Congress-mandated study  placing the number of students sexually abused by an education worker at  some point between kindergarten and 12th grade at 4.5  million. Furthermore, the AP found that most of this sexual abuse  is never reported and that even when it does come to light, often no  action is taken.
We’ve all heard the  story. Hundreds of young sexual abuse victims long afraid to come  forward for fear of embarrassment and scorn, abusers escaping  prosecution and quietly moving to different jurisdictions, authorities  covering up the crimes to avoid scandal and litigation. It’s a saga of  grave, grave sin.
Of course, you would assume that I’m talking about  the Catholic Church sexual abuse scandal.
And you would be wrong.
I’m describing the situation in  America’s schools — something that, although mirroring the problems  dogging the Church, is strangely ignored. 
Let’s examine the similarities  using statistics from the United States. According to the John Jay Report, 10,667 people made allegations of child sexual  abuse (not all were substantiated) committed by priests between 1950 and  2002; according to an AP investigation, at least 1,801 educators  committed sexual misconduct involving minors between 2001 and 2005. So  the per annum tally is: 
Number of people making allegations against  priests – 205
Criminal educators – 360
Now, since it’s logical to assume that  numerous individuals made accusations against the same priests, the  number of clerical transgressors is no doubt less than 205. Yet even if  we use the 205 figure, the number of offenders appears to be  approximately 76 percent greater among educators. But that doesn’t even  begin to tell the whole story.
While it’s obvious that a certain percentage  of cases must have gone unreported in both education and the Church, the  latter has been subjected to intense media scrutiny while the former  has remained off the radar screen. Thus, it’s reasonable to assume that  the percentage is higher in education. As to this, the AP tells us about  a Congress-mandated study placing the number of students sexually  abused by an education worker at some point between kindergarten and 12th grade at 4.5 million. Furthermore, the AP found that most of  this sexual abuse is never reported and that even when it does come to  light, often no action is taken.
Of course, the other side of the coin is that  the number of teachers nationwide is greater than that of priests, so a  raw-numbers analysis may be deceptive. So let’s examine the rate.  Wapedia reports the following: “A Perspective  on Clergy Sexual Abuse by Dr. Thomas Plante of Stanford University  and Santa Clara University states that ‘available research suggests  that approximately 2 to 5% of priests have had a sexual experience with a  minor’ which ‘is lower than the general adult male population that is  best estimated to be closer to 8%.'”
Now let’s look within the numbers, at the nature  of the abuse and abusers. While we hear a lot of media reports about  sultry female teachers seducing young teenage boys, the reality is that  almost nine out of ten school offenders are male.It’s also true that in  the cases of both the Church and the schools, the abuse is, by  definition, not pedophilia, as the abused were mainly  adolescents, not children.
Here critics may point out that there is a  difference: The abuse among priests is mainly homosexual in nature. This  is true, but I can’t imagine that it would bother the secular left very  much. After all, this is the set that for years has maintained that  there is a moral equivalence between heterosexual and homosexual  behavior and that saying otherwise is bigotry. Unless they’re now  changing their tune…
Another  similarity is the cover-up by school officials, who, as stated earlier,  were motivated by the same priorities as the most remiss bishop: a  desire to avoid embarrassment, scandal, and punitive court judgments. As an example, the AP presents  the story of Gary Lindsey, an Iowa teacher who was fired from his first  job for sexual misconduct but then allowed to work elsewhere for about  thirty more years. During these decades, Lindsey transgressed against  other students, dodging the hangman every time with the complicity of  school administration. And his is no isolated case. In fact, the  practice of transferring sexual predators is so common that it has  become known as “passing the trash,” and the abusers have been dubbed  “mobile molesters.”
 
Despite this, we currently have trash being  passed daily — it’s called media reportage. Why don’t we hear stories  about people who believe that the schools should be defunded, or that  parents should stop sending their children to them (similar things are  said about the Church)? Why has the Vatican been placed in the  unenviable position of having to defend itself with the “Look, others have the  same problems” argument? Why does Rome have to take up the cudgels for  itself and point out that its woes just reflect the wider society? It’s  because the media aren’t doing their job. 
…That is, at least, what their  job should be. What some within the mainstream media see it as being —  to attack traditionalist institutions — they’re doing very well. 
