Source |
The Child
Sex Abuse Crisis Leftists Don't Want You to Know About
Wrong
Victims. Wrong Perpetrators. Wrong Skin Color. Wrong Ideological Facilitators.
Karl
Marx is the superstar lead in the blockbuster movie of anti-Western
productions. Marxists focus their critique on economics. They insist that
capitalism is both cruel and doomed by ineluctable historical forces. Marx has
many supporting players, many totally unaware that they are extras in the
anti-Western project. Many of these supporting players wear gauzy fabrics in
pastel hues, shop at stores lulled by piped-in windchime music, and smell like
patchouli. They believe themselves to be apolitical, peace-and-love flower
children. They insist that their ideology, unlike that of the big, bad West,
has never hurt anyone. In fact political convictions as impervious to fact, as
destructive and as rigidly intolerant as that of any extremist undergird their
flowing tie-dye.
One
of the most powerful anti-Western myths runs like this. Rape, war, and
environmental degradation are Western, Judeo-Christian monopolies. Before the
Jews, those reliable villains of so many lurid and hate-fueled fabrications, humanity
worshipped a nurturing mother goddess. Men and women were equal. It was the
Jews and their disastrously influential offspring, the Christians, who
introduced inequality, domestic violence, and competition. Western man, steeped
in the Bible, was single-handedly responsible for the rape of the planet. Go to
any New Age bookstore, read any Facebook post by someone who identifies as "spiritual-but-not-religious,"
chat with anyone wearing an ankh, greeting you with "Namaste," or
self-identifying as a Wiccan, and you will encounter some version of this
ideology.
My
Facebook friend Bea is an anti-Brexit, open-borders leftist. Bea denounces
Trump supporters as a threat to world peace. She's the type of person who, if
she overheard a Salvation Army band playing "Onward Christian
Soldiers," would petition the UN to send in peacekeeping troops to her
street corner.
Bea posted
a YouTube video of a haka she especially liked. Haka are the war chants of
Maori, indigenous people of New Zealand. I noted the disconnect between Bea's
peace-love-coexistence Facebook persona and her endorsement of war chants. I
posted a very brief message. "Haka are traditional Maori war chants. They
were designed to pump warriors up for battle, and to intimidate
opponents."
Bea's
one-world friends attacked. How dare I label haka "war chants?" Haka
are a lovely art form of traditional people!
I
responded with a notorious passage from Jared Diamond's book Guns, Germs, and Steel. Diamond
described Maori warriors invading the territory of their neighbors, the
Moriori, and committing a genocide.
Maori
warriors, no doubt fueled from chanting haka, "killed hundreds of Moriori,
cooked and ate many of the bodies, and enslaved all the others … A Moriori
survivor recalled 'The Maori commenced to kill us like sheep … We were
terrified, fled to the bush, concealed ourselves in holes underground, and in
any place to escape our enemies. It was of no avail; we were discovered and
killed – men, women, and children, indiscriminately.' A Maori conqueror explained.
'We took possession… in accordance with our customs and we killed all the
people. Not one escaped … What of that? It was in accordance with our customs.'"
Maori
kept the preserved heads of their enemies. They would taunt these heads. One
Maori said to one of his preserved heads, "You wanted to run
away didn't you? But my greenstone club overtook you! And after you were cooked
you were made food for me! And where is your father? He is cooked. And where is
your brother? He is eaten. And where is your wife? There she sits, a wife for
me. And where are your children? The loads on their backs they carry as my
slaves."
My reference
to objective reality in the form of historical fact ignited a firestorm. An
African American male Facebook user posted a lengthy message
"correcting" and "educating" me. He pointed out that before
white Europeans arrived, Maori were peaceful, traditional people of color. Only
the presence of white people pushed them over the edge into genocidal violence.
If I did not affirm this, I was clearly a white supremacist. Bea
"liked" this man's posts.
