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Bonobo

(29,257 posts)
Sun Nov 18, 2012, 09:03 PM Nov 2012

The Medea Complex and the Parental Alienation Syndrome

I came across an article about what I think must surely be a phenomena that is massively underreported and probably extremely common on smaller scales. That is the mother's "brainwashing" of children to be against their fathers. How often do mother's co-opt their children to be allies on their sides against their mates? My sense is that it is probably epidemic. As a result of being absent more by necessity, and due to mother's closer bonds to children, enlisting them against their husbands is not difficult but its long-term affect on the emotional development of the child may be responsible for a huge amount of problems in adults mental states.
-------------------------------
http://www.mmpi-info.com/psychology-publications/medea.html

When doing custody evaluations, I am often struck by the frequency in which mothers aggress against their children's fathers by turning their children against him. In the process, they do great harm to their children. As a therapist, I am often struck by the resistance of patients who were brainwashed as children against a parent. I believe that brainwashing by a mother is both more common and more powerful than that of a father, since the child's bond with the mother is more intense and primitive. Such brainwashing and alienation usually leads to a life long problem with establishing and maintaining a healthy intimacy. Their mother's perception and definition of their fathers, if programmed at an early age becomes a core fundamental belief, and if questioned, the person's core sense of reality seems shaken; "If my mother lied to me about my father, then can I trust her love for me?" Thus there is a great deal of resistance to the awareness of having been brainwashed.

Fathers are very important to their daughter's feminine development. Biller's research review (1971) supports that girls who had positive relationships with their fathers were more likely to have satisfying heterosexual relationships. When a mother poisons her daughter's love of her father, she is also compromising her daughter's ability to maturely love any man. The mother is programming her daughter to be her ego extension without a will of her own, and to be with her and no one else, narcissistically bound.

Although both boys and girls are greatly harmed when they are turned against a parent, the harm is often different. Studies indicate that boys suffer the most harm when the boys are stuck with mothers who express hostility towards their fathers- the source of their male identity ( Hodges, 1991; Kelly,1993). This chapter, however, will focus only on the mother-daughter bond in the Parental Alienation Syndrome. Although the daughter's self esteem may not suffer as much as the son's, her ability to deal with separation and mature relationships with men is very deeply affected. Wallerstein's (1989) 10 year longitudinal study of girls from divorced families found that the nature of the mother-daughter relationship, and the daughter's identification with her mother were predictive of the daughters' ability to address the tasks of their relationships with men later on. Daughters who identified with hostile mothers had the poorest adjustment.

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The Medea Complex and the Parental Alienation Syndrome (Original Post) Bonobo Nov 2012 OP
This happens both ways. Fridays Child Nov 2012 #1
Opportunity to do so is clearly in favor of mothers. Bonobo Nov 2012 #2
Considering that courts almost automatically give custody to the mother... TreasonousBastard Nov 2012 #4
Assuming both men and women are equally inclined to this sort of petty vengeance 4th law of robotics Nov 2012 #3
My dad would have slapped me if i bad-mouthed my mother Hemp_is_good Nov 2012 #7
If mothers were as often alienated from their kids as fathers are... lumberjack_jeff Nov 2012 #6
Personally, I've found a lot of equal opportunity in the people I know in this spot ProudToBeBlueInRhody Nov 2012 #5
This is not a joke. redqueen Nov 2012 #8
Who said it was? 4th law of robotics Nov 2012 #11
No, it isn't. On that you are correct. ElboRuum Nov 2012 #12
The 14 year old, discredited piece in your OP is broken down in my next post. redqueen Nov 2012 #18
Well, it isn't my OP... ElboRuum Nov 2012 #19
Mea culpa, I thought Bonobo had replied to me. I did pay attention to that name, redqueen Nov 2012 #20
As a rational person... ElboRuum Nov 2012 #24
Yes, of course. Any rational person would not consider this to be evidence. redqueen Nov 2012 #25
I'm only going to reply to this post. ElboRuum Nov 2012 #61
And this, too, is certainly not evidence that most high conflict divorces involve domestic violence. redqueen Nov 2012 #26
Do you really want to go there? Major Nikon Nov 2012 #29
Some more non evidence... redqueen Nov 2012 #27
See post #29 Major Nikon Nov 2012 #30
And let's have a look at the person who invented this syndrome. redqueen Nov 2012 #28
ad hominem from a clearly biased site with a competing agenda Major Nikon Nov 2012 #62
More... redqueen Nov 2012 #32
This study ONLY researched male-perpetrated domestic violence Major Nikon Nov 2012 #63
I found a way to guarantee a heads up for every flip of the coin 4th law of robotics Nov 2012 #71
I took a look at the "study" Major Nikon Nov 2012 #74
Conclusion based science 4th law of robotics Nov 2012 #75
And I guess these are just opinions... redqueen Nov 2012 #33
Looks more like an anecdotal appeal to emotion Major Nikon Nov 2012 #52
Another opinion redqueen Nov 2012 #34
You're spamming. lumberjack_jeff Nov 2012 #37
My apologies for using many posts to share the evidence redqueen Nov 2012 #40
major nikon asked this; lumberjack_jeff Nov 2012 #42
No, it isn't possible, if his post was in response to mine. redqueen Nov 2012 #45
Sure it is. lumberjack_jeff Nov 2012 #48
No, it isn't. It is impossible to reply to posts made by people on your ignore list. redqueen Nov 2012 #49
Coming into this group and demanding people listen to you while simultaenously complaining that they Warren DeMontague Nov 2012 #50
So you are admitting the very best evidence you have is anecdotal Major Nikon Nov 2012 #53
She can't hear you. Warren DeMontague Nov 2012 #55
I know Major Nikon Nov 2012 #57
"We do know of many documented cases . . . ." 4th law of robotics Nov 2012 #60
Post removed Post removed Nov 2012 #47
Huffington Post? HUFFINGTON POST?????!?!?!?!?? Warren DeMontague Nov 2012 #51
Couldn't get past the first link. lumberjack_jeff Nov 2012 #14
It was written by a lawyer on behalf of a battered women advocacy organization Major Nikon Nov 2012 #22
I am still quite convinced this describes a common issue. Bonobo Nov 2012 #23
Yes, people doing shitty things is very common. redqueen Nov 2012 #31
It is primarily mothers who have custody and fathers who are alienated. lumberjack_jeff Nov 2012 #38
It is very common in families, not just divorce cases. redqueen Nov 2012 #41
Mothers are more often perpetrators of abuse and neglect. lumberjack_jeff Nov 2012 #44
Yes, you left this part out. redqueen Nov 2012 #46
I'm not really sure how you think that helps your argument Major Nikon Nov 2012 #58
Ah yes... the excuse part. At least we now know you read the link. lumberjack_jeff Nov 2012 #77
Though it is obvious to me that women engage in this more, it isn't vital to this discussion. Bonobo Nov 2012 #64
Where are your scientific, peer-reviewed studies proving that mothers do it more often? redqueen Nov 2012 #69
A member of a forum with over 20 banned members calls another forum 4th law of robotics Nov 2012 #72
Also: scientific, peer reviewed studies regarding the patriarchy, objectification 4th law of robotics Nov 2012 #76
Understanding and Collaboratively Treating Parental Alienation Syndrome redqueen Nov 2012 #9
The concept of PAS (at least Gardner's version of it) is not well accepted in the medical community Major Nikon Nov 2012 #10
Do you personally believe that this is a real occurrence? 4th law of robotics Nov 2012 #13
It is real. It really does happen, and there are enough first-hand accounts to demonstrate it. lumberjack_jeff Nov 2012 #15
"children's advocacy which is really mom's advocacy" 4th law of robotics Nov 2012 #16
I think the concept is a real thing, I'm just not convinced of Gardner's version of it Major Nikon Nov 2012 #17
Agreed 4th law of robotics Nov 2012 #21
The extraordinary fight over "parental alienation syndrome" and what it means for divorce cases. redqueen Nov 2012 #35
"But no hypothesis so rooted in gender bias should be credited by medical science." lumberjack_jeff Nov 2012 #39
Yes, the MRA spin is extremely popular all over the net. Most people don't bother to argue. redqueen Nov 2012 #43
So when the rate of incidence doesn't support your claims, you change the subject Major Nikon Nov 2012 #54
Many abusers use custody battles as way to seek control redqueen Nov 2012 #36
This is nothing more than an opinion piece disguised as journalism Major Nikon Nov 2012 #56
Here's my take: One, words like "Syndrome" are way overused. Warren DeMontague Nov 2012 #59
I completely agree... Bonobo Nov 2012 #65
Its a shame when the adults cant put their personal shit aside for the sake of the kids. Warren DeMontague Nov 2012 #66
It's not just about divorce. In fact, forget about divorce. Bonobo Nov 2012 #67
I don't know. lumberjack_jeff Nov 2012 #73
If you want to see how the smear campaign works, read this Major Nikon Nov 2012 #68
I think we should take a moment and be thankful that some forums 4th law of robotics Nov 2012 #70
Parental Alienation mikejeffries Nov 2012 #78
Thank you but as far as them being "equal numbers"... Bonobo Nov 2012 #79
When people say men and women do something bad in equal numbers 4th law of robotics Nov 2012 #80
I just don't think the numbers are equal Major Nikon Nov 2012 #81
Welcome to DU! hrmjustin Nov 2012 #82

