"Barry Glassner - The Culture of Fear (incomplete)" - читать интересную книгу автора (Glassner Barry)In that same vein, consider a suspenseful yarn that took up much of the space in a front-page piece in the Los Angeles Times entitled "Youngsters Falling Prey to Seducers in Computer Web Crime." It was about a fifteen-year-old whose parents found him missing. Using the boy's America Online account, they discovered that he had been sent a bus ticket to visit a man with whom he had communicated by e-mail. The parents frantically sent messages of their own to the man. "Daniel is a virgin," one of the parents' outgoing messages said. "Oh, no, he's not," came back the chilling reply. Yet when the reporter gets to the conclusion of Daniel's saga it's something of an anticlimax. The teenager returned home and informed his parents he had not been harmed by his e-mail companion, who was only a little older than Daniel himself. Nonetheless, the moral of Daniel's story was, according to the Los Angeles Times reporter: "Such are the frightening new frontiers of cyberspace, a place where the child thought safely tucked away in his or her own room may be in greater danger than anyone could imagine."
Now there's a misleading message. For those children most at risk of sexual abuse, to be left alone in their rooms with a computer would be a godsend. It is poor children-few of whom have America Online connections-who are disproportionately abused, and it is in children's own homes and those of close relatives that sexual abuse commonly occurs. In focusing on creeps in cyberspace, reporters neatly skirt these vital facts and the discomforting issues they raise. Raw Numbers and Pedophile Priests The news media have misled public consciousness all the more through their voracious coverage of pedophiles in another place that many Americans privately distrust and consider mysterious-the Catholic Church. John Dreese, a priest of the diocese of Columbus, Ohio, justifiably complained that a generation of Catholic clergy find their "lifetimes of service, fairly faithful for the great majority, are now tarnished and besmirched by the constant drone of the TV reporting." Writing in Commonweal, the independently published Catholic magazine, Dreese acknowledged that some of his fellow priests abuse children, and he decried the bishops who let them get away with it. But the media, Dreese argues, "seem more and more ideological. 'Roman Catholic priest' or 'Father' are consistently used in their reporting. Rarely is the generic term of minister or simply, priest, used. Shots of the inside of a Roman Catholic church, of angelic altar boys in cassocks and surplices, and first communicants dressed in pure white dramatically highlight the bold betrayal of this crime." Asks Dreese, "Is this responsible reporting, is it sensationalism, or is it Catholic bashing?" It is a question that warrants serious consideration by reporters and editors who have been much too accepting of evidence of "epidemics" of priestly pedophilia. The media paid considerable attention, for example, to pronouncements from Andrew M. Greeley, a priest best known as the author of best-selling potboilers, including Fall from Grace, a 1993 novel about a priest who rapes preadolescent boys. Although Greeley holds a professorship in the social sciences at the University of Chicago, his statements on pedophiles in the priesthood oddly conflict with one another and with principles of statistical reasoning to which he subscribes in other contexts. "If Catholic clerics feel that charges of pedophilia have created an open season on them," he wrote in an op-ed piece in the New York Times, "they have only themselves to blame. By their own inaction and indifference they have created an open season on children for the few sexual predators among them." Yet in a Jesuit magazine Greeley declared that the number of pedophile priests is far more than just a "few". There he estimated that 2,000 to 4,000 Roman Catholic clergy-between 4 and 8 percent of the total-had abused more than 100,000 young people. These shocking statistics, dutifully publicized in the press, were unreliable to say the least. Greeley extrapolated the number of pedophile priests based on rough estimates from the Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago, which based them on their own internal study, which may or may not have been accurate, and in any event, might not have generalized to clergy nationwide. As for the figure of 100,000 victims, Greeley came up with this estimate on the basis of studies of child molesters outside the priesthood that suggest that active pedophiles victimize dozens if not hundreds of children each. Yet these studies are themselves controversial because they rely on self-reports from men who were apprehended by the police-men who might molest more children than other pedophiles or exaggerate their exploits. Greeley's critics suggest he exaggerated the number of pedophiles and victims by something like a factor of ten. But whatever the true incidence, the amount of ink and airtime devoted to pedophile priests clearly has created a climate in which, on the one hand, the church has reason to disavow true claims, and on the other, con artists have leverage to bring false claims. Attorneys who specialize in bringing suits against the church and have collected multimillion dollar settlements say they see large numbers of false claims. The political essayist Walter Russell Mead pointed out a more subtle disservice of the media's focus. In reporting on perverted priests journalists presumably believe they are raising a larger issue about the moral collapse of one of humankind's oldest and most influential spiritual institutions. As Mead points out, however, obsessive attention to pedophile priests obscures more far-reaching problems of the church. He cites in particular corruption in political parties the church has supported in Europe, and a loss of membership in various parts of the world. These trends are considerably more difficult for the press to cover, especially in a manner that audiences will find interesting. Yet they are far more pertinent indicators of the decline and corruption of the church than are pedophile priests. "After all, the church does not teach that its clergy are saints-just the opposite," notes Mead. "Sin is with us every day, says the Catholic Church, and it deliberately teaches that the efficacy of its sacraments and the accuracy of its teachings are independent of the moral failings of its bishops and priests. From a certain point of view, the sex scandals don't so much disprove the Christian faith as confirm our need for it." Strange and Sinister Men In my review of news stories about crimes against children I have been struck by the frequency with which journalists draw unsubstantiated conclusions about the pedophilic tendencies of individuals and whole classes of people. When a man named Thomas Hamilton gunned down sixteen elementary school children, their teacher, and himself in tiny Dunblane, Scotland, in March 1996, the event took center stage in the American news media, much of which portrayed Hamilton as one in a large but nearly invisible breed of child predators, any of whom might, without warning, go out and massacre children. "The villain, all too predictably, was an embittered loner and suspected pedophile," wrote Newsweek. "He was," a columnist for the magazine said in an accompanying piece, "a slightly elderly, crazed version of the social category that now menaces our societies more than any other: the single male who has no hope." The columnist offered up no evidence in support of this slur against solitary bachelors. He would be hard pressed to do so, in particular with regard to the danger they pose to women and children. Married men, having greater access to these groups, commit the lion's share of violence against them. The pedophile connection is also tenuous. Child murderers may be suspected pedophiles, but only a small number are confirmed or confessed pedophiles. In the case of Thomas Hamilton, most major news outlets hinted at his pedophilia or quoted townspeople who asserted it outright, but on the basis of blatantly weak evidence. As a Reuters news agency story noted, "What really bothered people were the pictures, often showing boys stripped to the waist for physical activity-nothing sinister in that, but unsettling, neighbors and acquaintances said." Reuters's story on Hamilton was more balanced than many. Other print and broadcast journalists let audiences make what they would of the fact that Hamilton had been kicked out of his post as a scout leader for "inappropriate behavior." Reuters disclosed that, according to the scouting association itself, he had been sacked not for child molesting but for incompetence. Another interesting fact came out in People magazine. Although People's reporters made much of Hamilton's "penchant for photographing boys bare-chested," they let it be known that when town officials shut down a boys' club Hamilton had started, seventy parents and forty-five boys signed a petition saying he had great talent and integrity. "We are all proud to have Mr. Hamilton in charge of our boys," the petition declared. Hamilton himself, in a letter he sent to the news media just before his killing spree, professed he was "not a pervert" and insinuated that it was whispers to the contrary around Dunblane that had driven him to his heinous act. Still, in their stories about him some journalists were no better than the small-town gossips. They rekindled age-old prejudices linking homosexuality and pedophilia. Newsweek ran a sidebar titled "Strange and Sinister," which consisted of a photograph of Hamilton standing beside a boy (fully clothed) and allegations that