole population and subdivide from the data into groups, be they gender, social class, etc, to devise the best solution. Predeciding that you'll just improve those statistics for women is ideology at work, no?

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • I can't access the article - what's the gist?  I took the markets getting jittery when she was crying at PMQs to be a sign that they trusted her. But maybe it was because they were simply worried about any form of instability.  The NIC hikes have stymied the economy, which we could all see a mile off. Will a wealth tax improve things? Does anyone here think the trickle down has any impact and that chasing out the super rich will help things? Or are we just seeing off the biggest contributors to the economy? And has the Kwasi approach ever worked anywhere else?  Economics is not my strong point at all, I'd love to know others' opinions, but it seems to be she has few options, especially as the party is so divided. 
    • does either of them have a surgery? probably not over summer, but I thought they had to give the opportunity for their constituents to meet them.
    • MaryT, I’ve contacted the Dulwich Hill councillors several times in recent years, always copying them both in. I have never had an acknowledgment from Jon Hartley (not even an automated response or out-of-office) nor had any response or engagement from him regarding the issue raised.   On each occasion, only Maggie Browning responded (she uses an out-of-office if she is away). The last time, I received no response from either for 3 months, until Maggie Browning emailed me to apologise for not responding and asking if the problem had been resolved.
    • The  Kwasi effect is being considered. 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...