Reid Backpedaling with Media Help and Public Ignorance

2010-02-24
By

Recent events on Capital Hill not only provide some significant insight into the severity of misandry in modern American society, but also point to a culture that struggles rather feebly to get a grip on the problem; a struggle highlighted by the fact that the word misandry itself -the hatred or contempt for men and boys- still has to be explained to far too many people who don’t know what it means.

On February 22, Senator Harry Reid stood on the senate floor and told fellow legislators and the American people that passing the new jobs bill was important because “Men, when they’re out of work, tend to become abusive.” Of course he added for the benefit of his female constituents that “Women aren’t abusive most of the time.”

The subtext here is clear enough. We don’t need to create jobs because American men are suffering from unemployment and are finding it tough to provide security for their families. We need jobs so those abusers-waiting-to-happen don’t take out their frustrations on their wives by beating the crap out of them. If that’s the case, perhaps we should just divert VAWA funding to the jobs bill and kill two birds with one stone. Or is that language too violent?

Thing is, of course, that is not the case. Domestic violence is roughly a 50-50 proposition; a now well known fact that is commonly ignored for the sake of political expedience and bloated government programs. It’s a matter not so shocking in our political system. Politicians lie for money and votes, and we have come to expect as much without getting too troubled over it.

We do, however, expect their lies to have at least a vague resemblance to the truth. And when they don’t, we can usually expect the media to check things out and play gotcha for the sake of making their own money. We can expect them to do some truth mining on just about everything politicians say, from bailout money to WMD. Everything, that is, except in the realm of socio-sexual politics.

The events following Reid’s gaffe are quite illuminating.

Like many concerned citizens, I contacted Reid’s Washington office and spoke with his press rep about the statement. They would not discuss it over the phone but asked for my email address, and sure enough, within a couple of minutes I got an email claiming that Reid was accurate, citing a 2006 report by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) on domestic violence.

The only problem is that the study didn’t support Reid’s claims at all. In fact, it contradicts him entirely. (I had to run it down myself because the link they sent me went to a “page not found” message) I suppose that explains why they didn’t read it carefully.

While the report asserts that financial stress (unemployment) is one variable in possible predictors of domestic violence, it doesn’t claim anywhere that the violence correlates any more to men than it does to women.

So Reid’s press office is simply waving a piece of paper and saying “We have documentation!” And they do. Documentation of Reid’s lack of knowledge of the issue, and possible lack of integrity.

Being the intrepid investigator that I am, I decided to go one step further than Reid’s office and look for some facts. What I found was that Reid has no support for his claims. The one study that comes closest is a 2004 report by the National Institute for Justice. They found that the risk of intimate partner violence goes up for women incrementally with each period of repeated unemployment by their male partners.

But in the politically rich environment of “justice” studies, there are factors related to the study that elucidate matters more clearly than the study itself.

  • The study didn’t even purport to apply it’s findings to men in general.
  • There was no investigation as to increased female violence in the same circumstances.
  • There was no causal relationship established. None.

That last one is a matter of some significance. Unemployment is caused by a number of reasons other than a bad economy. Mental illness, alcoholism and drug abuse among others,  all known to have an impact on the incidence of violence. Chronic unemployment, even in a bad economy, is usually indicative of other overarching life difficulties. So attributing it to intimate partner violence without the consideration of other factors is tantamount to offering the following:

  • Almost all heroin addicts went to grade school.
  • Therefore, grade school leads to heroin addiction.

That outlandish and myopic conclusion is, scientifically speaking, no less valid at all than Harry Reid’s statements. This is why the National Institute for Justice Study couldn’t, with any credibility, generalize their findings to men. It is the same reason Harry can’t either. Unless he is just trying to increase his chances for reelection and doesn’t care how he gets there.

Were Reed the only culprit, this would be a slam dunk for the truth. Unfortunately, this isn’t the case.

Last night, CNN, gave a nationally televised demonstration of that when they broadcast a “fact check” on Reid’s comments and supported his claims. They did so by waving the same study by the CDC, which they apparently, like Reid,  either didn’t read or didn’t mind that the study wasn’t supportive of his position. Apparently their research into the matter consisted of a phone call to Reid’s press office, and retrieving a shopworn rubber stamp from a correspondents desk drawer.

Players in the print media have followed suit as well. In a glaring example of playing fast and loose with headlines, The Las Vegas Sun, who has given Reid glowing editorial endorsement, announces that “Domestic Violence Workers Find Truth in Harry Reid’s Jobless Comments.”

