The issue of shelters is as much a social one as it is a protective one, you know. A lot of battered men who end up being housed in hotels/motels are in a vulnerable position, even if their lives aren't in immediate danger from their intimate partner. Essentially just like with a battered woman who had to flee her home, a battered man also suffers from having just lost everything, especially their home. There is a substantial need for some camaraderie on both sides, some morale support, which is generally denied to men. Add to that that generally men don't get the kind of therapy they need, when this happens, then you've got a man festering in a damaged state, soaking in his own misery and bitterness. This isn't a good thing, it causes people to snap, and when people snap bad things happen. So the numbers excuse is rather moot compared to the immense untreated damage being inflicted by sexist view points.Lil devils x said:The circumstances are very different and most of the numbers affected do not warrant protection, as was already addressed in this thread. The men that qualify for protection are put in a hotel since it is only 7% of male homicides who are killed by an intimate partner vs 42% of women. It being so few men that meet the same qualifications as women do for protection, it is less costly to just put them in their own hotel rather than provide shelters to mass house them. There are so many women that are in immediate danger being hunted that it is too expensive to give them their own hotel rooms and are instead forced to cram them into cramped facilities together. Most abused women are just sent to take their chances at regular homeless shelters and do not qualify for actual protection as well.The Bandit said:Why do you need to know who is beating who to offer protection? If men are beating men and women, then wouldn't the same protection used for women work for men?Lil devils x said:If you actually read through the rest of the thread you would see why this is not only relevant, but necessary to allocate the funding. Battered women's shelters exist to prevent intimate partner homicides, in order to prevent intimate partner homicides, you have to address intimate partner homicides. Just because you are a " battered woman" does not even mean you will be admitted into a battered women's shelter or a safe house due to lack of resources available. Unless you met the criteria, you are sent to a homeless shelter instead.The Bandit said:How is who is responsible for the beatings relevant at all? This discussion between you two started over whether shelter's for men were needed. If it's men or women beating men, those shelters are still needed.Lil devils x said:I am not directing it away from the discussion, I am asking where are the stats on the perpetrators, not the victims? The subject at hand is from what I have seen, the numbers often get smudged to cover up the fact that it is mostly men responsible for the violence against other men, they are dishonest about what has actually occurred. You cannot address the issue unless you 1) know who is responsible for the violence and why is the violence happening? My idea of " winning" is we solve the problem and we have less people hurt by these things. In order to do that we have to actually address the perpetrators, not the victims. You help the victims by making LESS perpetrators. MAKE. IT. STOP. that is the best help you can give.Lightspeaker said:Lil devils x said:Not all domestic abuse victims require or go to a shelter, and that should be made clear. You cannot use base numbers like that to gauge the number of people actually seeking a shelter. Yes, it is actually incomparable as far as numbers of people seeking shelter from abuse. Here, not even all women are allowed into the shelters the demand so much outweighs the supply. " domestic violence" sadly does not qualify you for a shelter here, your life has to actually be in danger. The women that are admitted into the shelter here are sent from the hospital, they do not usually take walk ins and the ones that arrive are in pretty bad shape.
Since you were so interested I took an actual look at the data tables in the ONS survey I linked earlier (Table 4.01 to be specific if you want to look). Here are the numbers for that year for "Force (Severe)":
Family abuse: Men - 0.6% Women - 0.9%
Partner abuse: Men - 1.1% Women 1.3%
So as far as actual severe force (i.e. actual severe domestic violence) goes its about a 33:66 ratio for family abuse and a 45:55 ratio for partner abuse of men:women. Still incomparable? Frankly your argument here appears to rely on the old stereotype that "men don't get abused and don't need help". That isn't to say in some categories there aren't dramatic differences (sexual abuse being the most glaring difference), but you raised a specific point and...well...here is your answer.
The fact that places are oversubscribed (which they are; for both men and women) is a matter of record. It is not an argument in favour of supporting this imbalance but is an argument in favour of increasing funding in general.
See...this is why I am highly suspicious of these discussions, because you appear to be trying to direct this away from the subject at hand to something you know you can "win". How is it relevant who the perpetrator is? The focus was purely on provision of support for victims.ALSO, do you have the numbers on those victims in regards to whether or not their abuser was male or female? From all of the studies I have read, males are more likely to be victims, but it is ALSO males that are more likely to be the ones abusing them. Males usually are more likely to abuse both males and females, and out of all race/ sex groups white females are the least likely to be abusive from the numbers.
Look at it this way: if someone gets their leg torn off by a killer whale, is bleeding to death and gets taken to hospital then it doesn't help them to have all of the doctors standing around going "well now, that's very unusual, normally people get bitten by sharks instead". I'm aware that its a tortured metaphor here but it does serve its purpose: the focus should be on helping the victim, not on who was the perpetrator.
Why do you seem more interested in proving that women can't be evil than addressing anyone's actual points?
Are gay men immune to barb wire?
( This was already addressed thoroughly in this thread if you wish to read it ).
All of that isn't even coming near the things that happen when a trans person is abused by their significant other too.