Oh. You feel persecuted?
I'm sure many men do today- whoever was listed on a domestic or divorce court docket. Basically a purge lain:
But
Let's ignore that- it doesn't do women any favors, and that's all that matters right?
Oh. You feel persecuted?
You are all internally feminist. That is what this society has become- when you can't speak on problems with women, but can rail on men all day,
Oh. You feel persecuted?
I'm sure many men do today- whoever was listed on a domestic or divorce court docket.
IF they are lowlife, domestic abusers, then good ... they shouldn't just *feel persecuted* but should be prosecuted. Lose things that are important to them. Until such a time they grow up enough to understand that NO ONE has the right (outside of self-defense) to put their hands on another individual.
You aren't speaking to problems with women. You're mostly hurling angry, unfounded and unsupported accusations from a personal, obviously emotional foundation. That's not an invitation to discourse.:blabla:
You are all internally feminist. That is what this society has become- when you can't speak on problems with women, but can rail on men all day, there is something to be acknowledged there.
You aren't speaking to problems with women. You're mostly hurling angry, unfounded and unsupported accusations from a personal, obviously emotional foundation. That's not an invitation to discourse.
I know. I tried to actually educated you on the law and what was and wasn't true about your understanding of it and you were only interested in continuing your diatribe.
Rather, the training of a lawyer is in the development of a precise critical thinking skill set and its application to an instruction in the depths and particulars of the law.You're 'education' is very one-sided and biased.
Rather, if you listened to what I actually say you'd understand that while men and women can be and sometimes are treated unfairly, the error is usually found in the judgment of men and not in the law. Fortunately, where the error is demonstrable their is, within the law, recourse.Basically, if one were to go with what say, then men are not being treated unfairly at all-
Such as? You've asserted a great deal. But that's not really proof.which is completely contrary to a great deal of things I have shown on here- which you say are 'unsupported'.
I don't believe in magic. Though I do believe in magicians. . . I even enjoy their performances. But you need a new trick, that isn't a rabbit or a hat you're pulling it out of. lain:Yeah, you all are in denial about the problem. Or, under a spell- a very feminine spell
Yeah, that's what you choose to focus on,
69% of divorces are enacted by women
85% of custody hearings thereafter result in the woman's favor
97% of combatant deaths are men
80% of suicides are of men
93% of work related deaths are men
83% of the homeless are men
Nonetheless, there are 8 women's shelters for ever 1 men's shelter
Women unemployment rate: 8.1%
Male unemployment rate: 10.3
There are three women in college for every two men
"According to one of the most thorough surveys of child custody outcomes, which looked at Wisconsin between 1996 and 2007, the percentage of divorce cases in which the mother got sole custody dropped from 60.4 to 45.7 percent while the percentage of equal shared custody cases, in just that decade, doubled from 15.8 to 30.5. And a recent survey by the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers shows a rapid increase in mothers paying child support." from Dad's Day in Court, Slate Magazine69% of divorces are enacted by women
85% of custody hearings thereafter result in the woman's favor
We're disproportionately the initiators of violence. I don't think that's helping you.97% of combatant deaths are men
Seems high, though as with violence, in every country that I know of that keeps the statistics both violent acts against others and violence against self are male markers, sadly.80% of suicides are of men
Men work in much more dangerous occupations, typically. How is that a woman problem?93% of work related deaths are men
Women's shelters are typically about abuse, not homelessness. Most of those habitually homeless adults have histories of mental issues and your numbers aren't lining up with the latest statistics I've seen, supra.83% of the homeless are men
Nonetheless, there are 8 women's shelters for ever 1 men's shelter
So not that different. And a lot of women are still homemakers. I'm sure that impacts the number if it's accurate.Women unemployment rate: 8.1%
Male unemployment rate: 10.3
"The inside track on Washington politics.There are three women in college for every two men.
No, I've noted that a great many women seek divorce on those grounds. 37% of divorces are filed over infidelity. Emotional and/or physical abuse was cited about as frequently.Take notice to these statistics- I want you to think about it for a second.
