It's also totally not "what about the men?"
What about the women if you've gotten it wrong? I could go into detail about research showing that by having an overly simplistic model of abuse profiles, real women are harmed down the line, all so that an ideologically pure model can be promoted for political reasons. That's clearly
harming actual women, because it is in fact sacrificing possible gains in women's safety for the political ascension of a particular ideologically motivated model.
Some examples of harm to women include rigid adherence to the Duluth Model (a treatment program for batterers based on the patriarchy model, which downplays other possible factors, and has a similar logic to it as Alcoholics Anonymous. It's also the most common court-ordered treatment for batterers in the USA) despite even the creators of the model saying it's bullshit now, and when you do rigorous studies on it, it's effectiveness at reducing wife battering approaches
zero, which makes it
very similar to AA treatment. Neither of these programs are based on science or change in response to evidence based results.
Meanwhile the proponents of such models in the USA and similar ones here in Australia are actively hostile to mainstream psychology researchers who look at multiple factors (mental illness, drugs and alcohol researchers complain about this) that explain family violence much better: they do concerted take-down efforts to shut them out of the conversation, because they believe that looking at complex factors for violence will "take attention" (e.g. funding) away from "destroying the patriarchy". e.g. an ideological commitment to destroying "patriarchy" is valued more than getting actual real-world results for normal women, and other fields that touch on family violence are seen as the
competition for control of the domestic violence issue, which these groups claim 100% ownership of.
Hardline ideologies can't tolerate competition, even (especially if) that competition espouses similar goals: the whole rationale of hardline ideology is that it claims
exclusive rights to its pet topic. This is why feminist speakers often say that anyone who believes in equality of opportunity
must be a feminist: to allow the existence of someone who is not a feminist but believes in equality of opportunity, then that would undermine one of their key belief systems: that there is only one true way to The Light
tm, and that's by joining a badge-wearing feminist organization. However, going off survey results there seems to be little to suggest that this is true except in the minds of feminists:
A UK survey found only 4% of men consider themselves feminists yet 86% believe that gender equality was a good thing. With women, 7% were feminists, yet only 74% of them thought that gender equality was a good thing. Men are in fact pretty comfortable with women taking on the same roles as men (since it's none of our business), it's actually women who are more divided about it, since it affects them personally and the kinds of lives they can live. One feminist writer responded "
The simple truth is if you want a more equal society for women and men then you are in fact a feminist" however, this makes me think of the Christian parable of the "blind men and the elephant". each man (different religions) grasps a different part of the elephant (God) and describes it, however, they're all really describing different aspects of the
Christian God. Christians claim to "own" the idea of God the same way Feminists do with equality. Feminism needs to claim ownership of any non-feminists statement supporting equality because to do otherwise would be to question the claimed absolute monopoly on the topic. It's also a classic Aristotelian logical fallacy: all feminists believe in equality, however that doesn't logically prove that all non-feminists don't believe in equality, any more than christians being spiritual means non-christians are non-spiritual.
That's not to claim "feminism does more harm than good" or anything like that. It's like a
religion in many respects. Religions do "good works" too. But I'm still not signing up to a religion just because of that.