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MRA reddit violence against men/women

MRAs cheer on the Seal Beach shooter: “Women are much more likely to pay attention when they’re being threatened.”

The suspect in custody

On Wednesday afternoon, according to reports, a man named Scott Dekraai walked into a salon in Seal Beach California and opened fire, killing eight people, including his ex-wife Michelle Fournier, his evident target.  The two, who shared custody of their son, had been entangled in an acrimonious custody dispute. (Dekraai wanted to reduce his ex’s access.) Fournier had told friends she feared her ex would try to kill her.

It’s not, unfortunately, uncommon for angry or jealous exes to harass, stalk and in many cases actually kill the objects of their obsession.  Usually the killer is a man, and the victim a woman, but women kill too, and same sex couples are hardly immune from this kind of violence.

I’ve been following this story – it’s a heartbreaking one — though I hadn’t planned to write about it. There’s no indication, at least based on what we know so far, that Dekraai’s shootings were ideologically driven, that he was anything other than a deeply troubled man, bitterly angry that he had to share custody of his son with a woman he hated. There seemed to be no clear connections between this story and the misogynist ideologues I write about on this site.

But then they started making the connections themselves, offering apologias for Dekraai’s violence and twisting the facts of the case to fit their ideological agendas. TRIGGER WARNING: Many of the comments I quote below are some of the most vile and vicious I have ever found in more than a year of writing this blog.

On In Mala Fide, Ferdinand Bardamu didn’t let the facts get in the way of his perverse ideological spin on the case, titling his post on the subject “Anti-Male, Anti-Father Divorce Laws Drive Man to Commit Heinous Rage Shooting Against Ex-Wife” and blaming feminism for “poisoning the relationship between men and women” in America.

Bardamu’s argument, such as it is, is utterly at odds with the basic facts of the case. Dekraai and Fournier had shared custody of the boy they’d had together; Dekraai was not fighting to see his child — he was trying to further limit his ex’s access.

As a local Fox News affiliate noted:

Dekraai’s former attorney, Don Eisenberg, told CNS that the two had a “typical” divorce, which was finalized on Dec. 28, 2007.

“This was not a remarkable case. It was a stipulated judgment and the parties agreed on these details,” Eisenberg said.

Under the shared custody agreement, Dekraai had the boy each week from Thursday through the weekend, and the mother had him Monday through Wednesday, the attorney said.

“It was almost an exactly equal split,” Eisenberg said.

There’s not much beyond the headline to Bardamu’s post; the real action is in the comments — many of which openly advocate violence and explicitly endorse Dekraai’s murderous rampage.

One anonymous visitor left this chilling comment:

[E]nough of this type of offensive action might just start making women and their supporters* think twice, especially if they also become targets. (* Divorce attorneys, child services workers and counselors, family court judges, and other enabling cogs in the feminist legal system)

Self-immolating Thomas Ball may have made a point, but the fact remains that he didn’t strike a blow, even as he advocated it.

Someone calling himself Remorhaz expresses a similar sentiment:

The only way this or any offensive action will make a difference is if it starts affecting the judges and lawyers. King John did not sign the magna carta because he was a kindly just ruler, he did it with a sword on the back of his neck while watching a grinning man holding an axe who was busy trying on black hoods. In Mexico entire police forces quit because a few officers go missing. If that started happening then the law becomes meaningless as there is no one to enforce it. …

Essentially men need to tell feminism to shut the fuck up, give it a vigorous slap across the face thus reminding it who is the biological superior, then order it back into the kitchen/bedroom.

In a followup comment he railed against those who expressed disapproval of the shootings:

What options other than overt acts of physical violence are there for a man to deal with a shrew ex and corrupt family court system? To those who are horrified and surprised at this one question…. why? Isn’t the real question – “How come this isn’t a lot MORE common?”. And please avoid the “Well… nothing justifies killing blah blah blah” as we’ve all voted, supported, and tolerated governments who kill over parking tickets much less loss of children. And if keeping your children isn’t worthy of killing what is exactly?