The Church receives such  disproportionate scrutiny for the same reason why the media will happily  smear Pope Pius XII as a Nazi sympathizer when he was possibly WWII’s greatest hero and why they paint the Crusades  as imperialistic wars when they were but a defense against Muslim aggression: The media  views the Church as an enemy. They despise its teachings on abortion,  the all-male priesthood, and, in particular, sexuality. You see, if the  schools taught such things, then they too would surely be in the  crosshairs. But their embrace of all the left’s favorite isms grants  them great immunity.  
Now, this might be where I’m supposed to issue the  obligatory statement about how we’re all appalled by the sex crimes in  question. 
But it’s not really true.
And what comes to mind is late  Massachusetts congressman Gerry Studds. In 1983, it was revealed that he had had sexual relations  with a 17-year-old male page, which, as ephebophilia (attraction to  older adolescents), is precisely that of which many transgressing  priests are guilty. And what was his punishment? 
The liberals in his district  reelected him six more times until his retirement in 1996.
By the way, some may point out  that Studds’ behavior was legal, as the age of consent in Washington,  D.C. was 16. Of these people, I would ask: Are you equally charitable  with priests who had “legal” relationships with teenage boys?
Then there is serial sex criminal  Alfred Kinsey, the bug researcher-cum-human sexuality “expert” who ran a  pedophile ring disguised as a research team. If you read the piece I wrote about him (and trust me, this one  is worth the time), you’ll find that his research included things such  as encouraging pedophiles to continue committing crimes so that he could  collect more “data.” Yet there has never been a hue and cry for a pound  of flesh from the Kinsey Institute; the University of Indiana in  Bloomington, where the deviant plied his trade; or Paul Gebhard, a  still-living Kinsey co-author and partner in crime. On the contrary, the  left not only defends Kinsey, but it even lauded him in a whitewashed 2004 film.  
So do the Church’s critics really  care about sexual abuse? Some do, for sure. But there’s no doubt that  many of those using the issue to attack the Church do not. And “using”  is the key word. If they truly cared about sexual abuse of youth, they  would take pains to emphasize that it isn’t limited to the priesthood.  Oh, I’m not saying that they would necessarily do this to defend the  Church; they would do it to truly expose the problem. Instead, they’re  simply interested in exposing the Church to ridicule, and to this end,  they use these abuse victims as a convenient vehicle through  which to attack a hated adversary. This is typical of the left, which  makes a practice of using people as human shields, props, and political  hammers.
Of course, crimes against innocence are abhorrent, and those  committing them should be rooted out wherever and whoever they may be.  Likewise, those who knowingly and negligently facilitate their abuse  must be punished harshly, and the incompetent should lose their  positions. But this just states the obvious. If we really want to move  toward a more sexually sane society — get at the root causes, as it  were — then we must delve more deeply. 
We can argue about facts and  figures. We can debate whether sexual trespass is worse in schools or in  churches, and many will, no doubt, try to make the case that the  secular world is a safer place. But of this there is no doubt: The  social phenomena making us a more libertine and morally unmoored  civilization are the handiwork of the left.
It was not the Church that  sexualized society with Kinseyesque sex miseducation and prurient  messages everywhere — in movies, shows, music and on the  Internet. That was leftist academia, Hollywood, and their brothers in  porn. It was not the Church that expanded the First Amendment to include  protection of obscene imagery. That was leftist judges. It was not the  Church that spread moral relativism and its corollary, “If it feels  good, do it,” an idea that can find pedophilia no worse than peanut  butter. That was leftist philosophers and the millions who wanted  freedom to sin. It was not the Church that, reducing man to mere beast,  found a basis for his behavior in the animal kingdom. That was leftist  anthropologists and their acolytes. And it was not the Church that first  subordinated punishment to “rehabilitation” and subscribed to  slap-on-the-wrist pseudo-justice. That was leftist psychology. Of  course, insofar as the Church has allowed itself to become infected with  the spirit of the age, it is culpable. But know that it is the  infected, not the infection. 
As for the cure, the Church has done much in  recent times to root out sexual abuse — far more than the schools. Even  closer to the point, its teachings provide necessary guide rails for  man’s sexuality. Yet critics call this age-old wisdom “antiquated.” The left obviously prefers to take  its lead from the Kinsey Distorts, Hugh Hefner, and Hollywood. But if  the pleasure principle is going to be our master, then we shouldn’t  wonder why we’re taking our children on a field trip through Caligula’s  court.
FULL STORY
Help Make A Difference By Sharing These Articles On Facebook, Twitter And Elsewhere: