Gentlemen, I'd like to alert you to a
very important article that appeared in an issue of the Journal of the Florida (U.S.) Bar Association (Vol. 30:791-855, 2003). It takes a critical look at the domestic violence industry and the effects of the feminist state has had on it. And while IMO it places too much (i.e., any) emphasis on the subject of "patriarchy," it does do a good job of exposing the injustice and other harmful effects of feminist politics and hypocrasy.
From the artice:
Domestic abuse. The term immediately conjures up images nationally spread through such highly publicized events as the murder trial of O.J. Simpson and the saga of John and Lorena Bobbit, hit tunes like Tracy Chapman's Behind the Wall,1 and movies like Julia Robert's Sleeping with the Enemy2 or Farrah Fawcett's The Burning Bed.3 Everyone can also tell a more local story about domestic violence, be it one carried in a hometown newspaper or known about the neighbors. After a long history of hiding domestic violence behind
closed bedroom doors, everyone now knows all about the existence and prevalence of domestic violence.4 Or do we? The images we associate with domestic violence depict the male as batterer and the female as victim. Yet, despite the critical importance of first acknowledging and then eradicating the male abuse of women, an equally important but untold story remains.5 Women can be batterers. Men can be victims.
http://www.law.fsu.edu/journals/lawreview/downloads/304/kelly.pdfBrothers, arm yourselves with the truth and then go out and do good work.