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Opinion
The Battalion
Page 7 • Tuesday, January 14, 2003
Stripping pedophiles of their civil liberties
North American Man/Boy Love Association promotes questionable sexual abuse
T he North American
Man/Boy Love Association
(NAMBLA) promotes what
it considers to be “mutually con
sensual” relationships between
men and boys as young as 8 years
old, according to its Web site,
www.NAMBLA.org. Because of
NAMBLA's promotion of these
selfish relationships in which an
older man sexually abuses a boy,
the association has come under fire from
child welfare activists, and is rightly being
sued by the parents of a 10-year-old
Massachusetts boy who was murdered by
two men, one of whom was allegedly a
member of NAMBLA, according to
cnn.com. NAMBLA is being defended by
the American Civil Liberties Union
(ACLU) of Massachusetts in a suit filed
by the parents of Jeffrey Curley.
Curley was leaving his grandmother’s
home when 25-year-old Charles Jaynes
and 21-year-old Salvatore Sicari lured
Curley into Jaynes’ car with the bait of
$50 and a new bicycle, foxnews.com
reported. Curley was allegedly taken to a
Boston public library, where Jaynes
accessed the NAMBLA Web site before
taking the boy to Jayne’s house in New
Hampshire. Foxnews.com also stated that
after Curley resisted Jaynes’ sexual
advances, the 5-foot-9, 250-pound man
put a gasoline-soaked rag in the boy’s
mouth and sat on him until he died. Jaynes
then sexually molested the lifeless body of
Jeffrey Curley, put him in a concrete-filled
Rubbermaid container, and threw him into
a Maine river, the Web site reported.
According to the laws of every state in
America, any sexual contact of a child
younger than 14 — wanted or unwanted
— is a form of child molestation for
which the perpetrator can receive jail time.
Anyone advocating sexual contact with
children is advocating lawlessness at the
expense of children.
NAMBLA believes these are crimes
without a victim, but psychologists dating
back to Freud have described the ill effects
molestation has on children.
The ACLU is defending NAMBLA's
right to free speech as it pertains to man-
bevy relationships because it
believes that NAMBLA’s rights
are protected by the First
Amendment. NAMBLA’s right to
free speech ends when it advo
cates the sexual molestation of cit
izens who cannot defend them
selves.
Jeffery Curley had no way to
defend himself against Charles
Jaynes. What is more distressing is
that NAMBLA had at one time posted tips
on ways for men to seduce young boys.
The tips have since been removed from
the Web site.
When speech presents a clear and pres
ent danger to others, it is no longer pro
tected by the First Amendment. Yelling
“Fire!” in a crowded theater or inciting a
riot are both unprotected forms of speech,
as should be any material inciting the
molestation of America’s youth.
The ACLU stated in taking this case
that it believes it must protect the freedom
of speech in controversial cases in order to
protect it for all. If that was truly the case,
it would not have fought against voluntary
public prayer or a moment of silence
across the nation. Instead, the ACLU
shows how it is nothing more than a politi
cal machine working to silence prayer in
the name of the First Amendment, while
simultaneously working to protect the
right to speak about sex between a man
and a boy.
According to its Web site, \
“NAMBLA's goal is to end the
extreme oppression of men and
boys in mutually consensual rela
tionships.” The extreme oppres
sion it is campaigning against is
known as the age-of-consent- ^
laws.
Each state has age-of-consent laws
to protect its children — not to oppress
them. Age of consent is in place because
children are prone to manipulation and
need that law to protect them. NAMBLA’s
deplorable crusade to end age-of-consent
laws is in reckless disregard of the safety
of children, and advocates only perverted,
selfish, sexual cravings. The United States
must hold the welfare of children in a
higher regard than sexual wishes of adults,
and cannot allow NAMBLA’s advocacy of
child molestation to continue. The case of
Curley vs. NAMBLA gives the United
States the opportunity to squash a move
ment seeking to abuse children.
As opening arguments for the
Curley case draw near, Americans
need to decide for themselves
what is more important — the
welfare of children, or the sexu
al gratification of pedophiles.
Thomas Campbell is a senior
agricultural journalism major.
Dodging the Democrats
Reinstituting draft not way to avoid war
L ate last month, U.S.
Rep. Charles B.
Rangel, (D-NY)
wrote an editorial in The
New York Times asking for
a reinstatement of the mili
tary draft. Rangel wrote in
the Dec. 3 1 issue that he
will ask Congress to “sup
port legislation (he) will
introduce to resume the military
draft.” Rangel argues that minori
ties and the underprivileged com
prise most of the modern enlisted
military. A draft would balance
out that proportion, forcing the
American public and Congress to
reevaluate the possibility of war
with Iraq.
While Rangel’s
cause is noble, the
overall effect of this
gimmick is regret
table. Avoiding war
when possible
should be a concern
of members of
Congress, but put
ting effort into
something this dras
tic that will obvious
ly not pass only
wastes time. Rangel
has taken this cause
so far that he
stretches logic and forces it to fit
his argument. No flaw in the
make-up of the military exists. If
Rangel’s planned bill did pass, it
would hurt the disadvantaged he
seeks to help.
Rangel’s argument that the
poor compose most of the mili
tary is true, but the system that is
now in effect works well. Most
people who enlist in the military
do so for financial reasons, and
there is nothing wrong with that.
At the Army’s recruiting Web site,
potential soldiers can see the
financial aid available for those
who join the Army. These figures
shine light on the main reason the
financially underprivi
leged enlist. Full-time
recruits can earn up to
$28,000 for college
when signing up.
For people who
wouldn’t be able to
attend college otherwise,
MATT this is a large sum. It
RIGNEY could easily cover an
associate’s degree at a
community college, allowing
entry into the work force. New
enlistees can also earn cash
bonuses up to$20,000. Along with
college tuition help, the military
pays monthly just like any other
career. This adds up to a good
deal for the disadvantaged.
For the middle
and upper-classes,
however, $28,000
for college carries
less meaning. At
Texas A&M,
yearly costs total
more than
$ 14,000 each
year, assuming in
state tuition,
according to the
Princeton Review.
The sum that the
Army offers cov
ers only two
<6
No flaw in the
make-up of the
military exists. If
Rangers planned
bill did pass, it
would hurt the
disadvantaged he
seeks to help. ?
years of school at a relatively
affordable university. Instead of
serving in the Army for two to six
years, middle and upper-class stu
dents feel they can work during
college and earn scholarships to
make extra money. Many of these
students don’t need extra financial
aid to attend a university like
A&M. With no financial need,
these students feel that wasting
two to six years of their life does
not pay enough.
The military serves as relief
for people who have no other
alternative for financial stability.
Since the draft ended several
decades ago, the current system
was put in place and has been
effective. Reinstating the draft
would force the military to end
such benefits because it cannot
give everyone who is drafted the
current benefits. This would hurt
the economic class of people that
the military helps. It would shut
the door for many young people
who would otherwise depend on
the military to provide financial
support.
Not only would Rangel’s bill
hurt the lower class, it would not
produce his desired effect. Rangel
states that only one member of
Congress who has a child enlisted
in the military voted for the reso
lution that allows President Bush
to use force against Iraq. He
argues that if more members of
Congress had children in the mili
tary, they would be less likely to
vote in favor of war.
The congressman assurpes
something that only the naive
would assume: Children of the
members of Congress will be
drafted. This is simply not true.
According to the House press
release, Rangel noted that, “serv
ice in the armed forces is not a
common experience.” Neither is
being the son of a congressman.
If the draft were reinstated, then
surely the members of Congress
would find ways for their children
to be exempt. It would be
Congress, after all, who would
write this bill. There are simply
too many factors that Congress
controls for Rangel’s plan to
work.
Congressman Rangel has the
right idea. War can only hurt the
American people, no matter what
the class. However, Rangel’s plan
to reinstate the draft would only
hurt the people for whom he
seeks equality, and it would never
be implemented in its ideal form.
Putting liberals
into context
One of the biggest prob
lems with the rhetoric of
today's liberals is their use
of context-dropping when
ever it suits their ideological
needs. Context-dropping is
the over-simplification of
ideas to create abstractions
that ignore relevant distinc
tions that exist in reality.
For example, take the
notion of "extremism."
Liberals criticize conserva
tives' "extremist" views,
hinting that their extremism
flows from latent racism,
overt religious fundamen
talism, and quite often, sup
port of capitalism.
"Tolerance and modera
tion must replace extrem
ism," they might say, but is
this really a meaningful
statement? Within some
contexts, such as our daily
intake of vitamins, modera
tion is indeed the best poli
cy, as it is in our consump
tion of foods, exercise, rest,
MAIL CALL
study, etc. In other contexts,
however, moderation is not
a good thing - there is no
such thing as too much
love, justice, freedom, intel
ligence, etc.
What intelligent person
would say that there should
be moderation between
freedom and slavery, kind
ness and cruelty, careful
ness and negligence, or
truth and falsehood?
Clearly, the virtue of "mod
eration" depends on the
particular context.
"Discrimination" is anoth
er common area of context
dropping. Liberals might
say discrimination is bad
regardless of whether the
characteristic being discrim
inated is relevant or not.
After all, nearly every
action we take involves dis
criminating better choices
from worse ones, good val
ues from bad, and evaluat
ing other people is no
exception. In fact, when it
comes to evaluating people
and societies, liberals often
condemn evaluations by
relevant characteristics,
while glorifying irrelevant
ones. For example, differen
tiating those who are better
skilled in something is
"ableism," differentiating
moral from immoral men is
"bigotry" or "elitism," and
differentiating societies
which have better values
(such as freedom, capital
ism, and democracy in
America vs. mysticism, sta-
tism and force in Africa) is
"cultural imperialism" or
"ethnocentrism."
Irrelevant characteristics
on the other hand, are glo
rified and promoted. While
promotion based on skills
and academic achievement
is damned as "ableism" and
"Western bias," promotion
based on irrelevant charac
teristics such as race, origin,
and income is glorified.
Once again, the context of
the discrimination at hand
is dropped to serve the lib
eral's purpose.
David Veksler
Class of 2003
Matt Rigney is a sophomore
journalism major.