Survey: 1/2 of N.H. women experienced sex or physical assault
Submitted by Anonymous on Sat, 2007-03-31 00:56
In an attempt to conflate domestic violence statistics in NH, an important primary state for Hillary, local DV advocates/beneficiaries claim (based upon a single study) that more than half of New Hampshire's women have been abused in their lifetimes and almost one-fifth say they've been raped (?). Excerpt:
"The New Hampshire Coalition Against Domestic and Sexual Violence, the University of New Hampshire and the state worked together on the survey. It's the first time experts have tracked the prevalence of violence against women in the state. The hard data backs up what police, health and domestic violence workers have long known: victims are everywhere.
...
They said future abuse surveys could be expanded to include men."
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Oh My, Not In New Hampshire!
If over half of the female residents in NH have been sexually assaulted then it is high time that the state start issuing them stainless steel chastity belts to stem this epidemic. They may be on E-bay...cheap!
Just like every survey taken on DV/rape in the last 40 years...
...this one neglects men completely and intentionally. Therefore we can conclude that just like its predecessors, its only purpose was to demonstrate what awful, terrible monsters ALL men are, and what sweet, innocent victims ALL women are.
Are we down to 1 in 5 women have been raped by awful men? Recently, someone was trying to sell 1 in 3. Or was it 3 in 1, or 76 out of 100? I can never keep the lies straight.
So of course they didn't ask men the same questions, because the propagandists behind this nonsense knew full well what the results would be - that men at least as likely to be victims of sexual and physical assaults as women, particularly if feminist mis-definitions thereof were used. Since this bit of agitprop was clearly timed to coincide with attempts to get funding for the NH commission on the status of men, we couldn't allow that inconvenient little bit of reality to intrude on a perfectly good predetermined outcome now, could we?