One might suppose that The Sun assumes readers won’t be any more interested in the content of their articles than the average TV viewer is interested in the factual conclusions of a CDC study on domestic violence. For within the body of that article the truth starts to raise it’s inconvenient head, making the headline read, in retrospect, like the shameless snow job it is.

First a telling quote for the paper from Reid himself. He says, in defense of his remarks, “I’m just telling you what two people working in the field say every day. There is no question that people being out of work causes more people to be involved in domestic violence.”

Aye, there’s the rub. So it’s people now, not men, who commit domestic violence. Heck they don’t even commit it, they become involved in it. It’s called reshaping the story after the fact. Caught with his political pants down, uttering a bald falsehood, Reid now joins the enlightened and informed intelligentsia, addressing domestic violence in oh so open minded gender neutral terms.  And in doing so he manages, quite efficiently, to distance himself from his own words and stand on them at the same time.  Smart fella’, that Harry, at least if you are not paying attention.

It would be more forgivable if the media wasn’t in such blatant collusion with him. In the CNN report, they switched the language as well, citing that financial stress did result in increased domestic violence, but they pulled back from pinning that on men quite seamlessly when drawing their conclusion.

The rest of The Sun Article reveals more.

Maria Outcalt, a spokesperson for SafeNest, a domestic violence outreach group, is quoted in the article as saying “People that are not abusive are not all of the sudden going to become abusive because they lose their job. Abusive behavior is not just because somebody is having a hard time.”

Another quote was provided by Sue Meuschke, the director of the Nevada Network  to End Domestic Violence. “The economy doesn’t cause domestic violence, but certainly economic conditions can impact the circumstances.”

In all the quotes, including one that directly affirmed Reid’s remarks, all the language was sex neutral.

It has all the appearances of a massively organized spin machine.  All the quotes either contradict Reid directly or shift the language to avoid his initial stance, supporting him with statements that don’t support what he actually said.  The focus is being taken off the sexist and unsupported remarks by Reid, and reframed into a sexless dialogue that might help support the jobs bill he is trying to pass. Reid and the media and the domestic violence industry are doing a public relations ménage à trois; a graceful and deceptive ballroom fling, counting on the public not to notice that they changed the tune in the middle of the dance.

And it may be a desperate last move for Reid. For the first time since taking office, his senate seat is not secure. He is lagging in polls, and come the next election, he could be out of a job.

Perhaps his wife should contact a shelter and make her escape plan now.

Paul Elam is Editor-in-Chief for Men’s News Daily and the publisher of A Voice for Men.

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  • Bizzman662

    Great article Paul!

    Let’s not let the SPIN MACHINE get away with this one!

    Keep up the heat….I have had many friends call ol “Harry the Manhater” today and hopefully we all keep up the pressure until he RETRACTS this statement.

    The GLARING BRIGHT SPOT in this is that WE NEEDED SOMEONE…ANYONE in office to insert the ol foot in the mouth to get the VAWA and the MAN HATING agenda it carries in the media spotlight….

    For that, I thank you Harry.

  • Jim

    Paul

    I really like you!

    You put the REAL FACTS out there.

    And CNN is so bias it is not even funny.

    I have no clue why ANY MALE would ever watch CNN. It’s like a chicken watching KFC!

  • The Man On The Street

    Gee willikers Harry! MAybe you shouldn’t have cut the infrastructure bill in half – that went significantly to mens jobs – and gave it to the special interest work then eh?

    Idiot!

    TMOTS

  • http://www.rip-factor.com/formen/index.html Richard

    I am going to call him, write him a letter, and E-mail him:

    (just a reminder)

    Telephone: 1-202-224-3542
    Internet: reid.senate.gov/contact/index.cfm
    Fax: 1-202-224-7327

    P.S.
    I gotta dig it up:

    There is a picture of my dad shaking hands with Harry Reid many years ago – my Dad has this look on his face like he is putting his hand into a pile of dog-crap – in the photo – its funnier than anything.

  • Mr.K

    Some of us have had difficulty defining “Misandry”. Now Wikipedia has a good link to it. It also has a link to “Men’s movement” and lists Richard Doyle and Glenn Sacks among significant writers.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Misandry

  • Mr. J

    “He is lagging in poles”…
    Does that mean he is bad at pole climbing?

    Sorry, couldn’t resist.

  • 3DShooter

    There is no true journalism – fourth estate – in the ‘Main Stream Media’ (MSM) today. It only exists on the Internet – which is why the government hates the little beast ARPANet it created.

    Yes, you have to develop a pretty good BS filter to get information from the net, but there are sites like MND that give the real picture.

