2jakes
I'll Lock Up
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- Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas
There is a great and long tradition for it.
Sorry...I don't understand.
There is a great and long tradition for it.
Sorry...I don't understand.
Putting the hurt on anyone who would hurt a woman/his wife has a long tradition behind it.
In my grandparent's neighborhood back in the golden era, wife beating just wasn't looked down upon---you got it good if you did it. If it wasn't from the wife's brothers then it was from one of the neighborhood men who straightened him out REAL good. He got a warning and then a straightening if the warning wasn't heeded. I think my own grandfather had to do a little "straightening" a few times. They usually got it the first times---he had hands like hams.
I will put the hurt on any "man" that should do that to a women. And not to be
disrespectful...but the same goes to any man that hurts dogs or cats.
When I'm dictator, mistreatement of domestic animals will be a death-penalty offense. No appeals, no mercy.
When I'm dictator, mistreatement of domestic animals will be a death-penalty offense. No appeals, no mercy.
...In Maryland, as late as 1940, wife beaters were sentenced to public whipping.
At the risk of opening a can o' worms, that surprises me. My impression has been that husbands could get away with quite a lot with their wives back in the day, as far as the law was concerned, largely with impunity. Including marital rape. A quick google says that that it wasn't until 1993 that marital rape became a crime in all 50 states. So it surprises me that wife beating had such a harsh and public repercussion there. Not unhappy about that, just surprised. I figured that was why male family members or neighbors had to take matters into their own hands, because the law wasn't stellar about doing it.
It depended on where you lived. Some local police departments might have made it a policy not to interfere in "domestic matters" but as far as actual laws are concerned, wife-beating was illegal in every state by 1920.
Superman was against wife-beating, too.
As far as no-fault divorce goes, that was largely an innovation of the sixties and seventies, but even before the war many states granted divorces on the grounds of "mental cruelty," which was usually very broadly defined as "unhappiness." It wasn't hard to get a divorce in these situations, and divorces on the grounds of "physical cruelty" were granted even faster.
Then as now, people assaulted their spouses. And then, as now, many of those abused spouses stayed in those abusive relationships for their own reasons -- economic necessity, negative self-image, familial expectations, whatever.
I've heard many an anecdote concerning the abused wife's brothers or uncles or father "taking care of" the problem, but I take almost all of those reports with a large grain of salt. Conversely, I've witnessed domestic assault up close and personal, in my own home and in the homes of cousins and neighbors and friends, and I never once saw a superman of any sort come to the damsel's defense. I've seen the young male offspring (my own juvenile self among them) make such attempts, but a kid against a grown man is no fight at all.