Fairness
First of all......This article is not about making
excuses for anybody hitting anybody. This article is about
fairness, being
treated with respect and accepting no less. Society says a man should never hit
a woman. But is that all there is too it? Are there other aspects we need to
look at? Are there cases where a man should hit a woman? And has there been a
double standard embedded in our courts, our law enforcement, our minds and our
communities that allows women to get away destructive, abusive
behaviors?Equality demands that men and women are seen as equally
important our safety, our physical,
spiritual and emotional well being. Most major belief systems support this view
and our constitution confirms it in tha 14th Amendment which took effect in
1868. But that is not what has been happening. If a woman hits a man and tha
man hits her back, all over this country and 90% of tha time, he is tha one
likely to go to jail. Men are told to walk away if we are hit but women are
told to call tha police. This is not fair at all.
If hitting another person is wrong, the perpetrator should
be punished without regard to gender. If the man should walk away when the
woman hits him, then she should have to do the same. If the woman should call
the police when she is hit, the man should do the same without fear of being
the one to go to jail. Fair is fair, right is right and wrong is wrong. But
that is not what we are seeing in the courts.Our society has come to accept a
double standard when it comes to men and women hitting each other. Clearly BOTH
people should keep our hands to ourselves and neither person deserves to be hit
or physically abused. Sadly people looked down on Ray Rice when he punched his
fiancée without ever noticing in the video that she struck him before they even
got on the elevator. This of course is no excuse for him punching her but there
is more to the story that needed to be acknowledged. Nobody should hit anybody.
If you say I am wrong, you believe that men and women should be treated
differently and therein lies the problem. If we are equal, we should be treated
equally.When Solange attacked Jay-Z in tha elevator, we shook our heads and
said “wow“. But if Jay-Z had attacked Solange in tha same way, most of us would
have called him every name in tha book. Then we should do tha same towards her.
I consider women equal to men and women are either equal or they are not.
Therefore women should not be able to proclaim equality on one side of tha coin
then pretend to be the helpless unequal gender when they want more rights and
to be treated differently. Tell tha ladies they cannot have it both ways.Just
as it is with Child Support, women’s feminist groups who hate men have bought
off, bullied or and poisoned tha system, tha media and tha community to see tha
man as tha culprit 90% of the time without ever taking ALL tha plain,
verifiable and indisputable facts into account. And I can prove it!
But what about all tha stats on abuse of women? I refer to
Bureau of Justice Statistics which state that 1.2 million women are abused
every year. But those same stats show 837,000 men are abused every year.
Therefore the gap is not as wide as tha media and feminist groups would lead
you to believe. There is a deliberate effort by feminists masquerading as
women’s rights groups to vilify tha man almost always when a confrontation
occurs while absolving tha woman of any responsibility.Most people say “no
matter what tha woman does, tha man should not hit her“. But why isn’t this
same standard applied to tha man when tha woman hits him? Instead we see women
blowing up men’s cars in Waiting To Exhale, women keying men’s cars like in
Friday After Next, women stalking men like Idris Elba faced in Obsession and
women trying to kill tha man who rejected them like in A Thin Line Between Love
And Hate. Again we laugh and say “wow“, often justifying tha woman’s actions
instead of expressing outrage at her lack of accountability. From Gone With Tha
Wind to tha weekly Soap Opera to Jerry Springer, it is common place to see a
woman slap a man because of what he said – and our society ignorantly accepts
that.Sometimes it’s a fight, not domestic violence. And in tha African American
community, many of us can think of at least one scenario where “somebody should
have gotten their butt kicked“. Sometimes that somebody is in fact a female and
if you are honest, you will agree. Does that mean we consciously condone
violence? Consciously, no. Ironically, when we were little kids, a boy fighting
a girl on the playground was not looked upon as domestic violence – it was
looked upon as a fight. But African Americans as a whole are not making the
laws in this country and those who do are seeing things very differently.
Abuse is abuse, whether it is verbal, spiritual, sexual ,
physical or emotional. And we need to stop accepting the excuses when women do
it to men. It is a matter of right and wrong, not a double standard. It is a
matter of tha law and equal protection under it. Abuse begets abuse. That means
any kind of abuse can trigger a response of abuse in return. This is a fact,
not an excuse. That includes physical, spiritual, emotional, mental or sexual
abuse. Tha laws in most states and on a federal level are clear about one
person being tha primary aggressor. These laws also address tha issue of
language that provokes another person. For example, in Georgia, there is code
section 16-5-25 called “Opprobrious Language: Fighting Words” and when such
words are used, tha use of simple assault or simple battery may be justified by
law. Of course if you can help it, don’t risk it.What about the issue many
people raise that a man should never hit a woman because he is much stronger
than she is? This is usually followed by an ignorant statement such as “he can
take it” or another idiotic statement such as “she can’t do anything to hurt
him“. Tha fact of whether he can take it or not does NOT make her actions
lawful. Nor does it mean he deserves to be hit by tha woman. As for tha
assumption that she cannot hurt him, that is not an absolute truth at all. It
all depends on where she hits him, what she hits him, how hard she hits him and
what happens afterwards.Let’s look at an example that I encountered as a former
detective. Tha man is 6 foot 5 inches tall and muscular. His girlfriend is 5
foot 2 inches and petite. She strikes him in tha back of tha head with a steel
baseball bat swung at full force. He suffers blunt force trauma to tha head.
She hits him again. He falls and hits his head on tha fireplace. His brain
starts to hemorrhage. He now has brain swelling and a major concussion. There
is internal bleeding and loss of fluid from theabrain. HOW MUCH OF A FACTOR WAS
HER SIZE OR THA FACT THAT HE WAS MUCH LARGER AND STRONGER THAN HER? None.
If a woman hits a man, she is apparently not concerned that
he may be bigger and stronger. So now we are expected to exercise the woman’s
judgment for her, take tha abuse and walk away? No. Anybody who hurts or abuses
anybody should be punished period. If tha man should keep his hands to himself
(yes he should), then so should tha woman. This extends to destroying
belongings of tha other person.If you are a man who is involved with a woman
who hits or physically abuses you, realize that she is showing you what she
thinks of you by her actions towards you. Don’t make excuses for her and don’t
accept her excuses, apologies and attempts to make up or blame you. Nobody
deserves to be abused period, men included. If she continues this behavior, she
could either hurt you or provoke you into hurting her. Such is not a healthy
relationship and once the courts or the police get involved, it will likely go
downhill anyway – probably taking you downhill with it. Draw the line in the
sand just as they have told women to do. You as a man are just as valuable and
your safety is just as important as hers.What would I do? And yes I have been
involved with a violent and hot tempered woman in times long since past.
Knowing what I know now, I might walk away the first time, if she did not hurt
me. But if she injured me, she better run. I might call tha police. Or I might
leave and ask her to get counseling that would make a change and fast or the
relationship would end abruptly. I might record tha incident. I might notify
one of her family members she highly respects, seek his/her advice and ask
him/her to speak with her. Whatever choice I made, I would not, do not and will
not accept physical, emotional, spiritual, mental or verbal abuse from a woman
any more than I would accept it from a man. And you shouldn’t either. Even if
she says she loves you, her actions say otherwise and she has a problem. We all
must keep our hands to ourselves because we all are valuable.
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We humans look rather different from a tree. Without a doubt we perceive tha world differently than a tree does. But down deep, at tha molecular heart of lyfeexpression tha trees and we are essentially identical.....