
“I’m going to slug you, and then you sing a lovely song about how you love me anyway, and it doesn’t matter in the great scheme of things. OK?”
Steve-O-in-NJ sent in a thoughtful elaboration on the issue underlying my previous post regarding the obligation of abused women to end their relationship with abuser, and certainly not deepen it. He gets extra credit for quoting a lyric from “Carousel” in response to my post’s use of a similar themed lyric from “Show Boat.” (I wonder how many Broadway and popular songs are laments by abused women? The Rodgers and Hammerstein classic “Carousel’s” protagonist is an abuser: one woman he strikes says that the blow “felt like a kiss.” Gee, if he threw her down the stairs, would it feel like a hug?)
Here is Steve’s Comment of the Day on the post, The Ray Rice Affair: Defending Stephen Smith (and Blaming the Victims Of Domestic Abuse When They Behave Like Rice’s)…
There’s an Italian proverb to the effect that no one else should enter into the discussions between husband and wife. I’m personally acquainted with one couple where things went bad after the wedding because the husband decided his wife was no longer so good-looking after she didn’t quite lose all the weight she gained during her first pregnancy. I’m also acquainted with another couple, mostly with the wife, in which the husband both verbally and physically abused the wife for months before the wedding, but she married him anyway, and now with the birth of their first child it appears that life is perfect.
For a long time prior to the second couple’s wedding I listened to the now-wife’s constant complaining and gave her exactly the advice set forth above. It fell on deaf ears, and I paid a draining emotional price. Because of that, when the wife in the first couple came to me in tears because the husband’s attention had turned to some hot number with tattoos and piercings, I turned her away and told her to work it out, I didn’t have the time or the inclination to listen to this nonsense again, when all it would probably result in was her going back with him after burdening me with her problems, leaving me the loser. I should also mention that the wife in the second relationship had been in relationships with at least two other men who beat her prior to the one she actually married.
It’s hard to say that there’s a war on women when some of the women actively walk into the line of fire and toss logic to the wind (“What’s the Use of Wondrin’?”) and burden society’s resources by welcoming their 911 rescue only to drop all charges once they see their men in cuffs, leaving the cops and prosecutors wondering why they even bothered.
It’s generally an accepted practice that if you call for the paramedics because you feel ill or are injured, but decline to go to the hospital, you have to sign a form generally called an AMA (against medical advice) form, absolving them from liability. I would suggest that a similar form be adopted for domestic violence situations, where, if the woman declines to press charges, she has to sign a form saying she is doing so, and perhaps a second form where she has to sign off if she declines to leave the relationship. Then the police keep these forms on file, and when they get another call from the same address about the same stuff, they can give it a lower priority or ignore it altogether in favor of pursuing the shots fired or burglary in progress calls. It isn’t society’s job to help those who refuse to help themselves, nor to be a maid or valet service cleaning up after messy relationships but never able to get at the source. Society has an obligation to properly husband its limited resources, and members of society have an obligation not to become a drain on those resources.
As I mentioned in the original post, responding to domestic abuse calls is dangerous for police. If I were on a police force and had repeated calls to the same abuse case and the woman always relented I’d find it difficult to keep going back there.
*clapping*
I must admit, this is an amazing idea for the dolts that just keep going back to the abusers. Abuse groups would disagree, as they claim “it’s complicated”. Anyone who calls the cops — first chance is a route to escape being a victim — and there are plenty of shelters (nicer than men’s shelters) that can form a temporary reprieve while searching for accommodation . During this phase if the person does leave, then the police can have just cause in the event that person is involved again at another location — etc.
Those who choose not to be helped and are constantly calling the cops to sort out their relationship should be forced to sign a form in the event they do not wish to leave the offender.
We do live in a society that “cares” if someone dies tho, and preventing it (such as willful suicide) seems to be the norm, so I suppose the cops will keep going there to keep that person alive — While I value all life, I do feel that people should have the right to make their own decisions about their own life — in the case of domestic “abuse”, it is up to the person if they wish to stay in the lions den, or leave, and thus it is their own choice at risk of death. Of course if the “victim” is murdered while they sleep for not putting enough salt in the pasta, then that would be wrong on the victimizer’s side.
— most definitely STOP wasting valuable resources on those who do not wish to help themselves. In any profession.