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Pedophilia's Double Standard
Free Inquiry ^ | Christopher Hitchens

Posted on 07/01/2002 9:20:03 PM PDT by gcruse

Pedophilia's Double Standard

by Christopher Hitchens

[...] The prohibition against cruelty or violence to infants is quite ancient and very common to all cultures, so that we remember the exceptions—Sparta, for example—very well. It's probably encoded in us in some way; it hardly needs the very memorable condemnation that it receives from Jesus of Nazareth, who is supposed to have said that, rather than perpetrate such a hideous offense, it would be better for the guilty to have a millstone put around their necks and to try and hide their shame in the depths of the sea.

Given that, the existence of a vast pedophile ring in the United States in the twenty-first century is something more than an affront to "family values." And the fact that this ring is operated by named and senior churchmen, who continue to hold high office and to officiate at Sunday ceremonies, is something more than an outrage. Alleged "cultists" in Waco, Texas, who were only suspected of maltreating children inside their compound, were immolated by a bombardment of federal fire. The admitted and confessed enablers and protectors of rapists and child abusers are invited, at the most, only to resign their high offices. And even this suggestion is something that they feel strong enough to repudiate-and with indignation at that.

No doubt there are some secular institutions, such as prisons, where the incidence of sexual torture and rape is, so to speak, part of the system. But even these places take some care to protect the underage from predators. What continually strikes the reader of each successive case involving the churches is that the ghastly recurrence is truly systematic, if not indeed routine. I do not wish to seem sectarian, but I will risk the accusation. The Protestant churches and some prominent synagogues in Florida and New York appear to have been bad enough, in resorting at once to denial and to cover-up. The Roman Catholic Church, however, has been behaving as if, without the opportunity for sex with the underage, its whole ministry would collapse.

If I knowingly sheltered a torturer and abuser of children, or lied about my knowledge of him, or (aware of his record) pressed him upon my neighbors as a child-minder or babysitter, and if I stood to profit by these actions or inactions, I would expect more from the forces of law and order than a dirty look. So intense is our obsession with this crime, indeed, that many innocent teachers and even Web-site surfers have had their careers and lives ruined by even the suggestion of it. But here are the men of god, calmly engaged in the racket and evidently irritated by the resulting fuss.

It is quite obvious that, with recidivism at this level, one must look to the actual practices of the Catholic Church. The celibacy requirement, which is peculiar to Catholic Christians, is obviously a part of it. So is the renowned insistence of the Catholic Church on gaining authority over children, for doctrinal reasons, at the earliest possible age. The authority that is exerted, often by newly ordained and unstable young men, is a teaching entirely drenched in the obsession with all kinds of sex, and in the requirement to repress or prohibit a huge list of sexual behaviors. Moving along the continuum of priestly and episcopal hierarchy, one finds elderly but somehow useless men who may never have abused a child themselves, but cannot quite see why there is any outcry. I wager that they would not act like this if they had had the chance to be fathers or grandfathers themselves. Instead, they wager their supposedly immortal souls on the dogma that denies this opportunity to their subordinates, or which recruits from the maladjusted and inadequate.

To need love or sex only from the innocent, or to be able to express your needs only in that way, is obviously a terrible punishment in itself and can, in some circumstances, even call upon our pity (and our dearly bought secular and scientific knowledge about the possibility of care and help). But to become a hardened exploiter of children as part of your vocation, and to be defended by a coalition of stone-faced, ignorant patriarchs and hysterical virgins, is a privilege known only to the most devout. So who will now say that religion, for all its vast intellectual shortcomings, at least encourages the average Joe to be good (as the practical definition of morality used to run) while nobody is looking?
 

Christopher Hitchens is a columnist for Vanity Fair.
 
 


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1 posted on 07/01/2002 9:20:03 PM PDT by gcruse
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To: gcruse
So who will now say that religion, for all its vast intellectual shortcomings, at least encourages the average Joe to be good (as the practical definition of morality used to run) while nobody is looking?

Obviously being a member of the clergy is has never been any guarantee of morality or character. I will now say that organized religions are just one more way the state controls the masses.

2 posted on 07/01/2002 9:27:48 PM PDT by rageaholic
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To: rageaholic
 I will now say that organized religions are just
one more way the state controls the masses.

Opiate, and all that.  The founders strove for
separation to minimize this, but we seem
heaven-bent for leather to end up right
back in that soup.

3 posted on 07/01/2002 9:33:49 PM PDT by gcruse
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To: gcruse
The celibacy requirement, which is peculiar to Catholic Christians, is obviously a part of it.

Celibacy has nothing to do with it. Celibacy is the triumph of sexual self-control, something a sex-abuser cannot even fathom.

4 posted on 07/01/2002 9:36:01 PM PDT by Slyfox
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To: gcruse
Hitchens writes with passion. I did not read the book which attacked Sister Teresa, but I wish American writers could take strong unpopular positions and defend those positions with his degree of eloquence. Even though I vehemently disagree with his political and religious views, I must give him his due, he is more readable than most of our pundits who make a handsome living saying so much about so little.
5 posted on 07/01/2002 9:39:53 PM PDT by Biblebelter
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To: Slyfox
Celibacy is the triumph of sexual self-control,
something a sex-abuser cannot even fathom.