Facts
do not support the Noble Savage fantasy. Ten thousand years ago, archeologists report, nomadic hunter-gatherers massacred
twenty-seven people at what is now Lake Turkana, Kenya. A heavily pregnant
woman, bound hand and foot, was murdered with a blow to the head. Humans, tens
of thousands of years before the Bible, contributed to the worldwide extinction
of megafauna. Prehistoric
humans also contributed to desertification. Australian Aborigines' hunting and
burning practices may have altered that landmass' climate dramatically, according
to University of Colorado at Boulder Professor Gifford Miller. Humans armed only with flint-knapped
obsidian blades and fire kits proved quite expert at "raping the planet."
Male
and female equality are in short supply in non-Judeo-Christian societies, even
goddess-worshipping ones. In India Kali, the goddess of destruction, Laxmi, the
goddess of wealth, and Sita, consort of Ram, are invoked millions of times
daily. Even so, India aborts and murders its daughters at historic levels, as
Indian economist Amartya Sen has pointed out.
Valerie
Hudson and Andrea M. den Boer's 2005 MIT book Bare Branches provides a shocking and necessary look at female
infanticide. In remote, tribal New Guinea, a woman gave birth. Her husband
asked the baby's gender. When informed he had fathered a girl, he responded, "Break
it and throw it away." "It" was his daughter. Bare Branches provides many traditional
methods used to destroy female infants. Shove uncooked rice down their throats.
Expose them. Poison them with oleander. Sell them to sex traffickers.
In
China the corpses of discarded females clogged waterways. New Agers advance witchcraft
as a woman-friendly alternative to the Judeo-Christian tradition. In modern China,
The Christian
Science Monitor reports, witches stand at the ready to destroy female
children. "In the suburbs of Canton, there are even witches and sorcerers
who cheat and undermine birth control by holding feudalistic and superstitious
ceremonies after killing girl babies, alleging that by so doing they can get
the wretched parents to produce boy babies … a basin full of water is placed in
the room where the mother is giving birth so that if the baby is a girl, it may
be drowned immediately."
Australian
Aborigines are one of the most remote populations on earth. Outside of Africa,
Aborigines can claim the longest inhabitation of a landmass of any human
population. Aborigines may have left Africa 75,000 years ago, and they have inhabited Australia for
tens of thousands of years. They were not colonized by Europeans until 1788. Given
their remoteness, the ancientness of their culture, and their relatively recent
exposure to the evil West, many New Agers prize Aboriginals as exemplars of a
pure humanity, uncorrupted by the West's ills.
Bare Branches offers a less romantic view. When
Europeans arrived, it reports, they found one hundred fifty Aboriginal men for
each one hundred Aboriginal women. Of course one does not accept this statistic
without skepticism; colonizers had agendas. At the same time, it would be
foolish to pretend that this number has no significance whatsoever. Given that
traditional Aboriginal culture left few artifacts that we can study, no law books,
figurative art, play scripts, etc, how can we know how Aboriginal men treated
Aboriginal women before contact?
Journalist
Tony Thomas, in a 2013 Quadrant
Online article, cites paleopathologist Stephen Webb's
1995 Cambridge University Press book, Palaeopathology
of Aboriginal Australians. Webb analyzed 4,500 individuals' bones covering
50,000 years. "Webb found highly disproportionate rates of injuries and
fractures to women's skulls, with the injuries suggesting deliberate attack and
often attacks from behind, perhaps in domestic squabbles."
The
gruesome tale told by ancient bones is reinforced in first contact accounts. "We
have seen some of these unfortunate beings with more scars upon their shorn
heads, cut in every direction, than could be well distinguished or counted,"
reported one European of Aboriginal women. There are many other quotes offering
similar testimony. Traditional Aboriginal culture was no Noble Savage paradise
for Aboriginal women. Thomas also quotes numerous early contact Europeans
describing genocidal tribal warfare.
