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Date: Mon, 13 Aug 2012 11:54:22 +0800
Subject: News Broadcast Title 5 USCS "Whispers In The Night by 911" Act 2
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HANKS: What we do know is that allhuman beings can be violent given
certain circumstances and certainly in times of war we sanction some
people being violent towards other people but we also know that not
allmen are violent outside of wartime or a unique situation like that.
Only some men are violent and we know that men in general as a group
are more violent than women in general.
GHIGLIERI: that fact is testosterone is a real kick-starter for
violence. It's a kick starter for every male trait, not just violence,
it is the responsible hormone for making males..(to)and it does affect
behavior, it actually forces aggressive behavior. In humans as in
other species, even more in humans, we have the choice as individuals
whether we are aggressive or not. But the fact is testosterone does
affect male attitudes and the propensities to violence.
NARRATOR: If we look at violence interms of behavior, Ghiglieri says
that it is universal from species to species, culture to culture. Both
sexes use violence. Women use violence to protect what they have. Men
use violence to get more than they have.
GHIGLIERI: Men employ violence against everyone, irrespective of sex
and gender and even against other species if they get in the way.
Violence is a male tactic. But Ithink in general if you want to get
the simplest perspective on it, males use violence to control females
and they do it very often and they control those females for sexual
reasons.
ROBY: I don't like the idea of peoplepromoting the idea that males
have an innate tendency to act out aggressively. I think there's some
research that supports that to a limited degree, but certainly, we can
learn to rise above our biology.
NARRATOR: Jane Caputi is professor of American Studies at the
University of New Mexico and author of "The Age of Sex Crime." She
says that to look at male violence from a biological perspective is
skewed.
CAPUTI: I would say that what's happening now in all this emphasis on
men who are innately more violent and women are innately morepassive
and stuff like that is scientific sexism and nothing, nothing more.
NARRATOR: Is violence against women rooted in the way men and women
are socialized? Many feminists claim it's the result of a patriarchal
culture that encourages and rewards male dominance. (Pause) Patricia
Ireland, president of the National Organization for Women, says
violence against women has been accepted throughout history. She cites
an 18th century English common law giving a man permission to
discipline his wife with a stick no wider than his thumb.
IRELAND: That was actually an improvement. That was an effort to
recognize corporal punishment as appropriate. We had a judge out in
Baltimore who sentenced Ken Peacock to 18 months work releaseafter the
cold-blooded murder of hiswife, and said to Ken Peacock, I don't know
any man who would have come home under those circumstances, found his
wife in bed with another man and not have inflicted some sort of
corporal punishment. I think that we have a structure, a culture that
is based on the dominant dad whether it's in a family or in politics,
and that has used violence to keep that position when necessary.
NARRATOR: Feminists say history is filled with examples of legally
sanctioned violence against women.They site the burning of witches,
which was condoned by both church and state. Some even see religious
tradition as a factor.
CAPUTI: Religion is absolutely fundamental in perpetuating violence
against women. It is one ofthe key ways to communicate the idea of
male supremacy. First of all,God is male...patriarchal religions would
have us believe that all divinity if male and only male.
NARRATOR: Feminist author Gloria Steinem.
STEINEM: Society definitely encourages and condones men's violence
toward women. Not as much as it used to be when it was less visible,
and there were still laws on the books that made it alright for men to
beat their wives as long as it was within certain limits (to) The
attitude is diminished, but it's still there.
NARRATOR: When it comes to violence, we seem to be confused. Our
society claims to abhor violence, yet we often make heroes of men who
are violent.
CAPUTI: All the whole culture of masculinity, the heros that we see,
be it Indiana Jones or Rambo or John Wayne or Charles Bronson or
whomever, they're all predicated on some kind of violent action.
NARRATOR: Illinois Attorney General Roland Burr has claimed that
crimes against women are"motivated by hatred of women as aclass." An
April 1991 Newsweek article noted that "in all of pop culture (as in
most of society) women are the victims of choice. 'Consider this a
divorce!' Arnold Schwarznegger bellows just before he blows his wife
away in Total Recall. Audiences love it! She got hers!...An awful lot
of hostility against women is being played out in popular cultures
these days and it's not pretty." Do such attitudes set the stage for
violence against women?
