Reactions To Solange’s Attack On Jay Z Reveal Huge Double Standard

Jay-Z and sister-in-law Solange
Jay‑Z and sis­ter-in-law Solange

Video was released Monday of a vio­lent alter­ca­tion alleged­ly between rap­per Jay Z and his sis­ter-in-law Solange Knowles. By now, most peo­ple with access to WiFi have already seen it and maybe even joked about the way Solange launched her­self at Jay Z, punch­ing and kick­ing. The response elicit­ed by the footage begs the ques­tion, how­ev­er: is female to male vio­lence real­ly a laugh­ing mat­ter? The hash­tag #whatJayZsaidtoSolange is a trend­ing top­ic on Twitter, gar­ner­ing hun­dreds of thou­sands of tweets in a few hours. Users made attempts to one-up each oth­er with spec­u­la­tion over what the rap­per could have said to his sis­ter-in-law to pro­voke such a sud­den and vicious attack. Even some cor­po­ra­tions saw fit to cap­i­tal­ize on the moment. Fast foodchain Whataburger sent out, “I’m not shar­ing my Whataburger with you #WhatJayZsaidtoSolange.” “#WhatJayZsaidtoSolange It’s not DiGiorno, It’s Delivery,” tweet­ed the piz­za mak­er. The tweet has since been deleted.

Our soci­ety, cer­tain­ly our media, treats attacks on men by women as a laugh­ing mat­ter,” says Phillip W. Cook, author of “Abused Men: The Hidden Side of Domestic Violence.” Cook, who stud­ies and writes on inti­mate-part­ner and fam­i­ly vio­lence against men points to high-pro­file exam­ples like a 2011 Super Bowl com­mer­cial from Pepsi. In the ad, a man is repeat­ed­ly assault­ed by his female part­ner. She kicks him and push­es his head into a pie, among oth­er things. The com­mer­cial ends with her vio­lent­ly hurl­ing a can of Pepsi at his head but acci­den­tal­ly hit­ting anoth­er woman. The com­mer­cial was titled, “Love Hurts.”

Do you think there wouldn’t be howls of protest if a man was doing that to a woman,” asks Cook of the com­mer­cial. “Those kinds of images, and there are more than we real­ize, dimin­ish the seri­ous­ness of vio­lence against men and make vio­lence by women seem accept­able and fun­ny. That ulti­mate­ly has an effect on how we view all vio­lence,” he says. “We need to be accu­rate about the infor­ma­tion being sup­plied and treat it seri­ous­ly.” Family vio­lence against men, per­pe­trat­ed by women, is not near the epi­dem­ic that vio­lence against women is, but it’s still fre­quent and sig­nif­i­cant, say experts. According to Cook, meta-analy­ses of domes­tic vio­lence data have revealed that near­ly half of all inci­dents are clas­si­fied as “mutu­al com­bat.” More than a quar­ter of domes­tic vio­lence inci­dents, he says how­ev­er, are per­pe­trat­ed by women against their male part­ners. Read more here the​grio​.com