Raymond, meanwhile, directed his opprobrium at Dekraai’s ex-wife:

Hopefully one of the dead carcess was his wife. The son will be better off without any parents than to have been raised by a single mother who would have gotten her vindictive way. And to Scott, when you mess with a real man’s child, blood will be spilt. Most men will just lay down and be resigned to the state-enforced kidnapping and extortion plot, but some are made of tougher stuff and for you to whine about this dead ex-wife or that is inconsequential and no loss to humanity.

Presumably he will be pleased to learn that she was one of those killed.

Frank saw the dead as “collateral damage” in a just war; his only complaint was that Dakraai hadn’t gone after public officials.

This man went to war. He caused much collateral damage and casualties have piled. And the people whose first reaction is to cry “those poor, innocent people” are people who will never change anything. Death is the way of the world. Violence or the implicit threat of it is what causes change. Go ahead, make it clear that you don’t have it in you to destroy life. The enemy will breath a little easier, because you certainly aren’t going to make any changes.

That said, he should have gone after judges and legislators. There’s no justice like a dead “justice”.

Tweell hoped the shootings would frighten women out of challenging their husbands or ex-husbands in court:

Gandi [sic] and MLK got what they were after via non-violent means, but they were dealing with people of conscience, people who would think about the issues they espoused and not just kill them. Non-violence only works when your opponent has moral character. …

I submit that women …  are much more likely to pay attention when they’re being threatened. If it becomes obvious that claiming child abuse during divorce, withholding visitation and other such actions could result in their death, then they might think twice about such behavior.

Meanwhile, on Reddit’s Men’s Rights subreddit, more moderate MRAs weighed in on the case. While no one explicitly defended the shooter’s actions, numerous posters said they understood the violence, and (completely ignoring the basic facts of the case) blamed it not on Dekraai but on a court system biased against men.

A poster calling himself TheRealPariah embraced Dekraai:

He is one of us. You cannot throw men struggling out simply because they do something you disagree with.

Bobsutan predicted (and came very close to endorsing) more violence,

violent outburst[s] like this will continue to happen so long as ‘kidnapping by court’ and ‘sold into slavery by court’ (via CS & alimony) keeps happening. … fix the family court system and these murders wouldn’t happen.

Moderator AnnArchist – we’ve met him before – agreed, arguing that

To prevent this in the future the solution is clear: Mandate 50/50 custody without any child support as the default

Another r/mr regular, carchamp1, took it a bit further:

I don’t condone what he did. No sane person would. But, I understand it. …  You steal someone’s kids with the help of our so-called “family” courts you’re a pig. You have it coming. Period.

I think it’s high time we put a spotlight on these kidnappers. They are NOT innocent people. They are the scum of the earth. I couldn’t care less about their “welfare”. I care about the millions of parents, mostly fathers, who’ve had their kids stolen from them AND their kids.

When I pointed out in the discussion there that Dekraai had hardly been denied access to his child,  AnnArchist changed the subject, suggesting that it was Fournier’s accusations against Dekraai in court that had pushed him over the edge. In fact, both had made numerous allegations about one another in court; Dekraai accused his ex-wife of phone harassment; she complained that he was abusive, mentally unstable and had threatened to kill her. Obviously she was right to have worried.

But according to AnnArchist, Fournier was wrong to bring up his instability in court. As he put it: “Poking the bear is dangerous.”

When I pressed him on this, he responded:

If you really think someone is nuts, you probably don’t want to be the one to call them out in open court because if they don’t go to prison they might kill you. Its tough to do with kids involved, but if she thought he was capable of something like this, using it in a custody dispute would be considered by many to be risky.

Astonished, I asked him if he was really saying what it looked like he was saying, that if you think your ex is dangerous, and literally insane, you shouldn’t challenge them in court when they try to get sole custody of your kid? His reply:

I didn’t know what to say to this bizarre argument, so I stopped responding.

I don’t know what to say to any of this. It is beyond appalling.

 

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klopbop
13 years ago

Holy crap, that was long. Sorry!

thebionicmommy
thebionicmommy
13 years ago

… no? Ok then… Back to napping. Wake me up when he makes some sort of testable and/or valid and sound argument…

This reminds me of the story of Rip Van Winkle. He took a very long nap, too.

