The absolute lack of specific examples and the overreliance upon vague notions of things existing annoys me. The first example of this in Chapter 4 happens at the precise beginning:
Every day in America men are violent. Their violence is deemed “natural” by the psychology of patriarchy... This thinking continues to shape notions of manhood in our society despite the fact that it has been documented that cultures exist in the world where men are not violent in everyday life, where rape and murder are rare occurrences.
What are these documented cultures? Do you want your audience to learn anything? Why not cite them? Why not point to them?
There are a bunch of times this happens, and a lot of it is tied to victim-blaming structures of "analysis." This bit is tied to how women stand by and watch their sons get brutalised (and then says it's done because of allegiance to patriarchy, which I find to be a lazy and harmful way to discuss the actual dynamics):
No wonder then that male rage is often most directed at women in intimate relationships.
But there's no citations to it, and it's bizarre. Men's violence aganist women is formed as a result of their boyhood trauma because... women were bystanders (for whatever reason, though that reason is far more likely related to a desire for safety and a decrease in their own brutalisation)? I get the social conditioning of boys to participate in patriarchy, but I find it weird that this is just left there as an excuse for why men abuse women.
Then there's this gem about single moms that comes with no evidence and a quote that doesn't even support it (because it's irrelevant to the opening of the paragraph):
Contrary to popular myths, single mothers are often the most brutal when it comes to coercing their sons to conform to patriarchal standards.
She then goes on to say that their sons will be little patriarchs, and then says that this happens regardless of single or dual parent household... So... Why does it happen in dual-parent households? And what does the phenomenon have to do with single mothers? Weird setup, if we're honest.
I'm not going to keep listing examples of all the times I kept screaming "EXAMPLES? CITATIONS? REFERENCES? ANYTHING AT ALL?" because that would be almost every paragraph. The assertions she makes have a grain of truth behind them, but I don't agree with the analysis (and often find it to be erring too much on the side of victim-blaming women and "the feminist movement") while simultaneously making sure you know she thinks this violence against women is bad.
I'm not comfortable with giving abusers an out or an excuse, and I'm not comfortable letting them weaponise their abuse as a reason for why they're abusive. At that point, their trauma and abuse doesn't matter; they are hurting someone, and there is no reason for it. If anything, her writing reminds me frequently of the ways in which manipulative people often engage in trauma-bonding, trying to break down a person's defenses and get too close too quickly so that they can manipulate and abuse them.
... It's also hard to read a list of movies that she (mostly) correctly labels as "glorifying war" (those movies including Saving Private Ryan, Independence Day, Blackhawk Down, Pearl Harbor, and Men in Black—the latter of which I never felt glorified war but did glorify secret agencies, even while trying to prevent destruction)... and then says they are "patriarchal antifeminist backlash." While there might be antifeminist messages in those films, I don't know that I'd label them as backlash because... these kinds of movies were not uncommon genres. (It's also weird to see Will Smith get hit twice here? Especially when he's known for playing characters that usually break stereotypes, even of masculinity. Or characters who might have what is recognised as traditional masculinity but also aren't afraid of other expressions that aren't gendered as masculine. It's weird that he's here as 'patriarchal antifeminist backlash'.)
Maybe it's also because 'backlash', to me, implies that they are responding to that particular movement and in that particular way. I don't think Men in Black is responding to feminism; I don't think Independence Day is responding to it, either. Either way, this part is distracting (along with the dig at 'gangsta' rap for being violently misogynistic—not like other genres... like country or random pop songs by guys who literally outline stalking in the lyrics).
I also find a lot of the analysis about women's tolerance for abusive men lacking.