  • http://shatterdmen.com/ Shatteredmen

    VAWA will be up for reauthorization soon so I urge people to us this statement by Reid to start educating their own Senator and Congressional Representatives on the truth of domestic abuse.

    I have sent this to mine:

    Society is being told that 95% of domestic abuse victims are women. This is far from the truth. The means they use to get this is by polling women shelters but they will not say that about 80% of the women in these shelters are not there because of abuse, they are there because they are homeless and the shelters need a study stream of “victims” to keep their funding coming in.

    Psychiatric News August 3, 2007
    Volume 42 Number 15 Page 31

    Women are doing virtually everything these days that men are “working as
    doctors, lawyers, and rocket scientists; flying helicopters in combat; riding
    horses in the Kentucky Derby. And physically assaulting their spouses or
    partners.

    In fact, when it comes to nonreciprocal violence between intimate partners,
    women are more often the perpetrators.

    Regarding perpetration of violence, more women than men (25 percent versus 11
    percent) were responsible. In fact, 71 percent of the instigators in
    nonreciprocal partner violence were women. This finding surprised Whitaker and
    his colleagues, they admitted in their study report.

    As for physical injury due to intimate partner violence, it was more likely to
    occur when the violence was reciprocal than nonreciprocal. And while injury was
    more likely when violence was perpetrated by men, in relationships with
    reciprocal violence it was the men who were injured more often (25 percent of
    the time) than were women (20 percent of the time). This is important as
    violence perpetrated by women is often seen as not serious, Whitaker and his
    group stressed.

    Yet per the Violence Against Women Act, there is not one dime to help abused
    men.

    Oh yea….that budget freeze we are suppose to be getting….NINE special
    interest radical feminist groups are getting a 22% INCREASE!

    Gender feminist fought tooth and nail to keep the Violence
    Against Women Act only focused on violence against women? Why did
    they do everything possible to make sure it was not a family violence
    law?

    Are you aware that this act has led to much misinformation on
    domestic violence? Are you aware that there is no help for
    abused men? The most recent VAWA did add this: VAWA 2005, Section
    40002(b)(8) “Nothing in this title shall be construed to prohibit
    male victims of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault,
    and stalking from receiving benefits and services under this title.”

    This in no way means men have to be given services. Most of the time,
    they are not. In fact, often, abused men are the ones that are
    arrested when police are called.

  • Ben

    I found out a long time ago if you want to improve the condition of men you have to frame it in the context of what it will to to benefit women…

    Male suffering is only relevant to the proportions in which it increases female suffering..

    I believe intrinsically the senator knows this…They diverted the last stimulus package to women (Read Article: No Country For Burly Men by Christina Hoff Sommers)

    Again the only excuse to care for male welfare is by the proportions in which it affects male servitude to women and causes their suffering…

  • http://avoiceformen.com/ Paul Elam

    @ Ben

    “I found out a long time ago if you want to improve the condition of men you have to frame it in the context of what it will to to benefit women”

    Quite true, and I think this is one way of framing some MRA objectives. The positive thing about this is that the first time I have ever seen a politician have to defend himself from an allegation of misandry. It looks good on them too.

    Our solution is, in my opinion, not to bend to the fact that they want us to frame things in women’s best interest, but to make them the subject of ridicule if they don’t start addressing the interests of men and boys.

    I think we are getting closer to that day.

  • http://google cudb

    My email to Mr. Reid…..

    [Mr. Reid

    I have linked a copy of the study that I believe you were refering to a few days ago when you gave your misandric speech to further propagte more lies against men in your hopes to lock-up more female votes.

    http://www.cdc.gov/ncipc/dvp/ipv_factsheet.pdf

    It is truelly a disgrace and an injustice that someone such as yourself who holds such a public office will try and bend the truth. No where in this report is it stated that Men, specifically, are more violent towards their partners than women. Likewise if you are going to make that claim, why then, do you fail to draw such a claim to the women perpatrators as well who kill the 25% of victims which are men?

    It is unfortunate that you would say such things and try and hold all men in contempt for the acts of such very few men.

    We need to get help to the people that need help, women and men. But your words were dishonest and inappropiate at best. A public apology to the men of this nation would be a nice start towards getting back to the truth.]

  • http://jayhammers.blogspot.com/ Jay Hammers

    Good call. This sentence is offensive and has gotten most of the media attention, I think: “Men, when they’re out of work, tend to become abusive.”

    But this sentence is an even bigger lie: “Women aren’t abusive most of the time.”

  • JCH

    Harry Reid at the very least should be forced by the Senate to repudiate and apologize for his misandric comments or be censored. Frankly, I think he and all the other overt man-hating public office holders should be arrested and tried for committing hate crimes.






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