Violence against women is both a thing and not a thing because it depends on what exactly is meant by the phrase.

In my opinion, it is a politically driven agenda aimed at feminising men, especially since men are overwhelmingly more targeted than women.

Whether or not men are mostly the perpetrators of violence is irelevant where the victims are concerned.

Men are more targeted

For example, when I leave my house I am about four times more likely to be a victim of crime than my wife.

However, a large number of crimes against men are simply not reported.

  • Women make up only 7% of the prison population worldwide.
  • In the United States, men are four times more likely to be arrested for violent crimes than women.
  • Men are more likely to be victims of homicide, while women are more likely to be victims of domestic violence.
  • Women are more likely to receive shorter sentences for the same crimes as men.
The MeToo movement was highly desrtructive to both men and women
The MeToo movement was highly desrtructive to both men and women

Then there are other (more complicated) crimes committed against men.

I recommend listening to my conversation with Sean Parker who spent years behind bars after being falsely accused of rape. (A drunk woman, at a bar, regretted sleeping with him and her boyfrend was angry.)

Any honest veteran sex assault investigator will tell you that rape is one of the most falsely reported crimes that there is.

A command officer in the Denver Police sex assaults unit recently told me he placed the false rape numbers at approximately 45 percent.

Craig Silverman, former sex-crimes prosecutor

What should happen to women who falsely accuse men of rape?

What about violence against babies?

Let’s go with it

But, for the sake of discussion, let’s have a look at what is meant by ‘violence against women’.

Oh, and let’s accept that we do, in fact, know what a woman is.

Here’s one rather postmodern definition:

In societies shaped by patriarchy, violence against women is an expression of unequal power relationships between men and women.

So the causes of this violence are to be found not only at the individual level but also, and particularly, at the structural level.

These causes need to be eliminated in order to prevent further violence. Gender justice cannot be established unless misogynist structures are resolved. Only then will women and girls be able to live a life free of violence.

Source

The opening sentence throws around ‘patriarchy‘ as if it’s a bad thing.

It isn’t.

Patriarchy exists simply because of natural order. The power differential between men and women is such that women are unable to enforce their own rights and therefore require men to do it. Men, for instance, drove the suffragette movement in the 1900s.

Majority of men are – and have always been – benevolent.

That said, men who apply their strength by abusing women should be buried under the ground.

The United Nations defines ‘violence against women’ as:

any act of violence that results in, or is likely to result in, physical, sexual, or mental harm or suffering to women, including threats of such acts, coercion or arbitrary deprivation of liberty, whether occurring in public or in private life.

An interesting unintended consequence of this type of campaigning is the inherent messaging that men are, indeed, more powerful than women, which goes against the entire ‘equality’ narrative that attempts to convince society that men and women are equal.

Men and women are clearly not equal.

And can never be.

Which is why there is a globlist goal to destroy masculinity (by labelling it as ‘toxic’).

That being said, there is an easy solution. There is an easy way to stop men (and women) from hurting women.

Self defence.

Women say they want men to be able to show vulnerability, but when they do, women can’t stomach it.

Dr Brene Brown

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