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Feminist Feel-Good Science Explains Domestic Violence

January 9, 2013
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feministNCFM NOTE: the article below suggests that the authors of the research noted in the article are steeped in feminist ideology. It appears their project is disguised as science and the results thereof were in essence predetermined, or at least highly predictable. Feminists are infamous for using simple math to get nonsense. If  the numbers don’t work it’s no big deal, the researchers squeeze the data to make it fit their beliefs. Here, Campbell describes it as “rationalizing inconvenient results by re-configuring them to make a statement about social justice.” He concludes with, “They take statistics-as-science claims to a whole new level, and it feeds the rising problem of feel-good fallacies replacing data-driven conclusions.” Thank you Mr. Campbell. Please visit his website http://www.science20.com/Also see NCFM member Joe Manthey’s opinion piece on feminist false domestic violence statistics.

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By Hank Campbell | January 7, 2013

Hank is the founder of Science 2.0® and co-author of “Science Left Behind”.

A wise man once said Darwin had the greatest idea anyone…

In the New York Times, Nobel laureate Paul Krugman recently made the case for a return to the 1950s. Keynes-ian economics was still in vogue and taxes were higher for the super-rich, lots more people were in unions. Minorities and women had a tough time employment-wise but he thinks the economy was great, despite those recessions of 1953 and 1957.

feministNot every American that cares about women, minorities and poor people agrees with Paul Krugman that the decade was all balloons and ponies. One factoid that would have bolstered his case among his detractors is that women were apparently abused a lot less then. Academics at Sam Houston State University conducted a survey for the Crime Victims’ Institute in Texas and correlated women having jobs to relationship violence, and women worked a lot less in the 1950s so therefore domestic violence must have been less. If you don’t agree, you will never have a career in sociology.

In Science Left Behind, numerous chapters are spent debunking attempts to frame ideology as science. In the social sciences, for example, it’s common to find two curves that match and imply causation. The paper academics wrote correlating partner violence to dual incomes is another example of such ‘framing’ – in this instance rationalizing inconvenient results by re-configuring them to make a statement about social justice.

They did telephone interviews with 303 women who identified themselves as being currently or recently (last two years) in a serious romantic relationship. The names were taken from 700 Texas citizens in the Fourth Annual Texas Crime Victimization Survey. 67 percent of those women ages 18 to 81 said they had been subjected to some form of physical or psychological victimization by their partner during that period. Education levels made no difference, college graduates were just as likely to push, kick or pull a knife on their women, but when both people in the relationship were employed, the percentage of violence was more than double than if the man worked but not the woman.

feministIt means the traditional 1950s nuclear family leads to happiness, right?  Not in sociology. The authors instead concluded that men are insecure if their male authority is challenged by a woman working and those men lash out. We live in a time when only 20% of families have just a man working. Two generations of dual employment means it is the norm in America. They blame male insecurity instead of obvious money issues and the stress those bring because it matches their cultural agenda.

For example, dual employment was not the big risk factor for violence two years earlier.  In their 2010 paper “Assessing the Risk of Intimate Partner Violence”, the Crime Victims’ Institute determined the issue was unemployment – and substance abuse.  In 2011 their Risk Factors Associated with Women’s Victimization paper supported the feminist theory that victimization experiences of women were related to male patriarchy – in college students, no less. The big risk factor instead seems to be the research priority of the sociologists doing the surveying in any particular year. In this instance, Dr. Cortney Franklin is an assistant professor in Criminal Justice who focuses on violence against women and Tasha Menaker is a Ph.D. student who focuses on womens’ issues.

Rather than dual employment being the problem, it could be that some young women in Texas who reported intimate partner violence and then took a survey like the ‘bad boys’ and bad boys tend to be idiots in lots of ways.  The statistics bear that out, since older women were less likely to report being victimized than younger women. Instead of letting the data speak for itself, the authors speculate that women who are “home bound” lack self esteem and stay meek, whereas working women violate ingrained caveman sensitivities and get clobbered. They even refer to women who do not work outside the home as “domestic workers”, which sounds a lot like ‘maid’, and they say such women lack ‘social capital’ – a patronizing dismissal of stay-at-home moms that would be offensive if men wrote it.

Franklin and Menaker are focused on violence against women, so it is not expected they would find it everywhere and tackle this topic, just like evolutionary biologists tackle evolutionary biology.  The distinction is that biology is science, and science can have a null hypothesis. Sometimes experiments don’t work and the idea is thrown out.  In a survey masking itself as psychological science, there is no null hypothesis, there is no hypothesis at all, they just show a correlation and imply cause and it can never be wrong.

These kinds of analyses claiming to be science studies are why so many people on the left have begun to think science is a subjective world view rather than an explanation of the universe according to natural laws.  They take statistics-as-science claims to a whole new level, and it feeds the rising problem of feel-good fallacies replacing data-driven conclusions.

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It’s the radical ones… the gendersaurs and their educated hatchlings that cause the problems.

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2 Responses to Feminist Feel-Good Science Explains Domestic Violence

  1. mgtowman on March 27, 2013 at 8:09 AM

    Knowing most of us hate to stereotype, but don’t we all know beyond most shadows of doubt that most women are far more emotional than men. Too, they disproportionately, often obliviously let those emotions power them and drive them in certain directions—unlike most men in most situations.

    Isn’t it entirely possible that it is their skewed sense of reality perception that most women have, especially feminists—apparently!—that causes them to make up their own truth as they go—whatever makes them feel better? In other words, we will know when things are “equal” because they will let us know when they feel it…no matter how skewed their perceptions are! Those types have no objectivity—not even a capacity for it.

    Until we address the root cause of why women in mass numbers are doing this game, and those who aren’t are tolerating and allowing it, then we are merely putting band aids on a wound. IOW, leave the root, and the undesired plant will come right back!

    Come on, women are more alike than different. A TRUTHFUL stereotype is a very useful tool.

    No hatred here, just truth and a genuine desire for a solution that works, is REALLY EQUAL, and is permanent. But men should get to help decide equality issues too. Right?

    If true, then all things count in this war we did not start but have a right to win….and win by any means we legally have.

  2. TDOM on January 13, 2013 at 11:07 AM

    Good job. A few weeks ago I posted my own critique of this so-called study.
    http://thedamnedoldeman.com/?p=7356

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