Doctor Scratch wrote:Are you familiar with any of the social science work that was "used" to support this piece you posted?
Are you?[/quote]
Yes.
This demonstrates precisely nothing, as the statement the FRC authors used in this one, single instance was to verbal abuse
· A study in the Journal of Interpersonal Violence examined conflict and violence in lesbian relationships. The researchers found that 90 percent of the lesbians surveyed had been recipients of one or more acts of verbal aggression from their intimate partners during the year prior to this study, with 31 percent reporting one or more incidents of physical abuse.
Yes, I know. It was sprinkled in there amidst a lot of citations that are meant to portray homosexuals in a bad light. The actual article makes it quite clear that there really isn't much difference in terms of abuse between homosexual and heterosexual couples. If anything, there is more violence and abuse in
hetero couples, as the Kidd et al. article cited above indicates.
And the rest?
I can go through and look at them if you want. I'm guessing that I'd find something similar: i.e., that the citations have been lifted out of context, and that they don't really demonstrate what you want them to. It's clear that both you and the FRC piece want to "prove" that homosexual relationships are somehow "worse" or "more evil" compared with heterosexual relationships, but the social science just doesn't bear out that assumption.
But consider:
· In a survey of 1,099 lesbians, the Journal of Social Service Research found that slightly more than half of the lesbians reported that they had been abused by a female lover/partner. The researchers found that "the most frequently indicated forms of abuse were verbal/emotional/psychological abuse and combined physical-psychological abuse."
How does this measure up with women in heterosexual relationships? Why is that comparison (rather conspicuously) absent from the piece? The same question seems relevant to the other items you list:
· A study of lesbian couples reported in the Handbook of Family Development and Intervention "indicates that 54 percent had experienced 10 or more abusive incidents, 74 percent had experienced six or more incidents, 60 percent reported a pattern to the abuse, and 71 percent said it grew worse over time."
In their book Men Who Beat the Men Who Love Them: Battered Gay Men and Domestic Violence, Island and Letellier postulate that "the incidence of domestic violence among gay men is nearly double that in the heterosexual population."
This one:
The National Violence against Women Survey, sponsored by the National Institute of Justice, found that "same-sex cohabitants reported significantly more intimate partner violence than did opposite-sex cohabitants. Thirty-nine percent of the same-sex cohabitants reported being raped, physically assaulted, and/or stalked by a marital/cohabitating partner at some time in their lifetimes, compared to 21.7 percent of the opposite-sex cohabitants. Among men, the comparable figures are 23.1 percent and 7.4 percent."
...is bizarre. "[S]ponsored by the National Institute of Justice"? What does that mean, exactly? It sounds almost as if someone was paying the researchers to "get" these findings. But the even wierder thing is the "marital/cohabitating partner" thing for "same-sex" couples. Where did they get numbers for such a thing?
A Bureau of Justice Statistics (an agency of the U.S. Department of Justice) report found that married women in traditional families experience the lowest rate of violence compared with women in other types of relationships.[51] Women who were not married to their "intimate partner" (i.e., were cohabiting), experienced a rate of violence four times higher than that of married women (11.3 per thousand vs. 2.6 per thousand).
This one isn't really relevant to your basic thesis, since this is more about marriage in general, rather than homosexuality per se.
In any case, if you are actually interested in "the truth," you'd be a lot better off going and chasing down the actual research.
Go try and fool someone else. I've had far, far too much experience with you for this.
I'm not trying to "fool" anyone, Droopy. I just think your article is misrepresenting the research.
An entire post of worthless diversionary drivel in which you made not one single logical counter-argument, and posted not a single shred of empirical data counter to what is in the study. Your entire post is a
wall of assertion, period.
Try again Mr. Nowhere Man, and see what you can make stick on the wall.