Colonized
Aborigines suffered abuses as do all colonized people. My own ancestors, Polish
peasants, were colonized by Russia, Prussia, and Austria between 1772 and 1918,
and occupied by Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia, beginning in 1939. Aborigines
have higher alcoholism, diabetes, depression, suicide, and death rates than do
white Australians. This is wrong and every decent person wants these numbers to
change. As someone whose immediate family members, friends, and loved ones have
been plagued by alcoholism, domestic abuse, prejudice and negative
stereotyping, chronic, stress- and poverty-related illness, whose loved ones
have been lynched, gang-raped by Red Army soldiers and imprisoned in
concentration camps, I empathize with Aborigines.
The
problem is this. Leftists want badly to use Aborigines to prove their own
fantasies. Aborigines must be made out to be superhuman in order to prove that
remote, once primitive people are peaceful and egalitarian – and that the West
is bad and must be overthrown. Too, leftists want to use Aborigines to signal
their own, that is leftists', virtue. Leftists insist on clinging to cultural relativism
beyond any rational justification.
Franz
Boas, the "father of American anthropology," advanced cultural relativism
in a measured way. Boas insisted, for example, that stylized art produced by
Native American Kwakiutls, the art that one might see on a totem pole or a
carved canoe, was every bit as worthy as a Rembrandt painting. Leftists take cultural
relativism to an destructive degree when confronted with child sex abuse in the
Aborigine community. What's that you say? You have never heard of child sex
abuse in the Aborigine community? Why am I not surprised?
Sex
abuse of children is a crisis in the Aborigine population in Australia. It made
international headlines in 2007. Queensland District Court Judge Sarah Bradley
declined to jail nine Aboriginal males who admitted to gang raping a ten-year-old
Aboriginal girl. The judge said the girl "probably agreed" to
intercourse. The attackers were from more "prominent" families; the girl
was from a "less privileged" family. This notorious case would have been bad enough had it
been unique. It wasn't.
In
2003, Janet Stanley published "Child Sexual Abuse in Indigenous
Communities." The
reader immediately notes that Stanley's paper opens thus, "I first want to
start with an apology. You only have me presenting this paper – a white person
talking about Indigenous issues." Seriously. Seriously. Stanley is writing about child sex abuse and her first
focus is on "Mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maxima culpa. I am white and I have
no right to say anything critical about anyone with more melanin than I."
Stanley rushes to insist that she has partnered with Aboriginal co-researchers.
She quotes a 1999 report, "Violence is now overt; murders, bashings and
rapes, including sexual violence against children, have reached epidemic
proportions." Her laser focus should be, unapologetically, on protecting children from rape.
In
2007, prominent playwright Louis Nowra published Bad Dreaming.
He was inspired to write
a book critical of Aboriginal abuse of women and children by real-life
encounters. "I met a couple of guys in central Australia who were boasting
that they were going off to buy some plastic toy dinosaurs in order that both
men would actually have sex with a 12-year-old girl at the same time … when I
was in hospital, you saw these women who were viciously beaten by their
partners, their husbands and other relatives and I thought to myself, I can
pretend this doesn't exist and I can just go off and maybe, you know, write
about something else."
Nowra
noted that cultural relativism was used to excuse the abuse of women and
children. "I was fascinated in the 1980s, you started to get reports in
newspapers about customary law being used as a defence when a man had kind of
killed a woman or had severely brutalised her." Nowra said that white
guilt, benign racism, a sense that Aboriginal women and children didn't
experience rape and battery as white women do, and Aboriginal customs of
kidnapping and gang-raping women all played a role in facilitating abuse.
Also
in 2007, the Northern Territory government published Little Children are Sacred, a 316-page outline of the Aboriginal
child sex abuse crisis. That report cites numerous previous studies and warns
that unless drastic action is taken, another generation will be lost. The
mechanism by which that generation would be lost is suggested in one case
study.
"HG
was born in a remote community in 1960. In 1972, he was twice anally raped by
an older Aboriginal man … He never told anyone about it until 2006 when he was
seeking release from prison where he had been confined for many years as a
dangerous sex offender. In 1980 and 1990, he had attempted to have sex with
young girls. In 1993, he anally raped a 10-year-old girl and, in 1997, an eight-year-old
boy, ZH. In 2004, ZH anally raped a five-year-old boy in the same community.
