GayandRight

My name is Fred and I am a gay conservative living in Ottawa. This blog supports limited government, the right of the State of Israel to live in peace and security, and tries to expose the threat to us all from cultural relativism, post-modernism, and radical Islam. I am also the founder of the Free Thinking Film Society in Ottawa (www.freethinkingfilms.com)

Monday, September 10, 2007

Viewing Men as Predators....

Scary consequences because of our insistence of viewing men as predators....

Frank McEnulty, a builder in Long Beach, Calif., was once a Boy Scout scoutmaster. "Today, I wouldn't do that job for anything," he says. "All it takes is for one kid to get ticked off at you for something and tell his parents you were acting weird on the campout."

It's true that men are far more likely than women to be sexual predators. But our society, while declining to profile by race or nationality when it comes to crime and terrorism, has become nonchalant about profiling men. Child advocates are advising parents never to hire male babysitters. Airlines are placing unaccompanied minors with female passengers.

Child-welfare groups say these precautions minimize risks. But men's rights activists argue that our societal focus on "bad guys" has led to an overconfidence in women. (Children who die of physical abuse are more often victims of female perpetrators, usually mothers, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.)

Though groups that cater to the young are working harder to identify predators, they also ask that risks be kept in perspective. Big Brothers Big Sisters of America does criminal background checks on each of its 250,000 volunteers, and has social workers assess them. Since 1990, the group says, it has had fewer than 10 abuse allegations per year. More than 98% of the alleged abusers were male.

"If we wanted to make sure we never had a problem, one approach would be to just become Big Sisters -- to say we won't serve boys," says Mack Koonce, the group's chief operating officer. But, of course, that would deny hundreds of thousands of boys contact with male mentors.

The Boy Scouts of America now has elaborate rules to prevent both abuse and false accusations. There are 1.2 million Scout leaders, and the organization kicks out about 175 of them a year over abuse allegations or for violating policies.

These policies can be intricate. For instance, four adult leaders are needed for each outing. If a sick child must go home, two adults drive him and two stay with the others, so no adult is ever alone with a Scout. "It's protection for the adults, as well as the children," says a Scouts spokesman.

The result of all this hyper-carefulness, however, is that men often feel like untouchables. In Cochranville, Pa., Ray Simpson, a bus driver, says that he used to have 30 kids stop at his house on Halloween. But after his divorce, with people knowing he was a man living alone, he had zero visitors. "I felt like crying at the end of the evening," he says.

At Houston Intercontinental Airport, businessman Mitch Reifel was having a meal with his 5-year-old daughter when a policeman showed up to question him. A passerby had reported his interactions with the child seemed "suspicious."

In Skokie, Ill., Steve Frederick says the director of his son's day-care center called him in to reprimand him for "inappropriately touching the children." "I was shocked," he says. "Whatever did she mean?" She was referring to him reading stories with his son and other kids on his lap. A parent had panicked when her child mentioned sitting on a man's lap.

3 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Yup, and they wonder when all the men have gone from the teaching profession.

It's a shame, though. When I was a kid I really needed a decent male role model and was fortunate to have a great social studies teacher in grade 6; but of course that was before it was assumed that every guy that wanted to be a teacher in grade school was a pervert.

But we needn't worry. Some silly study in Alberta just revealed that boys do better under women teachers anyways . . . so much easier to ensure that they are not corrupted by the patriarchy!

9:35 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I used to teach continental (often mistakenly called "Morse" code) and basic radio theory to scouts and YMCA groups so they could go for their Novice-grade ham radio licenses. I stopped years ago when someone made a case out of absolutely nothing involving a married man and father. The case was tossed out, but would it be today?

I am single, no kids, one of nature's bachelors. I have NO interest AT ALL in children in such matters, and in fact find it all disgusting as hell. But do you think for two seconds I would take the risk? Hell NO!

9:54 PM  
Blogger Brian in Calgary said...

This gender-based double standard is really visible when we see how differently we treat women teachers who are accused of sexually abusing their students versus male teachers who are accused of sexually abusing their students. Let's treat ALL abusers like the evil pariahs they are.

1:27 PM  

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