NARRATOR: John Albert Taylor, whowas executed in 1996 for the rape and
murder of an 11-year-old girl, fantasized about raping other girls and
was charged with raping a Florida woman. In a letter he wrote in 1978,
he said: (Pause) "I felt rejected by them. When I raped or molested,
it was a way for me to get back at the female race."
NARRATOR: In her book, The Age ofSex Crime, Jane Caputi contends that
serial sex killers act to enforcemisogyny -- the hatred of women --in
our culture.
CAPUTI: These are not deviants, these are not monsters from nowhere,
they're actually performing a cultural function, in enforcing misogyny
-- the hatred ofwomen -- in showing that women are prey, etcetera and
in acting out masculinity in totally dominating thefeminine.
GHIGLIERI: ...There is no way biologically a species could evolve in
which one sex hates the other sex.
NARRATOR: While there might not be agreement on it origins, everyone
does agree that violence against women is a common theme in popular
culture.
CAPUTI: It makes it glamorous, it eroticizes that kind of violence
against women and makes it appear consensual, as if women seek this
out and want it. It makes it extremely normal as well (to) We allknow
the notorious General Hospitalwhere Luke raped Laura and then later
married her and so it made it seem as though rape was a kind of
courtship ritual....(jump ahead to)
NARRATOR: Like TV and film, advertising sexualizes violence and
domination.
CAPUTI: (audio only) we see these kind of advertisements everywhere.
(to) there's adds for jeans in which women are shown licking the
floor. That's a common technique in domestic violence, not just
hitting the woman but humiliating her, either through words or through
making her perform demeaning acts.
NARRATOR: The media, biology, religion, culture. All are cited as
factors in men's violence against women, but the causes are far
morecomplicated. Most men -- those who are the product of the same
biology, the same culture -- don't commit such acts. So what pushes a
man to be violent toward a woman? CARLOS
NARRATOR: Carlos is serving a five-year prison term for forcible
sexual assault of his ex-wife. They were going through a divorce when
he was first arrested.
CARLOS: "In one breath I'm telling her I love her and in the next
breathI'm wanting to just take her and slap some sense into her. I
don't know if you can understand that, but at that time I thought
that's what I needed to do.
CARLOS: I was really in love with myex-wife I guess. I'd come home
fromwork and I would look at these pictures and I would always say,
well, why me, why me...Everybody hates to loose a possession or
something and that's the way I really thought of my ex-wife. as a
possession.
NARRATOR: Carlos stalked his estranged wife. He was arrested several
times, once for burglarly, another time charged with spousal rape. He
talks about one incident.
CARLOS: "I drove back to her houseand sure enough this car was there
and he was there I sat in my car for about 10 minutes and I was just
letting this anger just build up inside of me an I knew something was
going on...so I got out of my car, I walked up to the door and I
knocked on the door. And I could hear laughing inside. Joking around
and I just got angry so I kicked the door in and a this individual got
up out of the couch, my couch that I bought, he got out of the couch
that he was sitting next to her and they were, I don't know what they
were doing, and my imagination wasgoing crazy And he came at me so I
just hit him right there. And blood got splattered all over. I picked
up the coffee table and I hit him with the coffee table.
NARRATOR: Carlos also assaulted his wife, but in his mind he was the victim.
CARLOS: I was holding all these emotions, all this anger, all this
hurt, all this, this craziness these crazy thoughts, I was just
holding itin and I wasn't releasing it. I wasn'tventing it out. So
when I went to myex-wife's house, when I saw this man, I exploded.
NARRATOR: Carlos now admits he was a husband who wanted control.
CARLOS: And one of my means of control was I would break furniture, so
if I said something to my wife, like let's go do this and she wanted
to do something else, I would get really angry and I'd just throw a
television out the window. (to) and Ididn't know any other way of
controlling my ex-wife. And so yes Idid have a violence but it wasn't
directed at my ex-wife. It wasn't nophysical violence. I used more
mental abuse then physical abuse with my ex-wife.
NARRATOR: Michael Kimmel is a sociologist at the State University of
New York who has received international recognition for his work on
men and masculinity. He says men tend to be violent against women when
they feel their power eroding.
KIMMEL: we might see men initiating aggression against women, we might
see men acting against women but the men themselves don't experience
it that way. They experience it as revenge or retaliation. Like women
have power over me because they're beautiful and sexual and I want
them and they elicit that and I feel one down, I feel powerless.