That little boy complained: 'ZH f---ed me.' Who will ensure that in years to
come that little boy will not himself become an offender?"
"Little
Children are Sacred" burns with urgency. Its authors want things to
change. Have things changed? In 2017, the Royal Commission into Institutional
Responses to Child Sexual Abuse published Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
Children and Child Sexual Abuse in Institutional Contexts. Here's the first full paragraph of
this report, "The authors acknowledge Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander peoples as the First Peoples of Australia and traditional custodians
of the land and waters of the many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Island nations
of Australia. We would like to pay our respects to the Stolen Generations and
their families. We celebrate the diverse cultures and customs that have
nurtured, and continue to nurture this land and its peoples. We honour the
Elders past and present and thank them for their wisdom and guidance in this
endeavor."
It's
a pity that the first full paragraph does not address sexually abused
Aboriginal children. Virtue signaling trumps protecting children. The report
goes on to state, "Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultures are
protective of children. There is no documented evidence to indicate child
sexual abuse was a problem in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities
before colonisation. It is important to understand that any heightened risk
that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children face today is 'not part of
Aboriginal tradition or culture' … Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
peoples 'have no cultural traditions based on humiliation, degradation and
violation.'"
The
myth of non-Western cultures as egalitarian paradises is advanced. "Prior
to European contact, when an Aboriginal 'state' was maintained, families with
their multiple roles practiced the age-old Indigenous practices of bringing up
children. Work, safety, shelter and food, culture, pride in being black and
Aboriginal, truthfulness and honour were all vital parts of growing up. It also
included sharing responsibility for the caring of each precious child which was
cherished as a significant experience."
One
must ask, how did Aborigines know, "prior to European contact," that
they should feel "pride in being black and Aboriginal"? That that
faux pas made it past the editor is just another sign of how much pressure the
authors felt to maintain identity politics, not child protection, as the
primary focus.
From
the report: sexually abused children should be educated as to "which clan's
they are connected to; stories associated with their country and their totem."
Note the incorrect use of "clan's" rather than the correct "clans."
The report goes on to state that being conversant in an Aboriginal language
will increase the likelihood that caregivers will be able to protect children
from sex abuse. The report bemoans past attempts to "inculcate children
into European values and … Christian moral values." Ask yourself, which of
the following would be more likely to help children? Fluency in an Aboriginal
language or the sobriety of the child's parents, and the loving presence of the
child's father in the home? Knowing what "clan's" the child descends
from and what those "clan's" totem animal is, or having a criminal
justice system unafraid to prosecute child rapists, no matter their ethnicity? If
"European" or "Christian" moral values can be interpreted
to mean, "child rape is bad," why not inculcate the child in those
values? The report acknowledges that parental alcohol use is correlated with
child sexual abuse. Unless I missed it, the report does not focus on that as it
does on language. I found the word "father" only twice in the report.
Words like "racism" and "racist" appear almost fifty times.
If a
society can't acknowledge its own failings, it can't correct its own failings.
This report offers scant hope that Australians of any color will name,
confront, and change their failings vis-à-vis their abused children.
In
December 2016, ABC (Australia) reported that a fourteen-year-old boy
was gang-raped by drunken men who put a bag over his head. The boy later
committed suicide. A five-year-old girl tested positive for gonorrhea. Child
protection workers described grim scenes.
In
one family, "Five children were found to have the sexually transmitted
infection gonorrhea. The mother is a drinker ... she told us she didn't know
who had abused her daughter. The child wouldn't say … When we brought the child
back to the family after getting treatment, she went over to her mum and the
mum said "F*** off and go play!"'
"'That
little girl was picked up about two weeks later and we found the mum and her
partner and a whole lot of other people in the house, all rotten drunk. This is
how kids get sexually abused, everyone gets drunk and passes out — without
making sure that their kids are in a safe house. So anyone can do anything to
these kids, because nobody is protecting them or caring for them.'"
An
ambulance paramedic reported, "When we entered the house there was
gambling going on and someone was breastfeeding a baby while drinking from a
bottle of Jim Beam. Two intoxicated adults were having sex and there was a
little kid sitting right beside them."