To what purpose?  Are the ministers of all other
faiths of lesser value to their flocks because have
experienced a fuller humanity?  Denying yourself
the love of a wife and family is of what benefit
to the congregation?

6 posted on 07/01/2002 9:41:46 PM PDT by gcruse
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To: Biblebelter
His point about Waco took me back a step. I had not considered that.
7 posted on 07/01/2002 9:43:10 PM PDT by gcruse
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To: gcruse
A priest who is celibate has offered himself to the Church. Not unlike a married couple who give themselves to each other exclusively. Both have God as a partner in their commitment. A minister who is married and is faithful to his wife shares a spiritual bond with God just like any other faithful married couple or priest who is faithful to his vow of celibacy.
8 posted on 07/01/2002 9:53:10 PM PDT by Slyfox
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To: gcruse
ZING!!!! Great read!
9 posted on 07/01/2002 9:57:56 PM PDT by BossLady
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To: Slyfox
A priest who is celibate has offered himself to the Church.

God didn't ask for it.  The congregation doesn't
benefit from it.  The priest is unable to empathize with
a major source of human conflict.  Other than an
ego trip, I don't see an upside for anyone.

10 posted on 07/01/2002 10:07:37 PM PDT by gcruse
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To: gcruse
This is more about homosexual chickenhawking than it is pedophilia.....the media sans talk radio simply refuse to acknowledge this point...no suprise.
11 posted on 07/01/2002 10:10:41 PM PDT by wardaddy
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To: gcruse
If you think a priest can not possibly empathize, please get a hold of a copy of "Love and Responsibility" written by Pope John Paul II.
12 posted on 07/01/2002 10:10:48 PM PDT by Slyfox
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To: wardaddy
This is more about homosexual chickenhawking than it is pedophilia

The article concerns the straight bishops as much as the homo priests.

13 posted on 07/01/2002 10:13:20 PM PDT by gcruse
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To: gcruse
The percentages I've seen are overwhlemingly of homosexual clergy with adolescent boys. The act of straight bishops in covering this up and not taking decisive action is a lamentable fact as well. Some talking heads estimate that upwards of 50% of the Catholic clergy in this country are homosexual. I know plenty of homosexuals and can attest that until they mature somewhere on the north side of age forty, that many of them absolutely covet teenage boys and can usually find a willing 15-18 year old rose petal to deflower. Nothing new here except that amongst clergy it's particularly despicable.
14 posted on 07/01/2002 10:21:22 PM PDT by wardaddy
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To: gcruse
BTW, as a non Catholic Prod but with many Catholic relatives, I can attest from observing at a relative distance that celibacy is not something that I think is a big plus for the church.....but as a Prod I realize, it's really not my place to say and I offer my apologies to the traditionalists.....seems many traditions are crumbling today and I can empathize why many may not wish to see this one go away as well.
15 posted on 07/01/2002 10:26:35 PM PDT by wardaddy
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To: wardaddy
 The act of straight bishops in covering this up
and not taking decisive action is a lamentable fact as well.

The apportionment of punishment in no way
reflects the degree of culpability, though.
As Hitchens points out, the bishops are
just irritated.  Someone in 'civilian'
society would be indicted.

16 posted on 07/01/2002 10:28:06 PM PDT by gcruse
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To: gcruse
You or I would be needing a good criminal lawyer for sure. It's been an eye opener for me about how powerful and insulated the Church is.
17 posted on 07/01/2002 10:30:24 PM PDT by wardaddy
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To: wardaddy
My brother is a domestic relations lawyer,he says over half of the child custody cases involve the mom charging the dad with sexually abusing the children. They don't need criminal lawyers,its handled with armies of mental health counsellors,psychologists,and psychiatrists who each support whoever hired them and guilt or innocence determined by the effectiveness of the testimony or the professional who presents best.

Americans need to get a grip and so do the bishops and priests.Something reprehensible is going on and it is going on all over. Most of these cases are homosexuals,many placed there with the specific intention of destroying the Church. There they(the homosexual)can satisfy his own desire and recruit at the same time while accomplishing the larger mission their handlers so much want. What a plan!!!Win/win,so to speak.

18 posted on 07/01/2002 11:39:57 PM PDT by saradippity
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To: eastsider; Romulus
Hitchens is a very effective writer,consequently dangerous.He lays out a good idea of the future of the movement.
19 posted on 07/01/2002 11:46:08 PM PDT by saradippity
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To: Biblebelter; Slyfox; gcruse
As you say, Bb, Hitchens IS entertaining, and at least he has a view. Even though I tend to think of him as a Catholic-bashing loudmouth, whenever I see his name, I do start reading. A point I disagree with in this article is: No doubt there are some secular institutions, such as prisons, where the incidence of sexual torture and rape is, so to speak, part of the system. But even these places take some care to protect the underage from predators. I think this is an implicit reply to Alexander Cockburn, a left-wing writer he debates with. A.C. wrote an article saying that while everyone was in an uproar about Catholic priests, "we the people" were sentencing people to prison where they are raped as a matter of routine. I think Cockburn has a point, and in juvenile institutions it is also bad, and the "gay lobby" is trying to have "safe sex" campaigns in juvenile prisons, which is just a cover for opporutinites for sex abuse.
20 posted on 07/01/2002 11:48:41 PM PDT by BlackVeil
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