For divorce, you argue domestic abuse
Not only haven't I said that, I've said that the tender years presumption that women are better nurturers has been dismissed from the law.For custody, you say women are better caregivers
I have no idea what you mean by that.For combatant deaths, it's the 3% who are women that stands out
Should a woman feel badly about feeling better?For suicides, women actually mock that- they take pride in being happier
I've never heard that. I've spoken to mental illness and a number of contributing factors.For the homeless, ~men are just lazy~
Nope, supra.For so many women shelters, it's because they are helpless
No, though I can't see how you're going to blame women for doing better in the job market, assuming they are. I'd suspect it goes to the sort of jobs men typically hold, especially in lower income brackets.For the unemployment rate, ~men are deadbeats~ #imganativepaygap
That's your real problem. You can't think beyond your expectations. You see things that aren't there and curse people for "pretending" they aren't.You all
"According to one of the most thorough surveys of child custody outcomes, which looked at Wisconsin between 1996 and 2007, the percentage of divorce cases in which the mother got sole custody dropped from 60.4 to 45.7 percent while the percentage of equal shared custody cases, in just that decade, doubled from 15.8 to 30.5. And a recent survey by the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers shows a rapid increase in mothers paying child support." from Dad's Day in Court, Slate Magazine
We're disproportionately the initiators of violence. I don't think that's helping you.
Men work in much more dangerous occupations, typically. How is that a woman problem?
Women's shelters are typically about abuse, not homelessness. Most of those habitually homeless adults have histories of mental issues and your numbers aren't lining up with the latest statistics I've seen, supra.
No, I've noted that a great many women seek divorce on those grounds. 37% of divorces are filed over infidelity. Emotional and/or physical abuse was cited about as frequently.
Not only haven't I said that, I've said that the tender years presumption that women are better nurturers has been dismissed from the law.
Should a woman feel badly about feeling better?
No, though I can't see how you're going to blame women for doing better in the job market, assuming they are. I'd suspect it goes to the sort of jobs men typically hold, especially in lower income brackets.
It was a reflective study. Now, where are you getting your data?Good for Wisconsin
The majority is still in women's favor.
Blame the victim? If you can't manage better than that you should stop trying.And women are disproportionately the antagonizing influence or, even the reason, for a lot of that violence.
And then they just give it away to...well, no. Then what do you want, a cookie? :chew:Men build the world and die doing it.
They don't gizmo. If you'd been paying attention when I was citing to authority you'd recall which sex was disproportionately poor and victimized by the other (hint: it wasn't men).So how do women get off on having more advantage within it
Why aren't men venerated for serving their own interests? Really. lain:and, why are men not venerated for it but women are venerated simply for utilizing it :think:
You were wondering why there were more shelters for women. The reason is that a good many women's shelters are specifically for women and children seeking shelter from domestic violence. I don't have the figures you didn't supply, but my best guess would be that's the difference.Riiight. Write it off on domestic abuse. Go figure.
You think you'd find the victims of domestic violence walking the streets when there are shelters for them?That's why you see soooo many homeless women on the street
Neither of those statements are objectively true, which is why you declare but don't actually support them. In fact, women are more likely to forgive infidelity. Anyone who wants to just google the question and read the results.Men are more likely to forgive infidelity and abuse because divorce is NOT a prospect for them. It hurts them more emotionally and financially- this is not so true with women.
Here's where you legal education is showing...what it means is that a judge acting without justification on the point can have his disposition questioned and overturned on appeal.Dismissed from the law' does not mean a judge cannot still rule in a woman's favor because he feels they are better caregivers.
It actually doesn't if you understand how the courts actually work. Thanks for providing me with the opportunity to underscore that you don't.I'm glad you brought that up because it's a perfect example of how deleting something from the law does not imply it being illegal to still do as what was deleted- there has to be an actual proclamation saying to not do so.
Another connection existing entirely within your bias and not as an expression of empirical fact.At men's expense, it's a bad joke.
The law doesn't aim to make men equals in more than right. It cannot make you better, smarter, or more rational than you are.'Equality' is not egalitarian in the law, it is forced. It is obvious that them 'doing better' is really equality enforced within market to put them in higher places. That is to say, it is an illusion.
Well, it's no surprise to find you blaming someone else for your error...the rest of your empty sleeve is, again, rubbish.To no surprise- the entire matter is a facade, and you'd rather dwell in it than see reality.
It was a reflective study. Now, where are you getting your data?
Blame the victim? If you can't manage better than that you should stop trying.
They don't gizmo. If you'd been paying attention when I was citing to authority you'd recall which sex was disproportionately poor and victimized by the other (hint: it wasn't men).