In
2002, a fifteen-year-old Aboriginal girl was "married" to Jackie
Pascoe Jamilmira, a fifty-year-old man who had killed his first wife. The girl's
parents had sold their daughter to the man in exchange for a percent of his
monthly government allowance. The girl resisted the man's attempts to have sex
with her, so he punched her, stepped on her neck, and raped her.
Women's News reports that, "Expert testimony
submitted by an anthropologist in the case called the man's arrangement with
the girl 'traditional' and therefore 'morally correct' … Several high-ranking
government officials nodded with approval when the appeal judge upheld Pascoe's
defense, explaining that while Pascoe knew he had done something wrong in the
eyes of Western law, his conduct was 'Aboriginal custom' and part of his
culture."
Some
argued that Aboriginal customary law should
supersede Western law.
If Aboriginal customary law said that the girl had to submit, she had to
submit. The raped girl got lost in the shuffle.
On
August 11, 2005, in excruciating detail, Chief Justice Brian Martin described
the selling and rape of a fourteen-year-old Aboriginal girl. Her assailant was
a fifty-five-year-old Aboriginal man. The judge called the case "extremely
difficult." One must ask what was difficult about finding guilty a
fifty-five-year-old-man who used battery sexually to penetrate a
fourteen-year-old girl. The answer is cultural relativism. The judge felt
constrained from bringing the full weight of Western law down on an Aboriginal
man, who believed that his culture sanctioned battery and rape of a child. The
judge said as much, "You are a 55-year old traditional Aboriginal man. You
believed that traditional law permitted you to strike the child and to have
intercourse with her."
The
unnamed girl had been given to the man by her family when she was four years
old. Ten years later, when she was fourteen, her grandmother lead her to the
man. The man beat the girl with two boomerangs. The grandmother beat the girl
with a large stick. The girl was forced to enter the man's house, where his
other wife and children lived. The man grabbed the shaking and crying child by
the leg. She kicked and screamed. He dragged her into his bedroom, where he again
beat the child, threatened her with the boomerang, and anally raped her. "You
caused a deep laceration at the edge of her anus. The child was later seen by a
doctor and the examination also revealed painful areas over the child's
body." Nevertheless, the judge stated, "The Crown accepts that you
believed that intercourse with the child was acceptable because she had been promised
to you … your fundamental beliefs, based on your traditional laws, prevailed in
your thinking … I have no choice but to sentence you on that basis … I am not
sentencing you for the crime of rape … In accepting that evidence I also accept
that your traditional law regarded your striking of the child as justified in
the circumstances. From your perspective, and the perspective of your
traditional law, the child had done the wrong thing, and the punishment by
striking her was permissible and justified … You have had a strong ceremonial
life across widespread communities. You are regarded by the Yarralin Community
as an important person in the ceremonial life of the community. You are
responsible for teaching young men the traditional ways … a number of members of the community are here
in support of you and those members of the community who support you believe
that you have not done anything wrong … I have a great deal of sympathy for you
and the difficulties attached to transition from traditional Aboriginal culture
and laws as you understood them to be, to obeying the Northern Territory Law."
Reading
the judge's entire statement, one sees the judge attempting to dance
a ballet atop eggshells. He says he wants to protect women and children, but he
devotes a far greater amount of verbiage to exculpating factors for the violent
child rapist. The judge advised that the rapist serve only one month behind
bars.
In
May, 2018, one twenty-five-year-old man and one twenty-four-year-old man were
charged with raping a two-year-old Aboriginal girl from Tennant Creek in
February, 2018. Before the rape allegedly occurred, the family had racked up thirty-five recorded incidences of
domestic violence, eight aggravated assault convictions against one parent,
more than one hundred fifty recorded interactions with police, and fifty-two
child protection notifications involving all children, with allegations of
physical and sexual abuse. Northern Territory Children's Commissioner Colleen
Gwynne said, "In terms of child sexual abuse I think we've taken
our foot off to a certain extent, particularly about what happens in remote
communities."
