Lion eyes....I really think we are in agreement.
I don't think you are, and this point is why:
An abused person already may have a propensity to believe things that are untrue about themselves....such as they are unworthy of love etc. As a matter of fact they share this mindset with an abuser because the abuser is extremely insecure and uses manipulation and control to "feel" loved.
The rule is that an abuser and victim are co-conspiritors in ignorance.....the exception is that a man is completely evil and narcissistic and is able to completely fool someone as he sucks them into his web of terror.
Basically what I believe you are saying is that women who are abused believe things about themselves that are untrue, or they are somehow otherwise unhealthy physically, emotionally, etc., and they often end up in abusive situations because they gravitate, whether consciously or subconsciously, toward men who meet their needs, and those men often turn out to be manipulative, deceptive abusers.
The thing is that not all people who believe things about themselves that are untrue wind up being abused. People who don't believe false things about themselves can and do wind up being abused.
Believing false things about oneself does not immediately punch your ticket into abuse. Furthermore, manipulation and deception, let alone abuse, are not things that people consciously walk into. When you say that an abuser and abusee are "co-conspirators in ignorance," you are very far off the mark, my friend, and that is the main point at which LionEyes (and myself for that matter) do not agree. Certainly people do fail to take steps that could help them become healthier people and better their situation, but that does not mean that they contribute to their abuse in any way. If you know that people who murder at random with guns exist in the world and you don't leave your house everyday with protective gear on, that does not make you even partially responsible for your own death if you get shot and killed. When a person is abused, the full weight of the responsibility of the abuse is on the abuser. Zero weight or blame is on the abused.
I would add too that I think you need to consider the repercussions of suggesting that a person might even be partially responsible for their own abuse. That is a demeaning and devastating thing for an abused person to hear, and in the end it is an untruth--it is a lie. Not because of the emotional weight it carries, but because it's simply, objectively untrue.
Also, no one is saying that you're justifying abuse in any way, the point LionEyes and myself are making is that there is no weight of responsibility on a victim whatsoever, and that is true for all types and degrees of abuse across the board.