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Why Congress Must Reject
VAWA
by
David R. Usher
The
Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) is up for re-authorization. VAWA is a
radical feminist program, always pushed by Democrats. In the past,
Republicans quietly went along with it for lack of focus on good social
policy. The purpose of this article is to provide Republicans with solid
social policy that everyone of sound mind will agree on.
Republicans think that letting the National
Organization for Women have its way would help them get re-elected. This
didn’t work for Senator John Ashcroft, who lost his race in 2000 to a dead
man, despite letting VAWA II out of his committee just in time for the
elections.
Republicans will pass VAWA anyway --- because they
haven’t taken the time to develop solid pro-marriage social policy. In
the short run, we must expect Republicans to require Senator Joe Biden to
effect modifications making VAWA gender neutral. Republicans can vote for
VAWA and the stand up for the 14th Amendment by insisting that the VAWA be
made gender neutral. At minimum, funding must be provided to help men and
children living in marriages where the wife is dangerous or abusive, as
called for by the
Safe Homes For Families and Children Coalition
In the long run, Republicans must stop funding
radical feminist social policy in areas including abortion, domestic
violence, and divorce. This is because feminist approaches are crafted to
have one common effect: destroying heterosexual marriage, usually for no
real reason whatsoever.
Lets see how this relates to the Violence Against
Women Act.
The Constitutional Issue.
VAWA is unconstitutional on its face --- just as
unconstitutional as a “Violence Against Whites Act” would be. No
court in America would permit the existence of a multi-billion-dollar
federal program pretending that violence is solely a black-on-white issue
and makes sure it always looks that way regardless of case facts. It is a
long held tenet that law enforcement must be blind to race and sex –
except of course unless it has the letters “VAWA” in front of it.
The Facts:
Here is the great myth propounded by radical VAWA
advocates: Domestic violence is always a male-on-female proposition.
Even if it isn’t, Victorian chivalry dictates that women should have
something that men cannot have: equal protection under the law.
Women’s abuse centers and advocacy groups
traditionally plaster the media with lopsided factoids about domestic
violence, misusing federal funds to get more federal funds to serve a
variety of radical anti-family purposes. The fundamentals prove them
wrong:
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According to the NIJ/CDC
National Violence Against Women survey, 10.8% of the women but only 4.1%
of the men used a knife on the victim. 21.6% of the male victims were
threatened with a knife, while only 12.7% of the women were so
threatened. 43.2% of the male victims were hit with a hard object
capable of causing serious injury, while this was true of only 22.6% of
the female victims. When all serious forms of domestic assault were
added together, as many assaulted men as women were seriously assaulted.
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The National Institute of
Justice and the Center for Disease Control estimates that 1.3 million
women and 835,000 men are the victims of domestic violence each year.
According to this NIJ/CDC survey, 37% of the domestic violence is
against men. 100% of the federal domestic violence funding under the
Violence Against Women Act is to be used for domestic violence against
women. 100% of the federal domestic violence research funds disbursed to
several federal agencies is devoted to domestic.
The Real Problem: Divorce and Substance Abuse
drive domestic violence and child abuse.
In addition to being wrong on their facts, women’s
centers do not tell you what drives family violence. There are two actual
primary drivers of family violence:
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Drinking, Drugging,
and Family: 75% of serious spousal violence
involves an offender who has been drinking. Another 11% involves an
offender who has been using drugs. In total, 86% of serious domestic
violence involves a person abusing mood-altering drugs (Bureau of
Justice Statistics, 1998).
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Divorce:
Only 4% of serious spousal violence occurs in the
intact family. 96% occurs in the non-intact family (Chadwick and
Heaton, Statistical Handbook on the American Family, 1992). While
chemical abuse is a major factor, it does not kick in until the family
is separated.
What does this mean from a public policy
perspective? It means that divorce (and the problems that go with it) is
the primary driver of domestic violence, and that mood altering chemicals
play a significant role after separation of the family.
Here is how this plays out in public policy and
law:
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If the wife has a substance
abuse problem, family courts rarely care. VAWA makes sure that the
woman’s drinking problem is ignored. Friction in the family drives the
wife to file for divorce to get away from the husband. She knows she
has at least a 75% chance of taking over the family and being able to
continue her life style. Family courts usually don’t care if mom had a
drinking or drugging problem. They just grant the divorce. This is why
over 2/3 of fatal child abuse is caused by single mothers, and the
natural father is actually in the lowest risk group for fatal child
abuse.
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Children of single parents were at higher risk of
physical abuse and of all types of neglect and were overrepresented
among seriously injured, moderately injured, and endangered children. Of
children who were maltreated by their birth parents, the majority (75%)
were maltreated by their mothers and a sizable minority (46%).
Third National Incidence Study of Child Abuse and Neglect (NIS-3), 1993.
We realize two crucial concepts from the above:
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Divorce, combined with
substance abuse, drives serious domestic conflict and child abuse.
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Funding VAWA will only
create more divorce, more domestic conflict, and more child abuse.
Proactive Family Violence Prevention and
Mitigation
Republicans have an historic opportunity to make the
lives of all Americans better.
The first step is to not give billions of dollars to
the National Organization for Women (which also misuses the funding to
promote the anathemas of same-sex marriage, abortion, and divorce).
The second step will be to create a proactive
“Family Violence Prevention and Mitigation Act”. This concept expects
marital responsibility of all spouses, will help them work through the
common problems of marriage, assist the responsible spouse to get the
other spouse into treatment, and save government and the taxpayers from
trillions of dollars in social expenses which presently revolve around the
triangle of divorce, chemical abuse, and violence.
Here are the basic elements of the Act. I have
discussed this at length with lawmakers in Missouri, and the feeling is
that this is an excellent program:
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A new type of temporary
restraining order, called an IO (Interventive Order) is created. A
responsible spouse can request a family intervention via the family
court, requiring the other spouse or child to undertake a
prevention/intervention (P/I) at a chemical dependency treatment
center.
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If the treatment center
finds that a spouse or child has a problem with chemical abuse, the
spouse is then ordered to undergo treatment and remain clean and dry.
The case is tracked on the court record. To handle cases where a
chemically-dependent spouse reports the clean spouse to avoid the issue,
or cases of co-substance-abuse, the treatment center may also require a
P/I on the reporting spouse.
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Federal funding should
provide loans to pay for treatment, and may optionally pro-rate
repayment based on ability to pay. In no instance will treatment be
free, because this is an element of personal responsibility.
This plan provides substantial benefits to all
Americans:
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A substantial number of
expensive social problems revolving around the divorce will abate.
Reductions in spending for child abuse treatment, foster care,
illegitimacy, crime, violence, child support enforcement, suicide
prevention, and many others should more than offset the federal cost of
carrying chemical-dependency treatment loans.
I urge everyone to take this concept to their U.S.
Senator and Congressman. The Republican party now has a very solid social
policy it can pass with confidence, with the support of the substantial
majority of Americans who would like to see government enact helpful,
pro-marriage policies.
David R. Usher is Legislative Analyst for the
American
Coalition for Fathers and Children, Missouri Coalition
The opinions expressed in
this column represent those of the author and do not necessarily reflect
the opinions, views, or philosophy of TheRealityCheck.org, Inc.
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