The
alleged victim's mother spoke to the media in June, 2018. The primary thrust of
an article covering the mother's statements is
that the mother does not want to be blamed. "It's not my fault," she
said. "The media is saying that I'm an alcoholic. I'm not. I'm a social
drinker." If it were not for the laws making it harder to drink alcohol in
her community – laws put in place at least partly to curb child sex abuse –
perhaps the rape never would have taken place, she insisted.
In
March, 2018, Federal Children's Minister Dr. David Gillespie insisted that laws should be changed so that whites could adopt Aboriginal
children. "His comments were 'incredibly offensive,' said Tim Ireland, the
chief executive of AbSec, the peak body for Aboriginal child protection in New
South Wales … Mr Ireland said Aboriginal child-protection organisations opposed
the adoption of Indigenous children because it took away safeguards to connect
a child with their wider family and culture."
In a
May, 25, 2018 Guardian article, Dr. Terri Libesman and Hannah McGlade
talk about racism, reparations, "loss of culture," past sins and
colonization. These were all bad things, and therefore Aboriginal children
should not be removed from Aboriginal families. Again, identity politics trumps
child welfare.
At
least one Aboriginal leader has publicly stated a contrary view, a view that puts
abused kids first. On March 5, 2018, the Herald Sun published "To Protect Kids, We Need to Be Fearless." The title is accurate and
unambiguous. The article's author is Warren Mundine,
a man of mixed Aboriginal and Irish heritage.
"I
say the only way to lift Indigenous people out of poverty is a job; that
chronic welfare dependency destroys families, communities and culture; and that
not sending kids to school is child abuse," he wrote. "There’s a
particularly strong response when I say that Indigenous kids at risk should be
put in safe homes and that their safety must come before anything, including
culture and kin … None of these statements is racist … People abuse me with
racist slurs like 'Uncle Tom' or 'coconut.'"
Mundine
went on to outline how his attackers make use of Saul Alinsky's Rules for Radicals. "Here’s Rule
13: 'Pick the target, freeze it, personalise it and polarise it' … Abusing
people as 'racist' for opinions that aren’t actually racist is straight from
Alinsky’s playbook. So is calling black people 'Uncle Tom' or 'race traitor.'
What that does is punish people for not sticking to socialist-left dogma that
promotes the welfare state as a legitimate way of life and which hides the
deep, social dysfunction caused by chronic welfare dependency … A leaked 2015
report into the Northern Territory’s child protection systems said that fear of
being accused of racism … was interfering with child protection agencies doing
their job. It said child protection staff believe culture should have 'unmoderated
priority over child protection concerns' … Stick to the facts. Facts can never
be racist."
Clearly,
the Aboriginal child sex abuse crisis has been exacerbated by leftist ideology,
just as the U.K.'s grooming gang crisis has been, as covered in the August 20,
2018 FrontPageMag piece, "Leftists Own the UK's Grooming Gang
Crisis." Children
were not helped because helping children would violate leftist ideology.
I
care about abused Aboriginal children because I was an abused kid myself. My
abusers, just like those abusing Aboriginal children, were also history's
victims. Their history of victimization in no way minimizes or excuses what
they did to me. Once, when I was a little kid, I went to the house next door.
My neighbor saw that I had an untreated wound. She tenderly washed it and
placed a Band-Aid on it. I had never seen a Band-Aid before. TLC and medical
supplies were inaccessible luxuries in my childhood. To this day I associate
Band-Aids with the care my neighbor showed me when I was a child, care I wanted
to cling to. My neighbor was Pat Gibbs, and she was not an immigrant Slavic
peasant like my own people. In fact, she was black. I embrace and honor her
memory. Abused Aboriginal children need such care, from anyone, of any skin
color. Leftists have distorted the difference between right and wrong. Abusing
children and beating women are both wrong. Cultural relativism cannot erase
that. Morality matters. Kids matter. And kids are more important than leftist
ideology.
Danusha
Goska is the author of Save Send Delete and Bieganski, the Brute Polak Stereotype. Her book God through Binoculars will be out later this year.