Disagreeing isn't an "attack". I could also claim you "attacked" me by not automatically agreeing with my original premise, right? I'm just remembering that you attacked me over using the term "female" - now that's an unfounded attack right there. You actually insinuated I view women as nothing but animals because I used "female" as a noun.
Rather than saying something "a billion times" you've barely addressed the two points I raised, if at all. The only real "attack" was where I disagreed that any problem for a man was merely a "loss of male privilege". Well, you concede that being free from false rape accusations aren't "male privilege" at least. I also discussed how the
exact same patriarchal stereotypes play into the refusal to admit that female->male abuse is a "thing" - those same stereotypes you'd be 100% against depending on the discussion. That bias in problem perception was actually a major point in the link you provided for me. And a lot of the writings here seem to portray the exact same interpretation prejudice highlighted in that very link.
Let's get back to the issue that was core to the question - the murder rate, and how support structures might have mitigated it. This is exactly what the articles on gender bias in attitudes to abuse (what you linked btw Vector) was talking about: Wife murders husband: "he must have been abusive", "what did he do to
deserve it?", husband murders wife: "that poor woman", "he was clearly abusing her". In each case, the man is framed as the guilty party, whether he murders, or was murdered.
Now, i'm not really
advocating anything here for men in the last two pages. What I am doing is taking palsch's analysis and
applying it in a gender-neutral way. What I showed was that a gender-neutral interpretation of the phenomena is compatible with the data we have. Advocacy for
males is pure secondary, especially since the goal of that advocacy was
entirely stated to be the reduction in the female murder rate. This is "advocacy for
people" plain and simple, and it's a bit of a twist to say I'm saying "men got it bad boohoo!".
I think that we, as a society, take abuse and violence in general far too cavalierly. I think we don't really care about the aftereffects. But I think that also, people see a lot of things (lacks of resources) as sexism against men and injustice when there really used to be a huge historical problem leaned in a particular direction; those things were corrected; and now when stuff starts looking similar, there's more resources for women available, because things used to be crazy-bad and the resources are a holdout from that period.
There are specifically, a
very poor amount of resources for men leaving abusive relationships. Who had it worse 40 years ago, and who "has it worse" overall as a gender-aggregate, well that's not relevant to what's happen at this moment to
individuals for a start. It doesn't matter if males have more average wealth, taking away crisis shelters from males wouldn't "even up the score" in any logical way. Because people are individuals, each with individual circumstances, not aggregates. That same "averages" theory would imply that giving more money to wealthy women would justify taking money away from poor women - "average" wealth by gender would be the same, so we shouldn't worry about how it distributed right? Likewise, a man in crisis isn't helped by "men on average have higher social mobility" or any other pronouncements.
Remember the original point was asking whether more men's services would actually alleviate the
female murder rate in the
same way that services for women are said to have alleviate the killing of males. My point was that, that same theory could be applied to both genders, and it makes a testable prediction - since male support is light-years behind female support, male murders of spouses won't have fallen as much as the inverse, exactly what we see in the data. And it's further supported as a conjecture due to the fact that before the support for women, the murder rate was "on par" between the sexes, regardless of the fact that
current Western society is
far less sexist than Western society up until the 1970's. It may still be pretty sexist, but it was inarguably more sexist back then.
The evidence (in a citation provided by you, Vector), is that there's a pretty even amount of "abusers" of both genders. Either gender can attempt to end their abuse in a number of ways. We shouldn't give one gender an automatic "free pass" to jump straight to murder, and make all sorts of extra critical judgements of the other gender based on how they chose to deal with it.
This also could be connected to the studies that found male offender programs based on the patriarchy model
don't work. The overall point is that trying to apply an incorrect model of male issues
harms women as well as men - as the faulty male offender programs indicate firsthand. Palsch linked an article where the writer observes women doing, what would basically be construed as abuse if the genders were reversed (this point was discussed in Vector's Wikipedia link). The men in that article were said to "lose their temper", in the face of visible goading and taunts by their spouse, and we shake our head at how weak they are "they should have walked away". The men were noted to be
trying all the tactics that are meant to defuse the problem - according to the men's offender programs that have been
discredited in Vector's citation. This shows firsthand how having a faulty model of a problem, actually prevents the problem being resolved.