Fridays Child

(23,998 posts)
1. This happens both ways.
Sun Nov 18, 2012, 09:57 PM
Nov 2012

If someone wants to claim that mothers alienate children from fathers more often or vice versa, reliable data need to be presented. Considering the nature of the issue, I doubt that such data exist.

Bonobo

(29,257 posts)
2. Opportunity to do so is clearly in favor of mothers.
Sun Nov 18, 2012, 10:00 PM
Nov 2012

I don't know how it would be possible to present reliable data on a soft science issue such as this. You said it yourself: "Considering the nature of the issue, I doubt that such data exist." I agree with you on that, so why demand data when you know it cannot really be measured like that?

However, common sense can be applied along with experience in order to easily come to the conclusion that is is more often perpetrated by mothers.

TreasonousBastard

(43,049 posts)
4. Considering that courts almost automatically give custody to the mother...
Mon Nov 19, 2012, 03:53 AM
Nov 2012

the few times a father is awarded custody in a divorce would imply the mother is some piece of work and is being bashed by more than the ex-husband.

Anyway, yeah, we know it's happening, but just how do we gather the data?

 

4th law of robotics

(6,801 posts)
3. Assuming both men and women are equally inclined to this sort of petty vengeance
Sun Nov 18, 2012, 10:17 PM
Nov 2012

that would mean that overwhelmingly it would be women doing it as children raised by single parents are overwhelmingly raised by the mother, not the father.

 

Hemp_is_good

(49 posts)
7. My dad would have slapped me if i bad-mouthed my mother
Tue Nov 20, 2012, 03:25 AM
Nov 2012

my mother was not quite as kind.
My dad has always loved my mother, but it was clear they could not live together, so they divorced.
Dad absolutely forbade me from saying ill against my mother, and always made a point to take her side when it was relevant.

my mother was less magnanimous, but rarely made overt ill towards dad, but it was inferred a great deal.
My parents were, overall, very very very civilized and grown up about their divorce.
I was around 10 when it happened.

But living mostly with my mother (I preferred living with dad but he sent me back to take care of my mother's sanity) I learned all the great things about being a liberal, feminist... and never learned how to properly be a man. this did great harm to my ability to not only interact with my male peers (foot ball is stupid and brutal) but with girls on anymore than as a good friend.

Being a nice guy who never gets dates is NOT good for the ego or self esteem / worth and my first relationship was a very abusive one... to me. How i was brought up, I thought I was supposed to be treated that way.

My other relationships were not too much better.
I've always been more self harming than anything. always assuming i'm in the wrong, that the woman is always in the right.

I know that's unhealthy... now. but then it seemed the natural way of things. I'm always wrong is a fact of nature... what a great thing to teach your son!

 

lumberjack_jeff

(33,224 posts)
6. If mothers were as often alienated from their kids as fathers are...
Mon Nov 19, 2012, 07:04 PM
Nov 2012

... the claim that both sides do it would have more believablility.

Women tend to manipulate people emotionally, men tend to manipulate people through fear and intimidation.

ProudToBeBlueInRhody

(16,399 posts)
5. Personally, I've found a lot of equal opportunity in the people I know in this spot
Mon Nov 19, 2012, 10:20 AM
Nov 2012

Sometimes, when you have the child less in your custody, the poisoning of the well is done quicker and more severely.

ElboRuum

(4,717 posts)
12. No, it isn't. On that you are correct.
Tue Nov 20, 2012, 01:29 PM
Nov 2012

As such, the subject probably merits a little discussion. Although a "link toss" without personally commenting doesn't really qualify so much as discussion, I'll deal with what I've been given.

Your first three sources are certainly fodder for conversation. Although, I do believe that that conversation would be rather short lived, as all three paint PAS as a non-existent phenomenon, when I know that in particularly vicious divorces it is not at all unheard of for the parent or parents to attempt poisoning the children against the other parent. I find any suggestion that this action cannot have a lasting effect on a child's emotional well being or contribute to future issues with socialization as an adult quite suspect. Yet that is precisely what these three links suggest.

The fourth link, well, having precisely NOTHING to do with the subject at hand, is quite easily dismissed as shit-stirring pap.

Perhaps, in your more regular haunts, this would be enough to garner your post some attention and a few kudos. Here, not so much.

redqueen

(115,164 posts)
18. The 14 year old, discredited piece in your OP is broken down in my next post.
Tue Nov 20, 2012, 03:24 PM
Nov 2012

Which, naturally, you did not bother to respond to.

Frankly, if one has done any significant amount of reading of the current information about this 'syndrome', a link toss is all that should be necessary.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mobileweb/2012/09/21/parental-alienation-is-no_n_1904310.html

ElboRuum

(4,717 posts)
19. Well, it isn't my OP...
Tue Nov 20, 2012, 03:52 PM
Nov 2012

If you'd paid attention to the name on the OP, you'd be aware of that. Your next post did not require response, because you there also failed to share anything of your own in it as well. I could have responded similarly, but that would be redundant. You may consider this a response to the other if it suits you.

You've supplied links and excerpts to support a point you never went as far as to make.

Those links, after a bit of perusal, do not offer refutations along any scientific rationale except in the oblique. Their primary focus is driven primarily by advocacy and court presence, and as we are all aware, courtrooms are not laboratories, unless you count political experimentation.

To be honest, if, as you say, I have not done any significant amount of reading of the current information about this syndrome (nice use of scare quotes, by the way), then the links you did toss would do little to correct my ignorance on the matter being short on actual scientific study and long on advocacy.

What claim are you making here? Perhaps that would clear up any misunderstandings.

redqueen

(115,164 posts)
20. Mea culpa, I thought Bonobo had replied to me. I did pay attention to that name,
Tue Nov 20, 2012, 04:15 PM
Nov 2012

it was yours I glanced over.

All I can say is, if you read the information at those links and your only response is to claim that short of lab experiments, you will dismiss it, then we have nothing further to discuss.

ElboRuum

(4,717 posts)
24. As a rational person...
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 08:54 AM
Nov 2012

I require facts. Opinions aren't factual. Conjectures aren't factual. I suppose they could transition to fact if supported by experimentation and evaluation, subjecting them to serious inquiry. And it is a psychological phenomenon we are talking about so, ABSOLUTELY, I will require some sort of scientific validation to accept things as factual in that arena.

What you provided me is an advocacy trail. I don't trust scientists with matters of law, and I don't trust lawyers with matters of science. These are what I would call outside the realms of their respective expertise.

