The Australian public have worked hard to make domestic violence a nationally-recognised issue. And now….? This.
Trigger warning: This post discusses domestic violence and may be triggering to some readers.
The hour has arrived: domestic violence is finally in the political spotlight.
For the first time ever, Australians are having a national conversation about this vital issue.
For victims and their advocates, it is an exciting time, and there is a real sense that if the energy around that conversation can just be harnessed correctly, it could be the game-changer that literally saves women and children’s lives.
So why, at this crucial moment – when we are on the cusp of something huge – has The Age published an article, which claims victims of domestic violence bear fifty percent of the responsibility for the choices and actions of their perpetrators?
And why, when we have such an important opportunity at our fingertips, have those editors squandered valuable column space on outdated, unsubstantiated, and frankly dangerous assertions, which if uncritically accepted, could massively set back the community’s understanding of domestic violence and jeopardize the headway being made in regards to perpetrator responsibility?
In case you missed it, today Dr Sallee McLaren penned an outrageous opinion article claiming that domestic violence victims (including, presumably, the ones who are murdered each and every week) contribute “50:50” to the situation, and are equally responsible for violence that occurs. Her reason? Because female victims don’t try hard enough to “command enough authority to stop [violence] in its tracks.”
Top Comments
Victims are never 50% responsible for being abused........they are 100% innocent of wrong-doing in every way.
The abuser is the one striking out ........THEY are totally at fault always.
Now, what was that stupid woman saying about the point at which the victim should be mindful of his behaviour ?
At 4/10 we should all be outa' there.
Why is it that when someone suggests that women can through their own actions makes their lives a bit safer they are shouted down as victim blamers? By refusing to acknowledge there are risks and passing the entire responsibility on to others for "fixing" the problems we actually undermine women by implying they are helpless victims entirely reliant upon the whims of other people to remain safe. Yes the person committing the act of violence is 100% at fault, but telling women they are helpless victims implies that their safety is completely beyond their control, and does not encourage them to believe they are strong enough to successfully escape their situation be it DV or a potential rape. There are people out there that do shitty terrible things and guess what? they will keep doing it no matter how many people say "don't rape" or "don't coward punch" or "don't mug that elderly pensioner for the $10 in their wallet". I was born into a family where DV was an almost daily occurrence, I spent my childhood hoping one day he would stop and one day he would love me and not want to hurt me. I left home at 17 when I realised that if I did not want to die I had to do something-anything to remove myself from the situation rather than waiting for it to miraculously stop. It is not helpful to shame DV victims, but it also isn't helpful to tell them they are helpless and unable to do anything to make themselves safe or prevent themselves from becoming victims of the same circumstances again in the future. If we continue to press the idea that we shouldn't have to engage in protective or preventative behaviours because "bad people just shouldn't do bad stuff" we are actually putting a generation of people at risk by telling them that their rights will always be upheld and being in the right is protection enough. Knowing my father wasn't allowed to beat me didn't protect me from broken bones or being punched until I loss consciousness, knowing I could do something to make it stop (walking away and cutting all ties with my family) made my safety something I could control, and leaving home did make it stop. In an ideal world crime would not exist, but this isn't an ideal world and crime does exist. We can bewail the current state of the world and rage against the unfairness of it, but that is not going to stop people from being victimised, giving people the information to recognise bad situations and the skills to make themselves safe in less than ideal circumstances might.
It's because there are people who tell women to not wearing revealing clothes ever, not walk in a provocative manner, not go in "dangerous" places, not go in places that aren't "absolutely safe", not trust anyone, not do anything reckless, not drink, not being sexually active, not make eye contact because that would send a wrong message, not be alone, not be with strangers, not be with people you know in stranger places, not go out at night, not carry a purse in a provocative way, not carry jewelry in a provocative way, not carry jewelry period, not wear high-heel shoes because "what if you have to run", always have someone on your side when the deliery guy arrives, not give your phone number, get an apartment where you can see who’s at the door before they can see you, alway check the door, own a dog or a dog-sound-making machine, get a roommate, take self-defense etc. etc, and then say "Well, what was she thinking?!" if they get raped anyway.
Meanwhile, if someone dares to tell them "You know, we should educate men more about sexual assault and consent", they get really pissy. Even though 1 in 3 men don't really know what they entail.
http://www.oneinfourusa.org...
http://www.victimsofcrime.o...
PS: oh, right, acknowledging that emotional and psychological abuse as well as the shame of "You haven't protected yourself, so it's also your fault" pushes them into never reporting the crimes they were victims of, thus spreading awareness on the problem in the hope that people would stop blaming the victims... will cause more victims. Sure.