Why aren't men venerated for serving their own interests? Really. lain:
You were wondering why there were more shelters for women. The reason is that a good many women's shelters are specifically for women and children seeking shelter from domestic violence. I don't have the figures you didn't supply, but my best guess would be that's the difference.
Neither of those statements are objectively true, which is why you declare but don't actually support them. In fact, women are more likely to forgive infidelity. Anyone who wants to just google the question and read the results.
Here's where you legal education is showing...what it means is that a judge acting without justification on the point can have his disposition questioned and overturned on appeal.
I asked, should women feel bad about feeling better?
Another connection existing entirely within your bias and not as an expression of empirical fact.
Not authoritatively. I'd be happy to compile and compare, but you need to cite something.From everywhere else :idunno:
That's the problem with statistics- you can always find a counter one. In your case, you found the needle in the haystack.
You're not connecting enough dots. So far it's: men fight over or about women and you think the men are blamed for it...by whom and in what sense? Next you suggest women fight over men. Sure. I doubt it's as common, but okay. And you think men are blamed for that...again, by whom and in what meaningful sense. This just sounds like a contrived complaint.It is a common fact that a great deal of violence between men has to do with a woman. In cases where it is the other way around- when women are fighting over men- the man is usually seen as bad. This is not the case with women.
You keep declaring things like that, but it's not demonstrably true. So if you say more women apply for divorce, sure. And the party applying has to establish grounds. If you want an advantage then those grounds need to be more than irreconcilable differences. Basically, as I noted the last time you ignored free legal counsel on the point by someone who has actually handled the matter in a court, you have two sorts of jurisdictions with different controls. In an equitable distribution state the judge decides how the marital estate is settled by considering, among other factors, fault. In community property either a prenup or statutes will control the division. Arizona, California, Idaho, Louisiana, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Washington and Wisconsin are all community property states, with Alaska allowing for an opt in option.Blows my mind, but it's not surprising when you look at the fact that in most divorces, women are always seen as the poor victims, WHICH IS WHY THEY GET AN ADVANTAGE IN COURT.
No, you tend to see a lot more men in prison because men are disproportionately responsible for violent crime. By way of example, in 2014, 80% of those arrested for violent crime were men. The DOJ notes that between 1980 and 2008, men were convicted of just over 90% of homicides, and where children under 5 years of age were murdered by a parent the male was the convicted perp 80% of the time.Women have far greater support systems then men. It is why you don't see many homeless women or women in jail- they have a tendency to virtually never even see these circumstances.
You wrote: "why are men not venerated for it but women are venerated simply for utilizing it"Women are. I mean, did you even think before you wrote that lain:
Why would anyone want to change that? I'm only noting your numbers are suspect. But I've spoken to this issue with you before too. You left my answer on it without rebuttal, as you did on the tender years bit and other points of law.It doesn't change the fact that the vast majority of the homeless are male.
I know this won't make sense to you, but a man who beats his wife shouldn't be allowed to return home absent consent on the part of the injured party and the only demonstrable screw up is him.And from what I've seen of domestic assault, the man goes to jail and can't even return to his own house until court months later- plenty of time for the wife to do all manner of screwed up, sheisty things.
What studies?I read the studies, and in marriage they are more likely to forgive- for the exact reasons I laid out.
What article, published where?I read an article which states that this is simply not true, evidenced by the mere minor drop in women winning.
Honestly...I think you're a little screwy on the point. That is to say, a bit unbalanced, emotionally invested and unhappy. From this skewed perspective come all sorts of ideas that I don't believe would appeal to you or anyone otherwise.They are aware that their 'happiness' is at the expense of men. They know it very well when they act the way they act- maybe you just never took notice or connected the dots, but they collectively have prided themselves on producing enmity between them and men.
I support rational thought and approach over grudge and emotional blinkering.That's what feminism did, and which you apparently support.
I know this won't make sense to you, but a man who beats his wife shouldn't be allowed to return home absent consent on the part of the injured party and the only demonstrable screw up is him.
I'm not going to put in much more effort with you on this. You're not trying a case, you're presenting the barest glimpse of a matter presented with more than one voice present to an impartial trier of fact and likely with lawyers involved. A woman who feels fearful enough to retreat to another room and close a door is one of the voices you aren't speaking for...though in my experience you don't shove a closed door open unless it's on a peculiar hinge. You break the mechanism. The woman was then struck by that and whatever the surrounding testimony and evidence was it was sufficient that the judge appears to grant a restraining order lasting months. I have no reason to trust your judgement on the points, less reason to trust someone like the guy involved.There was a time when a man got into an argument with his wife. When she went to the bedroom and shut the door, he pushed it open and it shoved her back.