As a rational person, I suppose I will have to dismiss it, you've given me no other alternative.

redqueen

(115,164 posts)
25. Yes, of course. Any rational person would not consider this to be evidence.
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 10:16 AM
Nov 2012

1996). Child custody evaluation practices: A 1996 survey of psychologists. Family Law Quarterly, 30, 565-586.

Research has found that many custody evaluators consider alienation of more significance than domestic violence in making custody recommendations. A survey of 201 psychologists from 39 states who conducted custody evaluations indicated that domestic violence was not considered by most to be a major factor in making custody determinations. Conversely, three-quarters of the custody evaluators recommended denying sole or joint custody to a parent who "alienates the child from the other parent by negatively interpreting the other parent's behavior."

Bemiller, Michelle. (2008). When Battered Mothers Lose Custody: A Qualitative Study of Abuse at Home and in the Courts. Journal of Child Custody, 5(3/4), 228-255. Available here ($)

Abstract: The following study adds to research that examines child custody cases involving a history of interpersonal violence. This study contributes to past research by providing qualitative accounts of women's experiences with intimate partner violence prior to custody loss, institutional abuse at the hands of the family court, and abuse experienced after custody loss. Data come from a convenience sample of 16 noncustodial mothers from northeastern Ohio. Findings support past research, which finds corruption, denial of due process, and gender bias in the family court system. Policy recommendations are made and future research directions suggested.

ElboRuum

(4,717 posts)
61. I'm only going to reply to this post.
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 08:20 PM
Nov 2012

I simply don't have the time to go through this pile of... stuff... to reply to each individually.

First, are you saying through the flurry of replies to the same post that it was literally inconceivable for you to consolidate this "evidence" into a single post? Seriously, how the hell do you expect to reply to any of it if you won't even adhere to that simple courtesy?

Or was that the point? Sluice the thread with a big pile of anecdotals, advocacy briefs, and rhetorical fallacies and hope that something sticks to the wall? Nice to know that when questioned, rather than answer the question, you simply start spamming the thread with a lot of noise.

Note that in all of this I still don't know what specifically you are claiming to prove with it, since you've never actually mentioned points that you were attempting to make with any of your posts, but whatever, I'm not holding my breath for that. To whit, regardless of the point, one thing that is missing from all of your posts in this thread is you a single shred of peer-reviewed scientific validation for the (presumed) conjecture that the phenomenon discussed in the OP does not exist, even if conceptually rather than in the terms Gardner presents. This, of course, was the point of discussion here. Rather, you have only presented how the legal system may view it, which means precisely nothing in this context. As I said before, I do not trust lawyers with science. Their purpose is advocacy, to get what they can for their clients, and are rarely interested in the truth as reasoned people understand it.

redqueen

(115,164 posts)
26. And this, too, is certainly not evidence that most high conflict divorces involve domestic violence.
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 10:38 AM
Nov 2012

No, its all just moms bad mouthing innocent dads. That's all. Theres absolutely no reason to think that abusive dads would lie and say they're not abusers. Of course not.

Peter Jaffe is one of the world's leading experts on children, domestic violence, and custody.

- Peter Jaffe, Michelle Zerwer, & Samantha Poisson, (2004),"ACCESS DENIED: The Barriers of Violence and Poverty for Abused Women and their Children After Separation," p. 1.

In "Access Denied", Jaffe states the following:

"Myth: Domestic violence is rarely a problem for divorcing couples involved in a child custody dispute." Fact: The majority of parents in "high-conflict divorces" involving child custody disputes report a history of domestic violence."

Jaffe et al also lists the following studies (with the following descriptions) as supporting the position that most custody litigants have had a history of domestic violence:

In a review of parents referred for child custody evaluations by the court, domestic violence was raised in 75% of the cases. - Jaffe, P.G. & Austin, G. (1995). The Impact of Witnessing Violence on Children in Custody and Visitation Disputes. Paper presented at the Fourth International Family Violence Research Conference, Durham NH (Rep. No. July 1995)

Of 2,500 families entering mediation in CA, approximately three quarters of parents indicated that domestic violence had occurred during the relationship. -Hirst, 2002

Between 70-75% of parents referred by the family court for counseling because of failed mediation or continuing disputes over the care of their children, physical aggression had taken place. -Johnston & Campbell, (1988), Impasses of Divorce: The dynamics and resolution of family conflict. New York, NY, US: The Free Press.

Attempts to leave a violent partner with children, is one of the most significant factors associated with severe domestic violence and death. - Websdale, N. (1999). Understanding Domestic Homicide. Boston, MA: University Press.

A majority of separating parents are able to develop a post-separation parenting plan for their children with minimal intervention of the family court system. However, in 20% of the cases greater intervention was required by lawyers, court-related personnel (such as mediators and evaluators) and judges. In the majority of these cases, which are commonly referred to as "high-conflict," domestic violence is a significant issue. - Johnston, J. R. (1994). "High-conflict divorce." Future of Children, 4, 165-182.

Major Nikon

(36,900 posts)
29. Do you really want to go there?
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 11:03 AM
Nov 2012
Women were slightly more likely (d = -.05) than men to use one or more act of physical aggression and to use such acts more frequently.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10989615



The largest percentage of perpetrators (83.9 percent) was parents, including birth parents, adoptive parents, and stepparents.30 How do fathers compare to mothers in the perpetration of child maltreatment? As discussed earlier, Federal data derived from CPS reports in 2003 indicate that in 18.8 percent of the substantiated cases, fathers were the sole perpetrators of maltreatment; in 16.9 percent of the cases, the fathers and the mothers were perpetrators; and in 1.1 percent of the cases, the father acted with someone else to abuse or neglect his child. Mothers were the sole perpetrators in 40.8 percent of the cases and acted with someone besides the father in 6.3 percent of the cases.31 This means that fathers were involved in 36.8 percent of child maltreatment cases and that mothers were involved in 64 percent of child maltreatment cases.

http://www.childwelfare.gov/pubs/usermanuals/fatherhood/chapterthree.cfm

redqueen

(115,164 posts)
27. Some more non evidence...
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 10:43 AM
Nov 2012
Studies conducted by the National Center for State Courts (NCSC), looking solely at court records, have found documented evidence of domestic violence in 20-55% of contested custody cases.

The NCSC's study, looking only at documented domestic violence in custody court records, found that 24% of court records contained some evidence of domestic violence in Louisville; 27% in Baltimore; and 55% of Las Vegas cases indicated domestic violence. - Susan Keilitz et al, Ðomestic Violence and Child Custody Disputes: A Resource Handbook for Judges and Court Managers, prepared for the National Center for State Courts; State Justice Institute," NCSC Publication Number R- 202, p. 5.

The same study found that a screening process (utilized by the mediation program) "revealed a much higher incidence of domestic violence than a review of court records alone would have indicated." - Id . at 7.


redqueen

(115,164 posts)
28. And let's have a look at the person who invented this syndrome.
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 10:52 AM
Nov 2012

Last edited Wed Nov 21, 2012, 11:32 AM - Edit history (1)

http://www.leadershipcouncil.org/1/pas/RAG.html

Richard A. Gardner, M.D., is the creator of the creator and main proponent for Parental Alienation Syndrome (PAS) theory. Prior to his suicide, Gardner was an unpaid part-time clinical professor of child psychiatry at the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University . He made his money mainly as a forensic expert.

PAS was developed by Dr Richard Gardner in 1985 based on his personal observations and work as an expert witness, often on behalf of fathers accused of molesting their children. Gardner asserted that PAS is very common and he saw manifestations of this syndrome in over 90% of the custody conflicts he evaluated--even when abuse allegations are not raised (Gardner, 1987, p. 67).1 Gardner (September 6, 1993) claimed that PAS is "a disorder of children, arising almost exclusively in child-custody disputes, in which one parent (usually the mother) programs the child to hate the other parent (usually the father)."2

Gardner 's theory of PAS has had a profound effect on how the court systems in our country handle allegations of child sexual abuse, especially during divorce. Gardner has authored more than 250 books and articles with advice directed towards mental health professionals, the legal community, divorcing adults and their children. Gardner 's private publishing company, Creative Therapeutics, published his many books, cassettes, and videotapes.3 Information available on Gardner 's website indicates that he has been certified to testify as an expert in approximately 400 cases, both criminal and civil, in more than 25 states.4 Gardner 's work continues to serve as a basis for decisions affecting the welfare of children in courtrooms across the nation. He is considered a leading authority in family courts and has even been described as the "guru" of child custody evaluations.4

Because Gardner 's PAS theory is based on his clinical observations--not scientific data--it must be understood in the context of his extreme views concerning women, pedophilia and child sexual abuse.

