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March 20, 2006
For over forty
years, the murder of Catherine Genovese under the windows of her
Queens, New York, neighbors has stood as a defining example of the
tragedy of human indifference. Her attacker had over twenty minutes
to assault and stab “Kitty.” When police were finally summoned, they
determined that over 38 people had heard the attack, ignoring her
cries and pleas for help…and had done nothing.
Indifference,
the failure to be moved by the needs of a fellow human being, in this
case, had immediate and devastating consequences. We are able to see
the result of indifference in the haunting photo of Kitty and point
our fingers at 38 people.
But today in
America,
we are facing a crisis of indifference that is just as tragic.
Entrusted as guardians of the welfare of our children, we have let a
culture of indifference develop, turning a corporate blind eye to
assaults on our children on a daily basis.
Consider this
brief sampling of events over the past decade:
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In 1997, the
Supreme Court ruled against the Communications Decency Act, removing
the legal tool needed to prosecute those knowingly sending sexually
explicit materials to minors.
-
A Kaiser
Family Foundation report states that 70% of teenagers (ages 15-17)
"have accidentally come across pornography on the Web." Adolescent
males make up one of the largest consumer groups of pornography, and
their access on the Internet is largely unrestricted.
-
In a college
sex survey this year, 87% of university students polled have virtual
sex mainly using Instant Messenger, webcam, and telephone.
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The average
age of first exposure to Internet porn is 11.
-
Approximately
20% of all Internet pornography involves children. According to a
National Children’s Homes report, the number of Internet child
pornography images has increased 1500% since 1988.
These events
signal a change in our culture that cries out for our attention. In
the name of love for our children, we cannot be indifferent.
Replicated
studies on pornography are virtually unanimous in their conclusions:
When male subjects were exposed to as little as six weeks' worth of
standard hard-core pornography, they:
-
developed an
increased sexual callousness toward women;
-
began to
trivialize rape as a criminal offense or no longer considered it a
crime at all;
-
developed
distorted perceptions about sexuality;
-
developed an
appetite for more deviant, bizarre, or violent types of pornography
(normal sex no longer seemed to do the job);
-
devalued the
importance of monogamy and lacked confidence in marriage as either a
viable or lasting institution; and
-
viewed
nonmonogamous relationships as normal and natural behavior.
Thankfully, the
FCC has begin to tackle the problem of nudity and sex on television.
Weeding through roughly 300,000 complaints, it recently proposed
almost $4 million worth of fines for television programming deemed
indecent by the commission. Of this total, $3.6 million in proposed
fines were for the Dec. 31, 2004, episode of CBS's "Without a Trace"
which depicted teen girls and boys participating in an orgy.
Parents must do
their part, too. A Kaiser Family Foundation report released in March,
2005, reported that “about half (53%) of all 8- to 18-year-olds say
their families have no rules about TV watching. Forty-six percent
(46%) say their families do have some rules, including 20% who say the
rules are enforced most of the time, while the rest say the rules are
enforced either some of the time, a little of the time, or never."
Indifference is
killing our children. The graphic sexual imagery assaulting our
children at every turn is not harmless. It is poisoning their view of
normal human relationships, teaching them that sex is a commodity even
in the most casual of encounters.
Love for our
children demands more than words and hugs. If we want our children to
grow and mature with healthy attitudes about love, sex and marriage,
we must fight the tendency to ignore what is right in front of our
eyes. We must get involved.
If we love our
children, we cannot be indifferent.
_____________
For more
information visit:
www.protectkids.com
See Archives
for more past editorials.
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