The man went to court, knowing he would not be found guilty for assault because, I mean come on now.. the prosecutor got into all the little details, actually demonstrating how he pushed this door open, and the man was laughing inside about how dumb it was.
But then, to his surprise, the judge found him guilty of assault.
He was also surprised to see that, upon returning to his home after months, his wife had moved out- she took everything of worth, and sold what couldn't fit into the apartment she put down with the check he deposited the day of his arrest.
I know this won't make sense to you, but the very fact that women are even capable of legally doing this is utterly absurd- just as absurd as those like yourself who minimize it and shove it off for you're obsession with 'protecting women'.
Please. Half of all 'domestic abuse' cases are exaggerated nonsense and you know it. They take advantage of your obsession
I'm not going to put in much more effort with you on this. You're not trying a case, you're presenting the barest glimpse of a matter presented with more than one voice present to an impartial trier of fact and likely with lawyers involved. A woman who feels fearful enough to retreat to another room and close a door is one of the voices you aren't speaking for...though in my experience you don't shove a closed door open unless it's on a peculiar hinge. You break the mechanism. The woman was then struck by that and whatever the surrounding testimony and evidence was it was sufficient that the judge appears to grant a restraining order lasting months. I have no reason to trust your judgement on the points, less reason to trust someone like the guy involved.
As a rule, women don't immediately flee a residence they have a court order to be in possession of unless they are in fear and attempting to hide/protect themselves from someone they feel won't respect it. The fellow had all sorts of options from the beginning. He had the right to counsel, to appeal the order, and the right to ask for a status quo order dealing with joint assets pending disposition by hearing. After the fact he had the right to institute proceedings to recover property or its value.
And protecting women and children (and once in a blue moon, men) from abusive partners and husbands wasn't an obsession. It was simply what I did. I was fortunate to be in a position to help people in need protect themselves and their children from people with serious problems.
I'm not going to put in much more effort with you on this. You're not trying a case, you're presenting the barest glimpse of a matter presented with more than one voice present to an impartial trier of fact and likely with lawyers involved. A woman who feels fearful enough to retreat to another room and close a door is one of the voices you aren't speaking for...though in my experience you don't shove a closed door open unless it's on a peculiar hinge. You break the mechanism. The woman was then struck by that and whatever the surrounding testimony and evidence was it was sufficient that the judge appears to grant a restraining order lasting months. I have no reason to trust your judgement on the points, less reason to trust someone like the guy involved.
As a rule, women don't immediately flee a residence they have a court order to be in possession of unless they are in fear and attempting to hide/protect themselves from someone they feel won't respect it. The fellow had all sorts of options from the beginning. He had the right to counsel, to appeal the order, and the right to ask for a status quo order dealing with joint assets pending disposition by hearing. After the fact he had the right to institute proceedings to recover property or its value.
And protecting women and children (and once in a blue moon, men) from abusive partners and husbands wasn't an obsession. It was simply what I did. I was fortunate to be in a position to help people in need protect themselves and their children from people with serious problems.
Thank you. For the response - and for the work you did on behalf of those who needed it.
I'm not going to put in much more effort with you on this. You're not trying a case, you're presenting the barest glimpse of a matter presented with more than one voice present to an impartial trier of fact and likely with lawyers involved. A woman who feels fearful enough to retreat to another room and close a door is one of the voices you aren't speaking for...though in my experience you don't shove a closed door open unless it's on a peculiar hinge. You break the mechanism. The woman was then struck by that and whatever the surrounding testimony and evidence was it was sufficient that the judge appears to grant a restraining order lasting months. I have no reason to trust your judgement on the points, less reason to trust someone like the guy involved.
As a rule, women don't immediately flee a residence they have a court order to be in possession of unless they are in fear and attempting to hide/protect themselves from someone they feel won't respect it. The fellow had all sorts of options from the beginning. He had the right to counsel, to appeal the order, and the right to ask for a status quo order dealing with joint assets pending disposition by hearing. After the fact he had the right to institute proceedings to recover property or its value.
And protecting women and children (and once in a blue moon, men) from abusive partners and husbands wasn't an obsession. It was simply what I did. I was fortunate to be in a position to help people in need protect themselves and their children from people with serious problems.