...


Please do visit the page and read the selection of quotes which follow, so you can get some idea of how messed up this man was.

Just a personal anecdote, my own dad liked to beat my mom and me. He was also convinced that I and my siblings didn't like him because my mom was turning us against him. Anecdotal I know, but I've heard many children of abusers report the same thing: dear old dad may have been beating mom and the kids, or either one or the other, but was somehow convinced that it was the mom talking bad about him that caused his own family to hate him.

Funny coincidence, this PAS being used by so many fathers accused of abuse, don't you think?

redqueen

(115,164 posts)
32. More...
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 11:40 AM
Nov 2012

Kernic et al., "Children in the Crossfire: Child Custody Determinations Among Couples With a History of Intimate Partner Violence," Violence Against Women, Vol. 11, No. 8, August 2005, 991-1021, 1013,

Kernic et al. from the Harborview Injury Prevention & Research Center in Seattle, studied at divorce cases, including both those with a documented, substantiated, and/or alleged history of domestic violence, and those without. The study found that in 47.6% of cases with a documented, substantiated history, no mention of the abuse was found in the divorce case files. - Id . at 1005.

Kernic et al. found that "the court was made aware of less than one fourth of those cases with a substantiated history of intimate partner violence." -Id. at 1016.

Further, Kernic et al. found that fathers with a history of committing abuse were denied child visitation in only 17% of cases. Mothers in these cases were no more likely to obtain custody than mothers in non-abuse cases. This study found that mothers were "more likely" than fathers to be awarded sole custody, but does not identify what proportion of cases resulted in equal sharing of physical custody (which is available in Washington even when one parent is designated "primary&quot . - Id. at 1014-1015.

Major Nikon

(36,900 posts)
63. This study ONLY researched male-perpetrated domestic violence
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 09:06 PM
Nov 2012

It's already been pointed out that women are at least as likely as men to initiate spousal abuse. Kinda hard to be objective when you only look at one side of the coin.

 

4th law of robotics

(6,801 posts)
71. I found a way to guarantee a heads up for every flip of the coin
Thu Nov 22, 2012, 10:41 AM
Nov 2012

Just lable all tails as outliers and exclude them.

Science!

Major Nikon

(36,900 posts)
74. I took a look at the "study"
Thu Nov 22, 2012, 11:02 AM
Nov 2012

It was authored by 4 women, all of which appeared to have authored studies with the same slant. The study was published in the "peer-reviewed" Violence Against Women journal. Kinda hard to imagine how dissenting opinions could ever have much hope in that environment. If you look at my post 68, you can do a google search and find some of the same web sites where this person is getting their information also provide links to the Breaking the Silence: Children's Stories garbage documentary on youtube. Very telling that.

Evidently this is what qualifies as fair and balanced to some, yet this same poster is quick to deride and dismiss anything and everything that has ever been uttered by any "MRA" regardless of where it originated or how factual or relevant it is. The same poster then complains that everyone is ignoring the clearly one-sided slant that is being spewed. I suppose the reasoning is that if everyone just lived in the echo chamber they have created for themselves, they might have a different point of view.

 

4th law of robotics

(6,801 posts)
75. Conclusion based science
Thu Nov 22, 2012, 11:38 AM
Nov 2012

Not really a science but with some external similarities (charts and graphs and sciencey words).

But ultimately it fails at being a science because the conclusion is immutable. Evidence is then sought to back the conclusion.

It is exactly the same as creationist scientists doing studies to prove their unchangeable beliefs.

Conclusion: men are awful, women are victims. Now found the correct data to match that basic tennet.

Also why real scientists welcome dissent whereas the people here... well go offer a dissenting opinio.n and see what happens

redqueen

(115,164 posts)
33. And I guess these are just opinions...
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 11:42 AM
Nov 2012

Silva, Gina, & Sax, Robin. (Sept. 10, 2012). Damon's Story: Lost in the System. Fox 11 News (Los Angeles).

A 16 year old boy speaks out about how the family court system has failed to protect him from his abusive father. According to Damon, the sexual abuse started when he was six. He now tells his story which he's been trying to tell for years, mostly through YouTube. Read more: http://www.myfoxla.com/story/19502814/damons-story-a-first-look#ixzz26Sd6wPt2

Major Nikon

(36,900 posts)
52. Looks more like an anecdotal appeal to emotion
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 04:11 PM
Nov 2012

Not much more relevant than bringing up how the system fails to stop women who drown their kids in the bathtub.

redqueen

(115,164 posts)
34. Another opinion
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 11:51 AM
Nov 2012

Dennis Ferrier. Mother who became fugitive to protect son returns to court. (Aug 27, 2012). WSMV News (Nashville, TN)

In 2008, Dunn was told by her son's pediatrician the boy was being sexually assaulted. An 11-person state investigative team looked into it and decided Cone, the boys' father, was sexually abusing his son. But when Dunn went to court in front of Hicks, she not only didn't win her case, she also lost primary custody of her son.

Then came new allegations this summer by the boy that led to an FBI investigation and federal search warrants. The FBI even accompanied Dunn to Robertson County earlier this month to again appear in front of Hicks to ask for an order of protection.

"They brought copies of warrants for search and seizure," Dunn said. "He said he wasn't granting it and that I would need to return my son to his father that day.

That's when Dunn walked out of the courtroom and became a fugitive from the law

 

lumberjack_jeff

(33,224 posts)
37. You're spamming.
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 12:30 PM
Nov 2012

You could have attempted to make your point in one post, and then addressed the relevant and very good question offered in post #29.

redqueen

(115,164 posts)
40. My apologies for using many posts to share the evidence
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 12:51 PM
Nov 2012

that is being ignored
for whatever reason.


I can't see post 29.

 

lumberjack_jeff

(33,224 posts)
42. major nikon asked this;
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 01:00 PM
Nov 2012

Women were slightly more likely (d = -.05) than men to use one or more act of physical aggression and to use such acts more frequently.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10989615



The largest percentage of perpetrators (83.9 percent) was parents, including birth parents, adoptive parents, and stepparents.30 How do fathers compare to mothers in the perpetration of child maltreatment? As discussed earlier, Federal data derived from CPS reports in 2003 indicate that in 18.8 percent of the substantiated cases, fathers were the sole perpetrators of maltreatment; in 16.9 percent of the cases, the fathers and the mothers were perpetrators; and in 1.1 percent of the cases, the father acted with someone else to abuse or neglect his child. Mothers were the sole perpetrators in 40.8 percent of the cases and acted with someone besides the father in 6.3 percent of the cases.31 This means that fathers were involved in 36.8 percent of child maltreatment cases and that mothers were involved in 64 percent of child maltreatment cases.

http://www.childwelfare.gov/pubs/usermanuals/fatherhood/chapterthree.cfm

It is possible that your statements are being ignored for the same reason you couldn't see his post.

redqueen

(115,164 posts)
45. No, it isn't possible, if his post was in response to mine.
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 01:08 PM
Nov 2012

What is the question?

He asked and answered the only one I see. It isn't even directly related to the topic of this thread anyway.

 

lumberjack_jeff

(33,224 posts)
48. Sure it is.
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 01:18 PM
Nov 2012

Your contention (albeit presented in a sarcastic manner) is that allegations of parental alienation are (often? usually? always?) intended as a proactive defense by a battering husband who wants the kids so that he can continue to abuse them and their mother.

