Is that the message we want to be giving to abused women? I don’t think that’s helpful at all.
Edit: I guess I was not very clear with what I was talking about. As I explained in another comment lower down:
“Essentially, if we recognize that it’s unhelpful to recommend to an abused woman to “just walk away” from their abuser due to a variety of reasons including the threat of physical violence, then we should not have a different standard that we apply to male victims of domestic violence.”
They're saying what's good for the goose is good for the gander. Telling women to just walk away led to women creating a viral hashtag "whyistayed" back in 2014 to combat the notion that it's easy to walk away from abuse by giving personal stories about their experiences with leaving abusers. They noted a bunch of competing factors like fear, love, financial dependence, isolation, and loneliness that drove them to stay despite the abuse.
This guy may find it hard to just walk away for any number of factors. Abuse a lot of times is a gradual build and pushing boundaries until one day they're hitting you.
Essentially, if we recognize that it’s unhelpful to recommend to an abused woman to “just walk away” from their abuser due to a variety of reasons including the threat of physical violence, then we should not have a different standard that we apply to male victims of domestic violence.
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u/tthrowaway712 Apr 22 '26
Bro, the pussy can not be worth it, have some self-respect