Feminist group brags about misandrist violence
A popular Facebook group named “Bad Girls Advice” has made headlines after its female participants bragged about committing barbaric acts of violence against men.
On Friday a woman opened the discussion by writing: “In a mad ass rage at my partner. Just want to punch him in the c*ck and stab him in the leg with a fork. Bad b****es, I want to know what is the craziest thing you've done in a fit of rage?”
According to screenshots obtained by domestic violence support group Black Ribbon Foundation Australia and shared by the Daily Mail, the post received hundreds of likes and comments from some of the 173,000 group participants.
One woman wrote:
Stabbed with a fork, reversed over him in a car, threw him out of the car, punched him in the nose, threw bowls, remotes or whatever at his head.
Another responded:
Stabbed one in the leg with a fork ... pushed another into the wall and the fat f*** fell through it.
Another commented:
Threw a chair at him through a glass door. Door smashed and cut him the f*** up. Needless to say he didn't smart mouth me again.
The above post received replies of adoration from other users, who commented “respect” and posted heart emojis.
One woman admitted she hit her partner with her car “all because it was Halloween and I felt bad that I didn't buy lollies for the kids” while another boasted that she hit her partner with her car and made him pay for the damage. Some participants expressed that this one was their favorite.
Other comments included:
Stabbed them in the c*** with a metal nail file sh** it was funny.
Bit him on the back of his neck until I heard crunch and felt blood. Still has the scar lol.
Threw a potato at his head, threw a mug at his head, threw a stubby at his head, threw a rock at his very expensive v8 (sensing a pattern haha) chased him with an ax.
A woman boasted that she was “reading these on ideas for the husband right now” and added that she was “actually full serious right now.”
The misandrist group’s administrator later said the thread was deleted Saturday morning and that it was “against our group’s morals.” The group remains active on Facebook.
The discussion highlights the holes in feminist narratives which portray men as violent abusers and ignore research showing women are at least as violent in intimate relationships.
As of 2014 there were 270 empirical studies and 73 reviews that found women are at least as physically aggressive as men in relationships. In teenage intimate relationships, girls have been found to be nearly twice as physically violent toward boys than vice-versa.
Female aggression surged with the advent of the second wave of feminism in the 1960s which attacked “gender roles.” Between 1960 and 1975, the percentage of female adolescents arrested for murder rose 53%, 132% for manslaughter, 49% for robbery, and 59% for aggravated assault. The numbers have continued to rise in western countries — where women have been “liberated” — such as the US, England, and Australia. This includes areas like disorderly conduct where female arrests are increasing while male arrests are declining. According to a US Department of Justice Study Group on girls and violence, female violence is rising at a faster rate than male violence.
But publishing such findings has become taboo. Since 1980, when evidence of equality in intimate violence began to surface and threatened the feminist narrative of an “oppressive patriarchy,” researchers faced criticism, abuse, falsehoods and threats from feminist operatives.
Researcher Kate Fillion wrote in her 1997 book Lip Service: The Myth of Female Virtue in Love, Sex, and Friendship of a COVID-like suppression of scientific evidence:
Currently, findings on all types of female physical and sexual aggression are being suppressed; academics who do publish their research are subjected to bitter attacks and outright vilification from some colleagues and activists, and others note the hostile climate and carefully omit all data on female perpetrators from their published reports.
Perhaps as a result of this censorship, social experiments conducted have found that bystanders who witness a man being physically violent against a woman are more likely to intervene but will stand by and even express amusement if the roles are reversed.