When in fact, abusive fathers and battering husbands are a minority compared to the more prevalent abusive mother and physically violent wife.

This country governs by stereotype and not data, so the problems that the stereotypes are meant to explain are worsened - relationships are more physically violent and child abuse and neglect go unaddressed.

For the subset of parents who abuse and neglect, alienation is simply another arrow in their quiver.

redqueen

(115,164 posts)
49. No, it isn't. It is impossible to reply to posts made by people on your ignore list.
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 01:36 PM
Nov 2012

As for the water muddying done with these abuse statistics, you're failing to consider the fact that you have no idea how many abusive mothers are involved in divorce cases where there are contested custody issues.

We do know of many documented cases where abusive.fathers have manipulated the courts, using PAS as a factor, to try to control or continue to abuse their family members.

Do you know of any documented cases where fathers involved in divorces with contested custody issues used PAS to try to protect their children from abusive mothers?

Warren DeMontague

(80,708 posts)
50. Coming into this group and demanding people listen to you while simultaenously complaining that they
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 03:00 PM
Nov 2012

are on your ignore list, is not conducive to discussion nor does it fit, to my mind, the spirit of the group SOP.

My first suggestion would be to stop using the ignore feature if you are so concerned about open communication. My second would be to please stop spamming the thread, as Jeff has asked.

Major Nikon

(36,900 posts)
53. So you are admitting the very best evidence you have is anecdotal
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 04:21 PM
Nov 2012

Furthermore you are ignoring the much more relevant statistical incidence of women who abuse children (which is twice as high as men) while simultaneously claiming that everyone else is ignoring your anecdotal evidence.

Major Nikon

(36,900 posts)
57. I know
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 04:38 PM
Nov 2012

This doesn't strike me as my problem. If anything it's a net positive because it probably means my posts are that much less subject to frivolous alerts. Although due to the incidence of sock puppetry, I'm not entirely sure how much good this does.

 

4th law of robotics

(6,801 posts)
60. "We do know of many documented cases . . . ."
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 06:25 PM
Nov 2012
We do know of many documented cases where abusive.fathers have manipulated the courts, using PAS as a factor, to try to control or continue to abuse their family members.


Yeah because family court is known for being oh so willing to give fathers the benefit of the doubt and stick it to the mothers.



Do you ever stop to read your own propaganda before posting it?

Do you know of any documented cases where fathers involved in divorces with contested custody issues used PAS to try to protect their children from abusive mothers?


Apparently all fathers are abusive or at best indifferent to abuse. Perhaps the reason no father has used this successfully is that it is such a vague and difficult to prove syndrome that it would likely be laughed out of court (if a male brought it up). The mother needs to physically abuse the child severely in front of the judge to have even a fifty/fifty chance of losing custody. So saying she is being emotionally abusive will accomplish exactly nothing.

Now she could always say the husband hit her with no evidence and gain custody immediately . . .

/also you complain that people are ignoring you then admit that you have many people here on ignore so . . . how do you know people aren't responding to you?

Response to lumberjack_jeff (Reply #37)

 

lumberjack_jeff

(33,224 posts)
14. Couldn't get past the first link.
Tue Nov 20, 2012, 02:31 PM
Nov 2012

Essentially they "scientifically studied" the occurrence of false abuse claims by reading Canadian family court rulings in 196 family (civil) cases. Of women who claimed that their husband was abusing the children, judges felt that 1% were false. Of men who claimed that their wife was abusing the children, judges felt that 21% were false.

There's so much wrong with this.
a) the only thing this proves is bias among Canadian family court judges.
b) a civil judge isn't a person to ask about guilt for criminal acts.
c) scientific? It's quantifying people's stereotypes and biases to three decimal places.

Major Nikon

(36,900 posts)
22. It was written by a lawyer on behalf of a battered women advocacy organization
Tue Nov 20, 2012, 07:27 PM
Nov 2012

By the author's own admission the purpose was to direct others on how to legally challenge allegations of parental alienation. The very best you can say about it is that it's a one-sided look at the issue. The author makes frequent references to abusive fathers and as far as I can tell no references to abusive mothers even though "mothers are almost twice as likely to be directly involved in child maltreatment as fathers" per HHS.
http://www.childwelfare.gov/pubs/usermanuals/fatherhood/chapterthree.cfm

Kinda makes you go hmmmmm.

Bonobo

(29,257 posts)
23. I am still quite convinced this describes a common issue.
Tue Nov 20, 2012, 07:50 PM
Nov 2012

I found the link to the article I posted after looking for something that would back up my own strong belief in the validity and scope of this problem. Not the reverse (i.e I did not conclude this was an issue after reading the article).

redqueen

(115,164 posts)
31. Yes, people doing shitty things is very common.
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 11:34 AM
Nov 2012

And parents of either sex denigrating the other is definitely one of those things.

The mistake is thinking that it is primarily mothers who engage in it.

Or that it has any merit as a factor which should be used by courts when determining contested custody arrangements.

 

lumberjack_jeff

(33,224 posts)
38. It is primarily mothers who have custody and fathers who are alienated.
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 12:33 PM
Nov 2012

If it is "very common", then it is primarily mothers doing it.

redqueen

(115,164 posts)
41. It is very common in families, not just divorce cases.
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 12:55 PM
Nov 2012

And in those divorce cases where custody is contentious, where domestic violence is so often an issue, then there is even more reason to question these allegations.

 

lumberjack_jeff

(33,224 posts)
44. Mothers are more often perpetrators of abuse and neglect.
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 01:08 PM
Nov 2012
Mothers are almost twice as likely to be directly involved in child maltreatment as fathers.

http://www.childwelfare.gov/pubs/usermanuals/fatherhood/chapterthree.cfm


Fathers in the home are a protective factor for children.

By contrast, children who live in father-absent homes often face higher risks of physical abuse, sexual abuse, and neglect than children who live with their fathers. A 1997 Federal study indicated that the overall rate of child maltreatment among single-parent families was almost double that of the rate among two-parent families: 27.4 children per 1,000 were maltreated in single-parent families, compared to 15.5 per 1,000 in two-parent families. One national study found that 7 percent of children who had lived with one parent had ever been sexually abused, compared to 4 percent of children who lived with both biological parents.

redqueen

(115,164 posts)
46. Yes, you left this part out.
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 01:14 PM
Nov 2012
Mothers are almost twice as likely to be directly involved in child maltreatment as fathers. Mothers are more likely to abuse or neglect their children than fathers because they bear a larger share of parenting responsibilities in two-parent families and because a large percentage of families today are headed by mothers. In some communities, they are the majority.


Regardless, this thread is about PAS.

I understand why you would want to change the subject though.

Major Nikon

(36,900 posts)
58. I'm not really sure how you think that helps your argument
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 04:52 PM
Nov 2012

It simply demonstrates the negative effects associated with having mothers as the primary custodian. You can't simply assume that the statistics would be reversed if the gender roles were reversed. In fact, given that children are less safe in single parent households where the mother is custodian, there is plenty of evidence to suggest the opposite.

 

lumberjack_jeff

(33,224 posts)
77. Ah yes... the excuse part. At least we now know you read the link.
Thu Nov 22, 2012, 12:42 PM
Nov 2012

Would this be the bargaining or the denial phase?

I'm sure that the fathers who are solely responsible for 19% of child abuse cases have good reasons just like the mothers who are responsible for 41%.

Bonobo

(29,257 posts)
64. Though it is obvious to me that women engage in this more, it isn't vital to this discussion.
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 09:19 PM
Nov 2012

This is the Men's Group where we discuss Men's Issues.

Here, the fact that women undermine fathers' roles by bad-mouthing, poisoning children against them and occasionally even punishing kids to get back at their husbands is the issue I have chosen to discuss.

That it occurs, often, is beyond argument. That women have more opportunity to engage in it is also beyond argument. Men are more often outside the house and, in some cultures like Japan, it is even more common than the US. The myth that men are outside the house because they WANT to be is pushed a lot but quite false in many cases.