NWOSlave, the battered wife defense is really just a way of describing a self defense plea when the battered partner kills in self defense. There is no way in the world a mass murderer like Dekraai was acting in self defense when he killed eight innocent people. In other words, this case has absolutely nothing to do with the battered wife defense.

paniorpa
13 years ago

IMO she deserves 33% of the blame. The system deserves some of the blame too. And of course the killer.

I predict thousands of people will die in similar circumstances in the years to come because some men will snap under the tyranny of feminist laws.

This is sad, but feminists wanted it.

Quackers
Quackers
13 years ago

“Feminists all wore purple recently in solidarity for support of of a woman who pumped 11 bullets into her hubby, and cheered wildly when Big Daddy let her off. State supported violence, dontcha think? I wonder if this chap’ll get the same punishment if he claims the battered man defense?”

proof please. I want to see examples of “cheering”

and if it’s battered man defense, wouldn’t he have just shot his wife and not 7 other innocent people? or did they batter him too?

Shaenon
13 years ago

As I’ve said, that “k ike nose” comment WAS NOT ME. I was the other one, he didn’t quote it, but it was something along the lines of feminist mangina piece of shit and all that.

Oh, well, I guess that’s okay, then.

It’s comments like these that make me think MRAL is so poorly socialized that he has no idea how he comes off–he honestly doesn’t seem to understand that it’s not appropriate to communicate via a combination of swear words, slurs, and violent threats. He’s like an infant who was abandoned and raised by online gamers.

paniorpa
13 years ago

If she thought the man was dangerous, she shouldn’t have had a kid with him.

She should have taken the time to judge his personality.

NWOslave
NWOslave
13 years ago

@thebionicmommy
“NWOSlave, the battered wife defense is really just a way of describing a self defense plea when the battered partner kills in self defense. There is no way in the world a mass murderer like Dekraai was acting in self defense when he killed eight innocent people. In other words, this case has absolutely nothing to do with the battered wife defense.”

You’re right, he didn’t act in self defense, the deaths of 8 innocent people is a terrible tragedy, and this had nothing to do with battered womans defense. Of course, a man long ago battered a woman in Duluth. From that case, which had nothing to do with all men, came the Duluth model power and control wheel, and much more. The Duluth power and control wheel is an impossibility, you’re damned if you do and damned if you don’t, or jailed as the case may be. It’s hatred pure and simple. So is the battered woman defense, which also was spawned from a particular case I can’t recall. It’s awfully convenient when the defense can’t even respond because he’s dead, and quite advantageous for a woman who is either mentally unstable, vindictive, or even seeking profit. How could this be considered anything but hatred?

Look at all the various cases of late. Immolation, swinging from bridges, killings, mass murder. All because of hate laws over child custody. Maybe not in this case but there have been others. Since we know women do have the power of State by how Big Daddy hands women any law they wish. What will women demand Big Daddy do because of this tragedy? Another power and control wheel name after this mans home town? Tougher deadbeat dad laws? Less child custody for men whom the ex-wives deem violent? Or will women finally understand that hate laws will breed hatred and tell Big Daddy to recind those vile laws? The balls in your court, what will you do?

Molly Ren
13 years ago

“He’s like an infant who was abandoned and raised by online gamers.”

^Best comment in the thread. XD

OSHIII
OSHIII
13 years ago

When I hear about stuff like that I wander… these people actually argue that men ARE insane, dangerous, uncontrollable creatures who should be avoided and yet feminists are called manhaters?
Wtah the fuck?

As far as I can tell:

– When they describe themselves tht way, it’s either to try and deflect blame (“you wore clothes that guy who raped you liked! What did you think would happen?!”), or to revel in their supposed power (MRAs typically feel like they have a lack of power, or at least, lacking the amount of power that they think they deserve). It’s gleeful group mental — and possibly in a few particularly disturbing cases, physical –masturbation, and empowerment.

– When women say something implying men are capable of being uncontrollable and dangerous, it’s seen as being criticizing. And women are the Other that MRAs have all obsessed upon, so that criticism is seen as an unconscionable attack from The Enemy, regardless of how hard it must be twisted to make what was said seem bigoted..

