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FEATURED ESSAYS
1. TV Violence: Impossible To Get Ri...
2. Domestic Violence
3. How Can I End Violence In My S
4. Violence By Children
5. Violence In Music And The Media
6. Violence In Sports
7. Domestic Abuse
8. Hurston's "Sweat": Women Overcomi...
9. Sweat By Zora Neale Hurston
10. Violence In The Media
11. Jane Eyre - Violence
12. Violence On Television: Violence ...
13. Violence In Jane Eyre
14. Domestic Violence


Violence Against Women Act

The Violence Against Women Act creates a right to be "free                 
from crimes of violence" that are gender motivated. It also gives a        
private civil right of action to the victims of these crimes. The          
Senate report attached to the act states that "Gender based crimes and     
fear of gender based crimes...reduces employment opportunities and         
consumer spending affecting interstate commerce."                          


Sara Benenson has been abused by her husband, Andrew Benenson,             
since 1978. Because of this abuse, she sued her husband under various      
tort claims and violations under the Violence Against Women Act. Now       
Mr. Benenson is protesting the constitutionality of this act claiming      
that Congress has no right to pass a law that legislates for the           
common welfare.                                                            


However, Congress has a clear Constitutional right to regulate             
interstate commerce. This act is based solely on interstate commerce       
and is thereforeConstitutional. Because of abuse, Sara Benenson was        
afraid to get a job because it would anger her husband. She was afraid     
to go back to school and she was afraid to go shopping or spend any        
money on her own. All three of these things clearly interfere and          
affect interstate commerce. Women like Mrs. Benenson are the reason        
the act was passed.                                                        


There has been a long history of judgements in favor of                    
Congress's power to legislate using the commerce clause as a               
justification. For the past fifty years, Congress's right to interpret     
the commerce clause has been unchallenged by the Court with few            
exceptions. There is no rational reason for this court to go against       
the powerful precedents set by the Supreme court to allow Congress to      
use the Commerce clause.                                                   


In the case of Katzenbach v. McClung, the Court upheld an act              
of Congress which was based on the commerce clause, that prohibited        
segregation. McClung, the owner of a barbeque that would not allow         
blacks to eat inside the restaurant, claimed that his business was         
completely intrastate. He stated that his business had little or no        
out of state business and was therefore not subject to the act passed      
by Congress because it could not legislate intrastate commerce. The        
Court however, decided that because the restaurant received some of        
it's food from out of state that it was involved in interstate             
commerce.                                                                  


The same logic should be applied in this case. Even though                 
Sara Benenson's inability to work might not seem to affect interstate      
commerce, it will in some way as with McClung, thus making the act         
constitutional. The Supreme Court had decided that any connection with     
interstate commerce,as long as it has a rational basis, makes it           
possible for Congress to legislate it. In the United States v. Lopez       
decision, The Supreme Court struck down the Gun Free School Zones Act.     
It's reasoning was that Congress had overstepped it's power to             
legislate interstate commerce. The Court decided that this act was         
not sufficiently grounded in interstate commerce for Congress to be        
allowed to pass it.                                                        


The circumstances in this case are entirely different than in              
the case of Sara Benenson. For one thing, the Gun Free School Zones        
Act was not nearly as well based in the commerce clause as is our          
case. The Gun act said that violence in schools kept student from          
learning and therefore limited their future earning power. It also         
said that violence affected national insurance companies. These            
connections are tenuous at best and generally too long term to be          
considered. However, in the case of Mrs. Benenson, her inability to        
work and spend directly and immediately affected interstate commerce.      
Therefore, the Lopez decision should not have any part in the decision     
of this case.                                                              


The Supreme Court, in McCulloch v. Maryland, gave Congress the             
right to make laws that are out of their strict Constitutional powers      
so as to be able to fulfill one of their Constitutional duties. In         
this case, the Court allowed the federal government to create a bank.      
There is no Constitutional right to do this and Maryland challenged        
the creation of this bank. The high court ruled that in order for          
Congress to be able to accomplish it's duties. The same logic should       
be applied here. The Violence Against Women Act is an example of           
Congress overstepping it's direct Constitutional rights so it can          
better regulate and facilitate interstate commerce. In order for           
Congress to legislate interstate commerce fairly, it must allow people     
to be able to work and spend as they should be able to. If a woman is      
afraid of being abused if she gets a job or spends money, it affects       
interstate commerce. Thus The Violence Against Women Act is                
Constitutionally based and necessary for interstate commerce.              


Violence against women is a terrible crime. It destroys                    
women's self esteem, tears apart families, and destroys lives. Many        
times, it will lead to murder or other terrible crimes. What the           
Violence Against Women Act is trying to do is give women a weapon to       
protect themselves from violent spouses. Without this act, many women      
would be left incapable of getting any form of financial redress for       
the years of suffering and abuse they went through. It is wrong to         
deny women a tool to rebuild they're lives after an abusive                
relationship. The years of abuse they went through makes it hard if        
not impossible for them to get a job or work in an office. These women     
are afraid for the rest of their lives that if they make a mistake or      
displease the men around them, they will be beaten. This act allows        
women to get some means of getting money to live on while they rebuild     
their lives. It allows them to seek professional help if necessary.        
Without this act, women would be forced on welfare or worse. When this     
happens, it benefits no one. The Violence Against Women Act has a          
strong Constitutional basis in the commerce clause, despite what           
Andrew Benenson says.                                                      


The Supreme Court has allowed many acts such as this to stand              
for the past fifty years. All the precedents of cases with similar         
circumstances are to allow the act to stand. Also, we cannot forget        
the human aspect of this case. This act is a tool for women to rebuild     
their shattered lives after an abusive relationship. To declare his        
act unconstitutional would be both legally and morally wrong.              


ADDITIONAL FEATURED ESSAYS
Violence In Televeision
General Purpose: To Persuade Specific Purpose: To persuade that violence in television does affect children. Central Ide
Violence On Television
The context in which most violence is presented on television poses risks for viewers. The majority of programs analyzed
Jane Eyre
Charlotte Bronte uses violence in several scenes throughout the novel. The violence in the novel is not fatal to anyone,
Jane Eyre 3
Charlotte Bronte uses violence in several scenes throughout the novel. The violence in the novel is not fatal to anyone,
Child Abuse
Abuse is the improper use of power by one person to the detriment of another. In today’s society and world, spouses of m



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