Anyway...

We will continue with the discussion if it is quite all right with you.

Thanks for popping by.

redqueen

(115,164 posts)
69. Where are your scientific, peer-reviewed studies proving that mothers do it more often?
Thu Nov 22, 2012, 07:57 AM
Nov 2012

That's a joke of course, because obviously that kind of thing is only an issue sometimes, in here.

It's funny how logic works within the confines of this group.

Happy Thanksgiving. I will most gladly leave you all to your echo chamber, and no longer trouble you with any information you'd rather not be shared here.

I will say it is more than troubling that Gardner's views on pedophiles and pedophilia raised not one single eyebrow here. Unless someone whom I have on ignore said something... I'd be willing to bet that didn't happen though. Please do let me know if I'm wrong in that assumption. That would definitely be something to be thankful for.

redqueen

(115,164 posts)
9. Understanding and Collaboratively Treating Parental Alienation Syndrome
Tue Nov 20, 2012, 11:18 AM
Nov 2012
http://www.fact.on.ca/Info/pas/waldron.htm

... Earlier researchers had rioted similar processes in families (for example, the "medea complex" described by Wallerstein and Kelly in the late 1970s), and professionals working with divorcing families easily recognized the syndrome, sometimes described as brainwashing, presented by Gardner. That his "syndrome" was so readily adopted is less a testament to Dr. Gardner's "discovery" than to his conceptualizing a familiar type of high-conflict divorcing family problem that is complex, perplexing, very resistant to change; and sometimes tragic.

Gardner's conceptualization of the problem and the dynamics underlying the problem proved at best incomplete, if not simplistic and erroneous. He portrays the alienating parent as virtually solely responsible for the dynamic, turning the vulnerable child against the innocent target parent. More extensive research on the topic(3) has more clearly established the complex involvement and motives of all of the actors in this disastrous family drama. ...

...

Think of the opportunity here. If a lawyer representing an accused child sex abuser can find a mental health professional who will testify that the children are victims of PAS, the same expert can take the next step to say that it would be rare for a child suffering from PAS to suffer genuine sexual abuse. By simply naming the child's antipathy for the parent as PAS, the lawyer has a defense.

...

The article attacks Dr. Gardner in strong terms. The commentator points out that the PAS theory is built upon criteria that Dr. Gardner invented and included in his widely discredited sex abuse legitimacy scale. It then goes on to argue that testimony regarding PAS should be excluded from the court both under the Daubert test and under the Frye analysis. Under Daubert, the trier of fact must rule on admissibility based on an expert's opinion as to whether the evidence is reliable and thus relevant. Under Federal Rule of Evidence 104(a), the trial judge must make a preliminary assessment of whether the reasoning or methodology underlying the testimony is scientifically valid. in other words, the court may consider whether the theory has been tested, whether it has been subjected to peer review and publication, and whether it has attracted widespread acceptance.(7)

...

Major Nikon

(36,900 posts)
10. The concept of PAS (at least Gardner's version of it) is not well accepted in the medical community
Tue Nov 20, 2012, 12:54 PM
Nov 2012

However, the concept itself is well accepted. There just isn't much in the way of empirical testing that proves anything which rises to the level of "syndrome" as Gardner describes it. This doesn't mean the entire concept is invalid.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parental_alienation

 

4th law of robotics

(6,801 posts)
13. Do you personally believe that this is a real occurrence?
Tue Nov 20, 2012, 01:59 PM
Nov 2012

That parents, often mothers, turn their kids against the other parent in a particularly nasty divorce as a sort of revenge?

And if so would you consider it rising to the level of child abuse?

Because your link seems to be arguing that this isn't a real thing and was simply made up to excuse/cover up sexual abuse (which given that the PAS accusation is usually leveled against the mother claiming it is a fiction to excuse the other parent of sexual abuse just fits in with the tired old mantra that all males are sexual deviants out to harm children).

 

lumberjack_jeff

(33,224 posts)
15. It is real. It really does happen, and there are enough first-hand accounts to demonstrate it.
Tue Nov 20, 2012, 02:36 PM
Nov 2012

It really shouldn't be subject to controversy. There is an industry (of which the links in RQ's post are exemplary), which has sprung up in the name of children's advocacy which is really mom's advocacy,

 

4th law of robotics

(6,801 posts)
16. "children's advocacy which is really mom's advocacy"
Tue Nov 20, 2012, 02:48 PM
Nov 2012

The sad fact is that to a great many people this is seen as redundant.

Hence we hear about "the good of the mother and child". Never "the good of the father and child". That sentence just sounds weird doesn't it? Why would a father want to be around his child? He must be some sort of pervert or at best he's doing that to harm the mother-child relationship out of spite. ( from me, utter sincerity from others).

It's assumed that mothers A) want to raise their children, B) want to do what is right for their child and C) are always mentally capable doing both A and B.

Which is why the mom has to be something special to lose custody in a divorce. Whereas the dad pretty much has to be a saint *and* hope that the mother physically abuses the child in front of the judge if he's to have any hope of gaining custody.

This would be a great sentiment if women were perfect. Or if motherhood transformed even deeply flawed and selfish individuals in to wise care-givers.

But since women are human and subject to all the flaws that men are that simply means that we're limiting the options of creating a stable home for a child by assuming that the child must go with the mom. If she's the best parent sure. If she isn't then absolutely not.

This would be another area where equality would be seen as quite oppressive to women. Going from 90% or so custody to 50/50 would be considered a major step down by most women I would suspect.

/but I believe there are many people who will never acknowledge this. To say otherwise is to reveal that women are just as flawed as men and that men aren't some horrible threat to be protected from but rather are just people. And women aren't saints to be protected but rather are just people. It goes against too many deeply held views. Let's see if RQ proves me wrong. I'd very much like for her to do so and acknowledge that abuse isn't a male problem. It's a people problem.

Major Nikon

(36,900 posts)
17. I think the concept is a real thing, I'm just not convinced of Gardner's version of it
Tue Nov 20, 2012, 03:14 PM
Nov 2012

If you look at the entire spectrum on the school of thought on parental alienation, Gardner is on the extreme end of the debate. He argues that the condition is a full blown mental disorder, which I'm not really prepared to accept based on what's out there so far. Maybe it is, and maybe it isn't. I just haven't seen a good proof of it. However, I think the concept of parental alienation is most certainly valid and is quite commonly used by parents in custody battles.

 

4th law of robotics

(6,801 posts)
21. Agreed
Tue Nov 20, 2012, 04:26 PM
Nov 2012

I think it may be child abuse at some point.

Otherwise it is just horrible parenting that does little to help anyone (even the parent engaging in it in the long run).

Frankly I think any parent who would use a child as a pawn to settle their own personal issues is pretty much unfit to be a parent. But that could be hard to define/enforce.

redqueen

(115,164 posts)
35. The extraordinary fight over "parental alienation syndrome" and what it means for divorce cases.
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 12:02 PM
Nov 2012
http://www.slate.com/id/2294831/

...

The most worrisome aspect of the legal fight over parental alienation syndrome may be that it divides supporters and opponents along strict gender lines: As a rule, this is classed as a women's sickness alleged by men. Fathers' rights groups are not solely to blame for the fact that an entire "disease" is predicated on the notion that women are lying liars; the inventor of the syndrome can take responsibility for that. But no hypothesis so rooted in gender bias should be credited by medical science. And because evidence of PAS is so frequently offered to counter maternal allegations of abuse, the experts testifying about PAS can be aiding and abetting a system that takes children from abused mothers and hands them right back to abusive fathers. Once again, this doesn't mean that some parents don't alienate their children in a divorce. It means that PAS is now used to discredit women whenever they claim abuse.