(to)so the aggression then is to restore the balance.I mean just
listen for a minute to the way in which we describe women's beauty and
sexuality. We describe it as a violence against us. She is a
knock-out, a bomb-shell, dressed to kill, afemme fatale, stunning,
ravishing. Imean all of these are words of violence against us. It's
like, wow, she knocked me out. So the violence then, or the aggression
or the sexual violence is often a way to retaliate. (GRAPHIC) PHILLIP
NARRATOR: Twenty-nine-year-old Phillip is in prison for sexually
abusing his step-daughter.
PHILLIP: I didn't think about her, and you know if you ask the
majorityof people who are here on this samecrime, what they think
about, and they would tell you the same, probably the same thing. They
didn'treally think. They just want somebody to vent their anger out
on. I could of went over to my ex-mother-in-law and shot the whole
family up. I could have waitedfor my wife to come home and blow her
car. I could have done all these things. But at that time, it was
justthere. It was just there. It just happened. It wasn't ya know, I
didn't look at it as a person or a child just an object.
NARRATOR: Philip won't talk about what he did to his step-daughter,
but he will talk about what he did tohis ex-wife, who was often the
target of his anger.
PHILLIP: I wanted to leave. She blocked the door which made me feel
like I was trapped. Everywhere Iwent she went. She clung on to me.And
like I said, it made me feel trapped. I didn't know what to do I
wanted to say like women get off me so I can leave but and I will be
back, but somehow I managed to get out of the house and I got in the
car and she was six months pregnant and as I was going down the
driveway she jumps on the car. Is still clinging and me not caring, me
being in a state of mind that I was in ya know this cold, this cold
state, I floored the car and threw her off and kept going.
PHILLIP: if a woman stands toe to toe with a man, he's gonna feel
threatened and once he feels threatened, he's gonna come out
swingin..that is if a man does not know any other way but violence.
NARRATOR: Like many violent men, Phillip was raised in an abusive home.
PHILLIP: I watched my dad choke mymother ya know. Ninety seven percent
of the scars on my body arefrom being abused. Ya know I'm talking
about, the welts, ya know the mental abuse, the watching the guns, put
in my mom's mouth and me being thrown across the room, watching my
brothers and sisters get their butts kicked by my father...
PHILLIP: (back to) Ya know and I always said that I would never be
like my father, I would never do these things that he's done. But yetI
was doing em and not knowing I was doing em.
PHILLIP: My children are scared of me. My little boy he doesn't really
cling to me, ya know because he is not sure if his daddy is gonna be
nice one minute or is he gonna be Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde the next
minutes. He's, I ya know one day hepicked up a knife and he came at
me. Now _____, that's his name ____ was um 4 at the time and
thatsurprised me, it really surprised me to see him do what I'd done
and see these are the same things I've seen my father do. So I was
just passing it down the line.
NARRATOR: To end this cycle of abuse, experts like Hanks says it's
crucial that men like Phillip are not only punished, but get
psychological help. She says abusive men need to learn new ways of
relating to womenso they can make a conscious decision not to be
violent. (Pause) Robert Bly, a poet and social critic credited with
founding the men's movement, talks about how violent men act
impulsively, using violence to solve problems. He outlines the three
stages of anger violent men go through.
BLY: First of all, there's the experiencing of anger which is felt
inside. Then there's the expression of anger, verbally. And then
there's the attempt to expel the anger fromthe body (to) We have men
who go from the experience of the anger tothe attempt to expel it in
Wham 20 seconds. Expelling it means you want to hit something or
somebody.It's as if the anger is in your body and you think you can
get it out by doing that.
NARRATOR: Bly says abusive men must learn to express anger in waysin
which no one will be hurt. He says the way to treat batterers is not
to shame them.
BLY: That makes sense on the surface and yet the reason they
arebatterers is because they're alreadyashamed. And what's more, this
kind of shaming people out of things does not have any
resonancepsychologically. (to) we know now with children you can't get
children to behave by shaming them, you have to ask them, why did you
actually steal that money. Did you want, were you really stealing
love?Is that what you were doing? (GRAPHIC) DON
NARRATOR: Don was court ordered to attend an anger control group
formen after violence erupted in his five-year marriage.
DON: I did have a problem with my anger. I felt very frustrated, a lot
of time it was that things weren't going my way. I'm a very
controlling person, grew up in a controlling atmosphere, never really
looked at myself. I always looked at others. Abig major problem as I
grew up, I could point my finger at anybody else but I never looked at
me. And my respect for other people's feelings was almost nil or void.
