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- Jun 23, 2012
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To insinuate that this was a "fight" that escalated due to flirting or that both were intoxicated, when the article was clear that only one had been belligerent, and there was no mention of Kristy being drunk, sort of smacks of victim blaming or excusing the rage of this husband. As if unfortunate circumstances just led him to become enraged and was due to bad behavior on both their parts.
I've read a few posts in this vein, including from people I deeply respect. The insinuation is that both were drunk, both were belligerent and that people have a responsibility not to "egg on" or "set off" a drunk and that if they do, well, murder can happen, which is unfortunate, but that those dealing with angry drunks are tasked with keeping them calm.
I'm reading posts from dear posters describing situations in which the victim of domestic violence in a relationship at the hands of an alcoholic are perceived as just as much or almost as much to blame for "instigating" any violence that occurs when dealing with a belligerent drunk.
I take issue with all of that.
I do believe drinking played a part in this but the only evidence we have of anyone acting drunk is that it was he: The man who had been belligerent all night.
So was she not supposed to defend defend herself against the belligerent tirades of her drunken husband?
I mean people can get drunk and do so without attacking their wives. No matter what the wife says. Anyone who becomes violent while drinking has that in them to begin with.
And belligerent drunks often won't stop until they get a response so they can vent their rage on the abused spouse. Cowering or staying silent typically won't work. They will wake you out of a sleep to rage. They will harass you as you sit there quietly. They will continue on and on, no matter what you do or don't do or say or don't say. No matter how you say it.
Regardless, the only person who bears responsibility in a situation where a drunk becomes enraged and attacks is the drunk. They have a responsibility not to get drunk. Especially if their violent nature is exacerbated by drinking. They have a responsibility to get help with their rage.
Arguing back with an angry drunk isn't what prompts more rage or verbal abuse or violence. What prompts that is the drunk being drunk and having an unresolved violent nature.
To summarize my thoughts:
1. No one is responsible for reasoning with or keeping calm or not "setting off" a belligerent drunk. The drunk has the responsibility not to get to that state to begin with and to deal with their inner rage.
2. Those who "fight" with an angry drunk are not at fault and should not expect to be attacked. Often, they are simply trying to defend themselves against an unrelenting verbal assault from a drunk.
3. It is not common sense to expect physical assault and/or murder or to try to prevent it when engaging with someone who is either drunk, angry or both because 99% of people in those states don't physically assault women or children. It's not in most people to do that no matter how upset or inebriated. And as to those who have already seen their spouses or partners become violent when drunk, see 1 and 2 above.
4. There is no evidence that Kristy was drunk. There is evidence that he was as he was belligerent and that can be a sign.
5. There is evidence that Kristy was in a domestic violence relationship. Why? Because the statement of the child indicates he has a pattern of being abusive (rather than that her mom was baiting him
as ive seen insinuated). Because she was murdered by her husband of over a decade. Because unlike a coldly calculated plan to avoid support, or get revenge for something, or to obtain insurance proceeds or hide a huge lie or wherever, sudden rage killings, which this appears to be, typically are just the culmination of on-going abuse rather than a sudden, unexpected murder.
6. The nature of this man is evident by his actions and words following the "accident". He tried to throw her body overboard. He didn't cry, "what have I done?" He cried, "MY life is over!"
7. We ALL need to do better in understanding domestic violence and supporting victims, not victim blaming and holding perps accountable. That includes me.
Respectfully, in no way was I victim blaming, and I apologize to anyone who took my post as that. The "evidence" that he was belligerent all evening was from a supposed member of her family who was not even on the cruise. He may very well have been, but most of the "evidence" I have seen suggests there was an argument, and an argument requires two people. I was only speculating about the possible cause of the argument, and clearly said so. She did absolutely NOTHING to warrant being harmed in any way , much less being killed, and in the several years that I have been a member here, I have never been accused of victim blaming. But to think that he just decided to get drunk and kill his wife on a whim is to ignore the likelihood that he at least FELT provoked at some point. And no, feeling provoked does not excuse what he did, and he should pay dearly for his heinous crime. JMO