 I thought this was a rather interesting article that I found on GayConservative.org. Eminem's songs have always been controversial, yet we (myself included) continue to listen. I'm not attempting to get on a soapbox right now and condemn lyrics or freedom of speech, but take the time to check out this article; it brings up a lot of great issues about domestic violence in both hetero- and homosexual relationships.By Mel Macguire
I thought this was a rather interesting article that I found on GayConservative.org. Eminem's songs have always been controversial, yet we (myself included) continue to listen. I'm not attempting to get on a soapbox right now and condemn lyrics or freedom of speech, but take the time to check out this article; it brings up a lot of great issues about domestic violence in both hetero- and homosexual relationships.By Mel Macguire
I have said before that lyrics are every bit as important as the tune  of a song to me; I choose which music I listen to carefully.  That  said, I typically hate rap.  The vast majority of it makes women into  property, gang violence heroic, drug use and alcoholism chic, and prison  time something to aspire to for “street cred”.  I particularly dislike  Eminem.  However, late one night while on duty, I was watching a spot on  Fox News where they discussed the song “Love the Way You Lie” and the  subject matter of the lyrics: domestic violence.  Finding that  especially poignant considering Rhianna’s participation, I broke my rule  and downloaded the song.  
 The lyrics are powerful.  I would not suggest this song for a kid, but the lyrics bring up some very good points.
 Domestic violence is an enormous problem worldwide, but here in the  US it wasn’t always a crime.  Rape and violence against a married  partner, for a long time, was not necessarily classified as a crime,  rape in particular.  It took years of fighting to convince lawmakers  that being married doesn’t grant a person the right to abuse their  spouse either mentally, physically or sexually.  Domestic violence  (which, in my profession, we simply refer to as DV) somehow still  manages to be a blight on our society, one that is worse in many ways  than other problems we face – and often more expensive, costing nearly  $6 billion a year to deal with (most of that being for medical care).
 According to the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence (NCADV), 85%  of DV victims are women.  One in every four women will experience DV in  her lifetime.  An estimated 1.3 million women are victims of physical  assault every year.  Witnessing violence between one’s parents or  guardians is the strongest risk factor for the continuation of DV from  one generation to the next, and boys who witness such violence at home  are twice as likely to behave the same way against their partners as  adults.  Approximately half of all abusers also abuse children.  What  about reporting?  DV is one of the most underreported crimes in our  society.  Only 25% of all physical assaults and a paltry 20% of all  rapes perpetrated by intimate partners are reported to the police.  Only  20% of those who experienced serious DV applied for restraining orders,  and among those issued a full half of those served with such orders  violated them.  The most sobering fact is that a full one-third of all  female homicide victims were murdered by their intimate partners after  experiencing DV at their hands.  Less than 20% of victims seek medical  attention for injuries incurred by DV.  There is a separate figure for  the costs of homicides that end DV relationships: a whopping $37  billion.
 Today, Arizona residents saw a harrowing story of domestic violence.  Antwon Smith,  born in 1984, has applied for four different orders of protection  against four different girlfriends since 2003.  In the first three  cases, his partners fought back and the orders were rightfully quashed;  in 2008, he got one to stick when an ex-girlfriend didn’t fight the  order.  Either that ex didn’t realize that she had to fight it or she  was so terrified of him that she simply didn’t want to face him in  court; either way, today’s video from a Circle K in Mesa was horrifying.   Smith’s ex girlfriend fled from him after he put a razor to her throat  and ran into a Circle K store to call police.  As she was dialing the  phone Smith stormed in, took the phone away, then grabbed her arm and  bodily dragged her from the store and forced her into his car.  He then  led police on a chase before being caught.  The girlfriend, who has not  been officially named, is probably lucky to still be alive.  Smith was  found not guilty of aggravated assault stemming from another  relationship in 2007 but still had a warrant out for his arrest for a  serious driving offense. 
 Not all DV stories have such relieving endings, though.  On September  4, 2005, Jorge Mario Gurrola got into yet another argument with  girlfriend Monica Sanchez.  Monica’s mother Maria did not want her to  move to Arizona to be with Gurrola because she knew he was dangerous,  but because she already had one child with him she came anyway.  She  didn’t want her daughter to grow up without a father.  On that fateful  September day five years ago this month, Gurrola found a picture of  another man in Monica’s wallet and he exploded in a fit of rage, beating  her so severely she fell into a coma.  She died two days later – along  with her unborn child.  His parents sued Monica’s for access to their  daughter just two months later.  In June 2007, I went to the Mesa branch  of the Maricopa County Superior court to observe his sentencing and  watched his relatives behave poorly, mocking the Sanchez family and  trying to claim that Gurrola was really a good man.  Childhood teachers  wrote letters about what he was like as a boy.  Not one member of his  family acknowledged the gravity of his crime.  In his initial 2008 appeal,  after having claimed in court at his sentencing to deserve the hatred  of Monica’s family, Gurrola argued that because he didn’t mean to kill  their unborn child, it shouldn’t count as an actual crime and come  attached with a separate prison sentence.  Such contrition.
 Gay and lesbian couples are not immune, either.  Any intimate partner  can commit acts of DV.  It often starts out slowly; a partner becomes  jealous of other relationships you have, insisting more and more with  each incident that you cut off other people.  They eventually isolate  you completely from the outside world.  They have impossible  expectations, believing that you are supposed to supply everything they  need.  They’re easily offended, very touchy – the slightest remark  becomes a personal attack and generates a strong response.  Jealousy  will give way to violence against others, whether verbal or physical.   They’ll start lying to turn you against people who are important to you.   They’re very moody, often depressed and angry.  Their moodiness first  gets blamed on others, along with their anger; then, when others can’t  be blamed anymore, they blame you.  They claim they can’t help their  feelings or the subsequent reactions.  When you refuse sex, they may try  to force you into it or wait until you’re asleep.  They’ll  self-medicate with alcohol or narcotics.  Eventually it will give way to  physical violence, injuries, and sometimes death.
 What’s worse about DV is that often, the victim feels they’re trapped  because their entire lives are wrapped up in their abuser – including  their finances.  Leaving seems impossible with no money (or access to  it), no vehicle to legally take, and no job away from where they live  with their abuser.  Most despairing of all is that many don’t even  recognize that they are being abused.
 Eminem’s lyric “you don’t get another chance, life is no Nintendo  game” was meant to convey the fact that you can’t take back the cruel  acts you commit against your partner.  Whether words or deeds, it cannot  be taken back.  If you are the victim, then you should get out at the  first sign rather than giving them opportunities to give you others.   The heinous nature of DV is why I believe it has long been far more  important to face than hate crimes.  It has cost far more in so many  ways.