Much of the blame for the biased history of PAS can be laid at the feet of its originator, Dr. Richard Gardner, who developed the theory—from his own practice and without clinical studies—of mothers who foster hatred for their children's father as a ''powerful weapon'' to grab custody for themselves. This wasn't a theory born of objective empirical observation. It was a campaign against mothers rooted in the idea that they regularly lie and then "brainwash" their children into lying about paternal abuse. Because of Gardner's gender-freighted conclusions, it was probably inevitable that men, in the form of fathers' rights groups, would seize upon the battle to legitimize PAS. One of its most famous spokesmen became Alec Baldwin, who wrote practically a whole book on the subject in 2008, arguing paradoxically that corrupt judges and the courts have too much power over custody disputes and that by recognizing PAS, the courts could make the whole child-custody process more fair. (Here is Baldwin describing PAS as something women mainly do to men.)

...

Gardner's long-term scientific credibility was not helped by some of his kookier pronouncements about incest ("intrafamilial pedophilia … is widespread and ... is probably an ancient tradition&quot , or pedophilia ("It is of interest that of all the ancient peoples it may very well be that the Jews were the only ones who were punitive toward pedophiles.&quot . But he still managed to become the David Barton of child-custody law, having written more than 250 books and articles, cassettes, and videotapes (often self-published) and testified as an expert in approximately 400 cases in more than 25 states.

...


That's what makes the current debate over inserting PAS into the DSM-5, which has been going on for years, something of a red herring. It almost doesn't matter. Nobody really believes it's a scientific theory anymore, and Gardner has been all but discredited where it counts. That's what worries Meier most of all: "Courts and experts have stopped talking about parental alienation syndrome and started talking about parental alienation," she says. "By dropping the word 'syndrome' they purport to just be describing a behavior; and that's harder to challenge as inadmissible, even though Parental Alienation is used virtually identically to PAS, with virtually identical quasi-scientific claims and prescriptions." Back when it was a matter of science, opponents of PAS could advance arguments about admissibility and scientific legitimacy. Now it's a conclusory legal term that can barely be refuted.

...



But this is just more liberal / progressive nonsense, I'm sure. Easily ignored or dismissed. Right, guys?

redqueen

(115,164 posts)
43. Yes, the MRA spin is extremely popular all over the net. Most people don't bother to argue.
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 01:05 PM
Nov 2012
http://www.nij.gov/topics/crime/intimate-partner-violence/measuring.htm

...

NIJ researchers have found, however, that collecting various types of counts from men and women does not yield an accurate understanding of battering and serious injury occurring from intimate partner violence. National surveys supported by NIJ, CDC, and BJS that examine more serious assaults do not support the conclusion of similar rates of male and female spousal assaults. These surveys are conducted within a safety or crime context and clearly find more partner abuse by men against women.

For example, NVAWS found that women are significantly more likely than men to report being victims of intimate partner violence whether it is rape, physical assault, or stalking and whether the timeframe is the person's lifetime or the previous 12 months. [3] NCVS found that about 85 percent of victimizations by intimate partners in 1998 were against women. [4, 5]

The studies that find that women abuse men equally or even more than men abuse women are based on data compiled through the Conflict Tactics Scale (CTS), a survey tool developed in the 1970s. CTS may not be appropriate for intimate partner violence research because it does not measure control, coercion, or the motives for conflict tactics; it also leaves out sexual assault and violence by ex-spouses or partners and does not determine who initiated the violence. [6, 7]

A review of the research found that violence is instrumental in maintaining control and that more than 90 percent of "systematic, persistent, and injurious" violence is perpetrated by men. [8] BJS reports that 30 percent of female homicide victims are murdered by their intimate partners compared with 5 percent of male homicide victims, and that 22 percent of victims of nonfatal intimate partner violence are female but only 3 percent are male. [9] Researchers that use city- and State-generated databases for analysis, however, attribute 40–50 percent of female homicides to intimate partners. This discrepancy likely results from omission of ex-boyfriends and ex-girlfriends from the Federal Supplementary Homicide Reports that are used by BJS. Ex-boyfriends account for up to 11 percent of intimate partner homicides committed by men, and ex-girlfriends account for up to 3 percent of intimate partner homicides committed by women.

...


It's so much easier to ignore such claims, assuming that any reasonable person would see right through such nonsense.

Unfortunately many people seem not only to unquestioningly buy it hook, line, and sinker... but they also have absolutely no problem spreading such MRA ideology around as if it were fact.

Major Nikon

(36,900 posts)
54. So when the rate of incidence doesn't support your claims, you change the subject
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 04:30 PM
Nov 2012

This has very little, if anything to do with child custody disputes. When men assault female spouses, the seriousness of the injuries are greater. This simply reflects the reality that men are generally stronger than women and are able to inflict more damage. How this relates to custody disputes where women unquestionably have higher rates of child abuse is anyone's guess.

redqueen

(115,164 posts)
36. Many abusers use custody battles as way to seek control
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 12:20 PM
Nov 2012
http://www.news-leader.com/article/20120115/NEWS01/201150333/custody-battles-abusers?nclick_check=1

...

Missouri law requires divorce judges to consider the mental and physical health of people in the case and a history of any abuse. If a judge decides that awarding custody of a child to an abusive parent is in the child's best interest, the judge must explain this decision in writing.

Seal said this can happen if the abusive parent successfully manipulates the court system.

"Victims of domestic violence can be made to appear less healthy and less stable in court, especially without legal counsel, which is a result of the abuse they have suffered," Seal said. "Abusers capitalize on this appearance and present a cognitive frame to the court that they are the 'responsible parent,' and the victim is in fact mentally unstable and financially unwise. Far too often this results in abusers being given too much control over children and the non-abusive parent."

...

Toby Kleinman, a New Jersey attorney who is an associate editor of The Journal of Child Custody, said a schism sometimes exists between what the law says and how it is implemented. She said batterers, who are often male, often appear more professional and believable while the ex-wives come across as hysterical and angry.

"If you've been beaten time and time again, you might have post-traumatic stress syndrome," Kleinman said. "One of the hallmarks of PTSD is anger. Well, you're not supposed to be angry. One of the things that family courts want and expect from custodial parents is that they can set aside their anger for the welfare of the child. That's not an unreasonable request, except when you've been brutalized by the other parent."

Major Nikon

(36,900 posts)
56. This is nothing more than an opinion piece disguised as journalism
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 04:35 PM
Nov 2012

It assumes the "abusers" are most often men (which isn't true) and fails to provide one shred of evidence to support such an assumption. The very best you can say about it is that it's very sloppy journalism.

Warren DeMontague

(80,708 posts)
59. Here's my take: One, words like "Syndrome" are way overused.
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 05:16 PM
Nov 2012

I think divorce, child custody, etc. cases are inherently messy. And in many situations you have two principals whose word it is against the other, with no corroboration on either side.

I come from a divorced family. I'm of the opinion that in these sorts of situations, it is incumbent upon the adults to act like, again, the adults.

Sadly, it doesn't always work that way. I do think that divorce, child custody, etc. from a legal standpoint ought to be handled on a case-by-case basis. There are crappy moms out there, and stellar dads. And vice versa.

As far as "syndrome" goes, though, I feel it's yet another attempt to slap an authoritative-sounding label on something which is simply common, if unfortunate, human behavior. We see this all the time with the wordy sociological assertions coming from anti-porn crusaders, for instance; the male gaze heteronomative harmful objectification eye of the smuttifying nasty pornification blahblah.

What it boils down to, generally, is a wife who finds a copy of Penthouse under hubby's tool box in the garage, and can't reconcile herself to the fact that Ed sort of likes jerking off to pictures of naked women, and it's a relatively harmless stress-relieving activity with low sociopolitical or environmental impact. (Assuming he cleans up after himself) ... immediately the hunt is on to explain it in the context of some grand conspiracy which has befuddled the brain and re-frimhatzed his fitwardle with code purple erotoxin levels, to make him mistakenly believe he enjoys looking at nude women.

So I'm not ready to ascribe all sorts of syndromes and processes and convoluted yet authoritative sounding byzantine machinations to what is, often, humans being petty or small- in this case, parents letting the acrimony of a divorce situation - from either side - interfere with what is best for their kids.