he was a pedophile who had been caught by police "in a gay red-light district" in Edinburgh "in a compromising position." Homophobia is a recurring element in journalists' coverage of mass murderers. Research by Philip Jenkins, a professor of history and religious studies at Penn State University, shows that the media routinely emphasize the supposed homosexuality and pedophilia of men who commit multiple murders. News stories over the past quarter century about Randy Kraft, Westley Alan Dodd, John Wayne Gacy, Jeffrey Dahmer, and assorted other killers included phrases like "homosexual homicide horror" and "homosexual sadist." As Jenkins notes, "Emphasizing that such individuals were gay serial killers tended to confound homosexuals with pedophiles and to support contemporary claims that homosexuality represented a physical and moral threat to children." Studies of pedophiles solidly refute such claims, of course. One recent study published in the medical journal Pediatrics indicates that a child is about a hundred times more likely to be molested by the heterosexual partner of a close relative than by a homosexual. Other research finds that many of the men who molest children not only are not gay, they despise gays. In failing to make note of such research in articles where they represent men like Thomas Hamilton as gay pedophiles, journalists do more than misguide those who read or watch their reports; they feed right-wing groups with material that is then used in interviews with the press and in membership solicitations as evidence that gays "seduce our children," as Lou Sheldon put it in a solicitation mailing for his Traditional Values Coalition. Stealth Weapons One media commentator did provide an astute assessment of Thomas Hamilton and the search for deeper meaning that his butchery provoked. "We seem to think a monstrous effect must arise from a monstrous cause. But not much evidence turned up to make the eruption possible," suggested Lance Morrow in an essay in Time magazine. To depict Hamilton's abominable act as a "pedophiliac-itch-gone-violent" was, Morrow wrote, "inadequate, trivializing...almost sacrilegious in its asymmetry." In point of fact no one knows why Thomas Hamilton snapped. The headmaster at the school where the shooting occurred got it right when he said, shortly after the slaughter, "We don't understand it and I don't think we ever will." Which is not to say that these deaths are inexplicable. Actually, four causes of the bloodbath in Dunblane can readily be identified. That the American news media barely managed to mention them is shameful. They were at once the most proximate and the most verifiable factors in the children's death. I refer to the two revolvers and two semiautomatic pistols Hamilton used to carry out the carnage. Without his guns Hamilton never would have been able to slay so many people. More rigorous enforcement of Britain's gun licensing laws unquestionably had been warranted in Hamilton's case. At the local gun clubs Hamilton had a reputation for being unstable, and he was refused membership by one of the clubs five weeks before the killings. And several years before the bloodbath at the school, when a mother accused him of molesting some boys, Hamilton reportedly threatened her with a gun. Yet many American reporters brushed all this aside. "There were demands for even tougher gun laws in a country where gun homicides are about as common as water buffalo," Newsweek brusquely remarked. "In the days after the bloodletting, there were the predictable calls to toughen the country's gun control laws even further," said People. Some of the European press, however, got the point. An editorial in the British newspaper the Daily Mail asked the question that by rights should have been at the heart of all of the news media's coverage of the Dunblane massacre: "Why should any private individual be legally allowed to own hand guns that can cause such carnage?" Their answer: "Whatever gun club apologists and sporting enthusiasts may say, there was nothing sporting about the caliber of the weapons which Hamilton was licensed to hoard in his own home. These were not small bore pistols for target practice. They were not suitable for shooting game birds. They are the macho tools of the killer's trade." Some American reporters and editors have swallowed so much baloney fed to them by the gun lobby they cough up explanations for gun deaths that credit everything except guns. They even blame their own industry. A columnist in Newsweek wrote of the Dunblane massacre, "Onanistic solitude, lived out in a fantasy world ruled by terror and thrilled by incessant gunfire, poses a lethal combination. Media moguls, enriched by promoting these fantasies, deny any blame for society's degradation. They are only giving society what it demands, they say." |
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