Quackers
Quackers
13 years ago

God NWO just shut the fuck up, really. Is this the case you’re talking about? http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/07/nyregion/barbara-sheehan-who-killed-husband-is-found-not-guilty-of-murder.html?pagewanted=all

It must have been a pretty strong defense because he was a cop and cop killers don’t get off that easy. Even her kids testified against him, it wasn’t just her word over his.

Battered Wife Syndrome seems a bit similar to pleading insanity. In Canada a few years ago a man randomly beheaded another man on a Greyhound bus but got placed in a mental institution instead of prison because he was deemed mentally unstable at the time. He didn’t “get away with it” but its a much more lenient sentence. Many people were disturbed and outraged at this verdict. These types of defenses aren’t just limited to women. I’m sure a man could claim he killed someone out of self defense too and be let off. I’m also sure cases like that have happened in the past. Maybe not typically in a domestic case, but in other cases where he had to defend himself.

Nova
Nova
13 years ago

@Snowy: Ah, I understand. I thought the issue was more with the insinuation that he was mentally ill, rather than with the terminology. Thanks for pointing it out and I do apoogize. English can be a tricky language sometimes.

Bagelsan
Bagelsan
13 years ago

“Crazy” is an ambiguous word at best — some people hate it, some people don’t use it, some people don’t mind it, and I personally use it very casually for all kinds of good and bad and mental-illness-related stuff in a sort-of reclamation (or more like “dilution”) attempt.

Thanks to a culture of ableist bullshit it’s hard to delicately and accurately express the idea that some individual may be mentally ill and severely disconnected from morality/reality and violent without accidentally implying that those three things must always go together. Personally it’s the sweeping generalizations of that last stereotype I object to, not the occasional instance in which the stereotype is true.

(I am glad that manboobz assumes a level of goodwill on the terminology stuff though; prevents a lot of wanktastic meltdowns over slightly out-of-date phrasing or misinterpretations. :p)

Bee
Bee
13 years ago

If she thought the man was dangerous, she shouldn’t have had a kid with him.

She should have taken the time to judge his personality.

Totally. I was wondering when some brave soul was going to stop blaming the guy who murdered eight people and put the blame on the evil woman, where it belongs.

What will women demand Big Daddy do because of this tragedy? Another power and control wheel name after this mans home town? Tougher deadbeat dad laws? Less child custody for men whom the ex-wives deem violent? Or will women finally understand that hate laws will breed hatred and tell Big Daddy to recind those vile laws? The balls in your court, what will you do?

Exactly, milkslave. If only there weren’t so many laws criminalizing negligent and abusive parenting and domestic violence (a.k.a. hate laws, amirite?), our homes and families would be so much less violent. Makes a lot of sense.

mythago
13 years ago

I really don’t understand what our host doesn’t ban more of these bozos. Vigorous debate is one thing, but “OMG please yell at me I need the attention” or “wharrgarble EVIL FEMALZ” is just a waste of everyone’s time.

Snowy
Snowy
13 years ago

@Nova I’m sorry I should have made that more clear probably, and thank you. It is really tricky sometimes especially since the kind of “oh people who are crazy are all violent” idea is so pervasive, I know I used to say stuff like that a lot before I learned more about it.

Holly Pervocracy
13 years ago

What does it say about the hole that people like NWO and paniorpa have burned in my personality that I’m not at all surprised or even as offended that I should be that they’re taking the “the victims should be tried for bullet theft” stance?

It’s like a parrot that’s been trained to say nothing but vicious insults. Sure it’s offensive, but it’s like that all the time and you figure that it doesn’t really know what it’s saying, so it just turns into background noise. Now and then you wake up and go “man, that’s one fucked-up parrot,” but most of the time you just have this vaguely embarrassed feeling of “welp, NWOparrot’s doing its thing.”

If I fully realized what it means that there are human beings who actually feel good about what they’re saying behind those screennames, I wouldn’t get to bed at night.

