You didn’t actually mention Y, but even if you had, you wouldn’t have data to support the comparison of abuses(X,Y) to abuses(Y, X), which seemed to be your claim.
You didn’t actually mention Y, but even if you had, you wouldn’t have data to support the comparison of abuses(X,Y) to abuses(Y, X), which seemed to be your claim.
As I said, I was comparing abused-by(X, me) to abused-by(Y, me), in rejection of the hypothesis that males are not subjected to cruel “street harassment” by females.
I was comparing the subsets of X and Y that had bullied or harassed me personally.
You didn’t actually mention Y, but even if you had, you wouldn’t have data to support the comparison of abuses(X,Y) to abuses(Y, X), which seemed to be your claim.
As I said, I was comparing abused-by(X, me) to abused-by(Y, me), in rejection of the hypothesis that males are not subjected to cruel “street harassment” by females.
Your notation is unconventional—I read “abused-by(X,you)” as “X was abused by you”. I know this is the converse of what you really meant.