I never thought too much how another person might feel.
NARRATOR: Like some abusive men,Don points to the role women play.
DON: Women are not always the victims. Men are victims, too. It takes
two people to fight. Usually itcan be how they push each other's
buttons and it can escalate and I don't think the man is always at
fault. I don't know every incident that's ever been recorded, but I do
know that it's very frustrating for aman in the role that he plays in
society today that he does play a dominant role and a lot of times,
women fall for men for their dominance. And dominancy is what brings
us down.
NARRATOR: Michael Kimmel says the traditional model of masculinity
isn't working.
KIMMEL: Well the basic rules of manhood, if I were to put them this
way are no sissy stuff, that's the first rule. You can never do
anything that even remotely hints offemininity. The second rule is be
a big wheel. ya know, we measure masculinity by the size of your
check, wealth, power, status, things like that. The third rule is be a
sturdy oak. You show that you're a man by not ever showing your
emotions. And the fourth rule is give em hell. Always go forward,
exude an aura of daring and aggression in everything that you do. And
this model of masculinity has been around for an awfully long time.
NARRATOR: The women's movementhas helped to challenge this model.
While some men are beginning to embrace the ideals of equality and
mutual respect, Kimmel says other men are more threatened than ever,
which may explain, in part, the increase in violence against
women.(Pause) Robert McGinnis, director of the conservative Family
ResearchCouncil, says he's concerned that violence against women is
being blown out of proportion.
McGINNIS: You've heard the myth that domestic violence is directed
only at women and it's a by-product of patriarchal domination. Well,
the facts are that both men and women equally start fights. But it's
the unfortunate reality that women aren't as strong as men...
NARRATOR: Crime surveys consistently show that no matter who initiates
the violence, women are 7 to 10 times more likely to be injured than
are men.
IRELAND: Irrespective of what the numbers are it's far too many. I
don't want us to be diverted into a discussion of whether it's 1.7
million who are battered each year or is it three million battered
each year. Is a woman raped every three minutes or every six minutes?
It is far too much, whatever it is.
KIMMEL: The truth is there's a lot of violence against women out
thereand all of it is unconscionable, all of it is wrong, and most of
us, mostmen and most women, would agree that none of it should happen.
NARRATOR: If a man's past history of abuse, his desire for control,
his anger or his insecurity can lead him to batter his partner, what
motivates a rapist?
ROBY: I don't think that it's solely asexual crime. I think that
there's also a lot of desire to dominate or control others and to a
certain degree it's something I think that we've learned socially.
Males often grow up and realize that the way to get what they want
when they're younger is through aggressive means. So, it's something
that we talk negatively about, but we quietly I think condone it and
actually seem to promote it.
NARRATOR: Since the 1970s when Susan Brownmiller published her ground
breaking book, Against our Will, rape has been viewed as a crime of
control and violence.
GHIGLIERI: that whole power and control thing as an end in itself is
amyth. Power and control is used as an instrument to accomplish a
sexual event with an unwilling victim. And to leave out that
sexualevent is to completely forget what the crime was, which was a
copulation was stolen from her against her will.
--
President of The United States
Guy Ralph Perea Sr President of The United States
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contents of this E-mail is strictly prohibited. If you have received this
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USCS section 192 etseq Margie Paxton Chief of Childrens Bureau of as
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(Supreme Law of The Land) The Constitution of The United States "Any thing
in The Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary Notwithstanding"
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Ambassador Chevy Chase; Kevin Corcran; Jack Nickolas; Cher; Shirley Temple
Black; Liza Minnille; Ansari; Ernest Tascoe; Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act
Agent Jodie Foster; Department of Veterans Affairs Director George H.W. Bush
Title 22 USCS section 1928 (b) The e-mail
transmission may contain legally privileged information that
is intended only for the individual or entity recipient, you are hereby,
notified that any disclosure, copying, distribution, or reliance upon the
contents of this E-mail is strictly prohibited. If you have received this
E-mail transmission in error, please reply to the sender, so arrangements
can be made for proper delivery. Title 42
USCS section 192 etseq Margie Paxton Chief of Childrens Bureau
Director of The United States Department of Human Services; Defendant
Article IV General Provisions Section 2
(Supreme Law of The Land) The Constitution of The United States "Any thing
in The Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary Notwithstanding"
Contrary to Law (of an act or omission) illegal;
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