Valerie
Valerie
13 years ago

Honestly, how do these guys get dressed in the morning? You have to have some level of logic to know that you put on the pants one leg at a time.

Amused
Amused
13 years ago

I think the best child custody advice to misogynists would be a paraphrase of Golda Meir’s famous saying: They’ll get custody more often and have better relationships with their kids when they start loving their kids more than they hate their ex-wives.

Joanna
13 years ago

Hmm… been offline for a bit there. What did I miss? Did the MRAs say something silly again?

Amused
Amused
13 years ago

Let’s recap the MRA position:

When a woman marries a man who will, in the future, abuse her and perhaps even kill her and some random people who happen to be nearby, her fate is her own fault because she should have foreseen everything the man was going to do the moment she met him. By marrying a future murderer, she consents to her own murder, and she also consents on behalf of other future victims to be murdered as well. In other words, it’s her own damn fault.

When a man marries a woman who will, one day, divorce him and take “his” kids, it’s the fault of feminism. And women. And that particular woman. Since men are responsible for everything, they shouldn’t have to be held responsible for anything.

Logic!!

kariface
kariface
13 years ago

@Joanna- When don’t they say something silly? ^_^

Holly Pervocracy
13 years ago

Amused – Also, a father’s fitness as a parent is irrelevant; all that matters is his entitlement to his “seed.”

paniorpa
13 years ago

As I already said, responsibility correlates with the power to choose.

Women have much more leverage on the dating market than men since female gamets are so rare. At least if they don’t wait until they have become sluts in their 30s like so many feminists.

90% of the women who claim to have been raped or who get killed simply reap the reward for their attraction to violent men.

The word “victim” applies only to those who didn’t indulge in a relationship with a dangerous man.

If I belong to a gang, I know there are risks. If I get killed or assaulted, I won’t be able to claim the victim-status like honest people who refuse to associate with gangsters.

Good women date good men. You are who you fuck. You don’t need to look into your mirror to know yourself. Just have a look at your mate, you’ll see what kind of woman you are.

Pecunium
13 years ago

Holly: A father’s job is to be a role model. That’s all that mattes. He brings home food/money (and tells people how to spend it), pays the rent, and made decisions.

Everything else is women’s work. That’s why her leaving is so bad, his ability to be a role model is decreased, and so he can’t “shape the twig”, and the children (esp. the boys) have “mommy” as their role model and don’t grow up in the right understanding of the world.

They may even come to believe that women are as capable as men when it comes to decisions, and making money.

Viscaria
Viscaria
13 years ago

This is so ugly. How anyone could be so blinded by hate as to view this tragedy the way the quoted MRAs have is entirely beyond me.

On a lighter note, whenever I see any of this “they’re stealing our children!?!?” stuff I (like klopbop) think about my own parents’ divorce. Unlike the even split that Dekraai and Fournier had, my parents had joint custody but my mom had physical custody. My dad took us on weekends when he happened to be in town, and they worked out schedules for holidays and school breaks and such.

I say “happened to be in town”–my dad lived in the same city as my mom and stepdad. He just travelled for work. A lot. And worked 80-90 hour weeks. Before my parents split, I mostly knew him as the guy who may or may not be home a couple of hours before my bedtime, who got loud more often and more loudly than mom ever did, and who mostly stayed away from me and my brother the rest of the time.

I wonder if the MRA crowd would think it was a real crime that my dad only got to see his children a couple of weekends a month. Well, I think that it was. I would have loved to see my father more growing up, before and after the divorce. But see, he had this idea that his only contribution to the raising of his children should be a financial one. Kids need more than money to survive, and he didn’t know how to give us any of that. So, yeah, if the goal is making sure that he got more time with his kids than that uppity bitch who left him, they should have gotten joint physical custody. But if the goal was to ensure his children’s welfare, it was done the right way. MRAs seem to care a lot more about the uppity bitch than the children.

I would love to see less custody arrangements like the one my parents had, because that would mean more fathers were taking an active role in their children’s lives. If only we could have some sort of… social movement, you know? One that tries to break down these entrenched gender roles that say a woman’s place is in the home and a man’s is outside of it? But that’s obviously just a fanciful dream.

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