Bonobo

(29,257 posts)
65. I completely agree...
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 09:28 PM
Nov 2012

In all honesty, it is so clear to me that this "behavior" (drop the silly overblown term "syndrome&quot exists, that I was looking for a way to bring the "issue" to this group.

Failing to write a long treatise on the subject, I thought I might take the shortcut of trying to see if the issue had been addressed somewhere on the intertubes and I foolishly fell for the appeal to authority gobbledygook in an attempt to bring the important phenomenon to light.

I DO think the struggle between parents for the emotional support of the children almost ALWAYS falls in the direction of the mothers co-opting the children against the Dads (rightly or wrongly) and that is really what I wanted to discuss.

Warren DeMontague

(80,708 posts)
66. Its a shame when the adults cant put their personal shit aside for the sake of the kids.
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 09:33 PM
Nov 2012

Not surprising, probably, but still a shame.

Like i said, i think -however making this work in the real world would be realistically implemented- that custody and divorce should focus not on the gender of the parents but who is best suited for the caregiver role. There should be no assumptions going in.

Bonobo

(29,257 posts)
67. It's not just about divorce. In fact, forget about divorce.
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 09:58 PM
Nov 2012

Let's talk about fathers who are away from the house depending on the support of their wives vis a vis the kids. So that the kids understand how important the role of a father is.

Let's talk about mothers not bringing emotional issues between the parents to the children's feet and dropping them there accompanied by tears.

I grew up thinking my dad was a real shit and my mom was a real saint. As I look back now, I see that it was MOSTLY true, but I still wonder how much my mom let her issues with my dad invade my life. At the end of it, my Dad was so estranged from all of us that he found a second wife and left us all out of his will. I was in my mid-twenties when they finally divorced and was always stuck in the middle of their issues.

Was my father as bad as he was portrayed by my mom? Were we manipulated a bit to fill the hole in my mom's heart left there by a distant husband? Were the kids needs put first? Did my father have the opportunity to manipulate us as effectively as my mom?

These are complex issues and surely vary marriage by marriage. Having said that, if you want to see who used tears, by and large, as a weapon, it is women. And when you cry in front of your kids and they say "Why are you crying Mommy?" and they know it is because of Daddy, that is a very solid starting point for emotional manipulation. And my guess is that it is RAMPANT and as common as water.

 

lumberjack_jeff

(33,224 posts)
73. I don't know.
Thu Nov 22, 2012, 10:56 AM
Nov 2012

What does one call a collection of psycho-emotional symptoms which are largely predictable if you know the events in the person's upbringing?

The term seems at least as defensible as stockholm syndrome. Like stockholm syndrome, I see PAS as a form of capture-bonding.

Major Nikon

(36,900 posts)
68. If you want to see how the smear campaign works, read this
Wed Nov 21, 2012, 10:08 PM
Nov 2012

PBS produced a documentary entitled, Breaking the Silence: Children's Stories. This was a one-sided smear campaign against PAS which was so bad, PBS pulled it. A quick google search revealed countless feminists and women's advocacy organizations which promoted it (and still do), even after PBS concluded it was bullshit. One has to wonder just how just the cause of PAS opponents are when they have to engage in a willful campaign of lies in order to counter it.

The PBS Ombudsman report on this is quite telling.

Prior to the broadcast, Connecticut Public TV released a statement from the producers:

"When we began this project over a year ago, our goal was to produce a documentary about domestic violence and children. We had no preconceived notions about the issue...no specific agenda to prove or disprove. The finished documentary is simply a result of where countless hours of extensive research and interviews took us."


The documentary never mentions that 60% of domestic violence against children is perpetrated by women.

The experts provided by Lasseur/Tatge debunk PAS as "junk science." At one point the film states that PAS "has been thoroughly debunked by the American Psychological Association." Contacted for verification by a number of critics and viewers, the APA's communications director stated:

"The American Psychological Association does not have an official position on parental alienation syndrome -- pro or con."


Perhaps the most incendiary statement in the documentary, and the one that drew the most fire from critics, came from a custody lawyer for mothers:

"For the father to win custody of the kids over and against the mother's will is the ultimate victory short of killing the kids."



"Despite the film's claims, research shows that parental alienation is a common facet of divorce or separation. For example, a longitudinal study published by the American Bar Association in 2003 followed 700 "high conflict" divorce cases over a 12-year period and found that elements of PAS were present in the vast majority of them."


Another instance that prompted objections was the case of Dr. Scott Loeliger whom the film depicts as an abusive father. Loeliger charges that the show producers ignored extensive court filings, records and testimony that demonstrate conclusively that it was his ex-wife, not he, who abused their two daughters. He notes that his ex-wife was found liable in juvenile court for eight counts of child abuse, including physical abuse, and thus lost custody of the children.

Loeliger claims he gave this documentation to the show producers 6 months before the program aired, but he was ignored. In the documentary, the mother and daughter give poignant, even heartbreaking testimony. But is it true? Or is it a product of parental alienation syndrome? Among the press critics of Breaking the Silence was Glenn Sacks, whose column on the subject was headlined: "PBS Portrays Known Child Abuser as Hero."


My conclusion after viewing and reviewing the program and checking various web sites cited by critics is that there is no hint of balance in Breaking the Silence. The father's point of view is ignored as are new strategies for lessening the damage to children in custody battles. There is no mention of the collaborative law movement in which parents and lawyers come to terms without involving the court, nor of the new joint custody living arrangements.

The producers apparently do not subscribe to the idea that an argument can be made more convincing by giving the other side a fair presentation. To be sure, one comes away from viewing the program with the feeling that custody fights are a special hell, legally, emotionally, psychologically. But this broadcast is so slanted as to raise suspicions that either the family courts of America have gone crazy or there must be another side to the story.


Lots more here:

http://www.cpb.org/ombudsman/display.php?id=10

 

4th law of robotics

(6,801 posts)
70. I think we should take a moment and be thankful that some forums
Thu Nov 22, 2012, 10:40 AM
Nov 2012

Allow an open market place of ideas. Where dissenting views are met with counter arguments rather than censorship.

And where people who long ago would have labeled disrupters or shitstirrers and been banned are allowed the opportunity to argue their case.

Not everyone is so fortunate to have such an open and tolerant safe haven that values reason and logic over emotion and strictly enforced conformity.

mikejeffries

(1 post)
78. Parental Alienation
Sun Nov 25, 2012, 08:56 AM
Nov 2012

Thank you for your post on parental alienation. Parental alienation is real and affects countless children, parents and extended family members every year.

I would like, however, to correct one misconception. Mothers and fathers are both the alienating parent and targeted parent in equal numbers. Neither sex has cornered the market on the long-standing, unresolved emotional issues that lead a parent to alienate a child from his or her other parent.

For more information, and resources, on parental alienation feel free to visit our website at http://www.afamilysheartbreak.com. I'm confident you and your readers will find the information helpful.

Best,

mike jeffries

Bonobo

(29,257 posts)
79. Thank you but as far as them being "equal numbers"...
Sun Nov 25, 2012, 09:49 AM
Nov 2012

Let's be honest, the chances that the numbers are equal is almost incalculably small.

The truth is one is almost certainly more common than the other. It is either more common for men or women to be doing it -simply from a statistical viewpoint.

 

4th law of robotics

(6,801 posts)
80. When people say men and women do something bad in equal numbers
Sun Nov 25, 2012, 11:27 AM
Nov 2012

typically that means women are doing it more.

We're ok with saying men are all because the commit most murders, rapes,etc.

We're less comfortable acknowledging that in some ways women can be the main perpetrators of some horrible act.

So at best we can get people to say, well its about equal maybe.

Major Nikon

(36,900 posts)
81. I just don't think the numbers are equal
Sun Nov 25, 2012, 12:23 PM
Nov 2012

Fathers retain custody only in about 10-15% of cases. It's hard to imagine fathers doing as much of the alienating. If you want to suggest that mothers are as likely as fathers to alienate on an individual basis, then it might be more plausible.

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