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‘We Told You So,
Boston'; Your Homosexual Network Twenty Years Later
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It
now turns out that a book published in 1982 had warned us
that this was all going to happen in
Massachusetts .
“We
told you so,” says Connie Marshner, who works at the Free
Congress Foundation, which expressed their concerns in 1982.
The
book was The Homosexual Network: Private Lives and Public
Policy, by Enrique Rueda, a Catholic priest then in the diocese
of Rochester
.
“If
you had read that book you would not have been surprised by
the revelations that have been coming out of
Boston in the recent trial of Fr.
Geoghan,” says Marshner.
According
to her, the priest’s book not only analyzed the ideology of
homosexuality, but it documented the spread of that ideology
through religious organizations, including the Catholic Church,
and traced the funding of it.
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We Were Warned
March 2002
This
is what Marshner says today.
In
the book, Fr. Rueda detailed – with meticulous footnotes – what,
already then, was the growing network of “support groups,” counseling
referrals, newsletters, and organizations of homosexuals and pro-homosexuals
in the churches of the United States, including the Catholic Church.
The
network was particularly effective within the Catholic Church: at
one point in the late 70’s, a key staffer at the Office of Public
Affairs and Information of the U. S. Catholic Conference/National
Conference of Catholic Bishops was a leader of the Washington, D.C.,
homosexual movement as well as president of Dignity, the pressure
group which seeks to force the Catholic Church to relate to homosexuals
according to the tenets of the homosexual ideology.
The
name of the fair city of Boston
appears frequently in Fr. Rueda’s pages, giving it the
dubious distinction of being the birthplace of NAMBLA, the North
American Man/Boy Love Association (an interesting coincidence in
light of subsequent developments). Also interesting to note is that
one Fr. Paul Shanley attended the NAMBLA convention in
Boston , supposedly on behalf
of the then-Catholic Archbishop, Medeiros.
In
the early days of “gay liberation”, 1972, a National Coalition of
Gay Organizations adopted a “Gay Rights Platform”. This list of
demands included one to repeal all laws governing the age of sexual
consent – a matter of some obvious concern to pederasts. “Homosexuality
is no sicker than heterosexuality,” proclaimed the Third Number
of the NAMBLA Journal, “What is sick is society’s efforts to suppress
[sic] and persecute it.”
In
those days, every type of sexual activity was considered equally
deserving of “liberation”. As pederast theoretician David Thorstad
proclaimed it in the pages of Boston
’s Gay Community News in January, 1979: “We should present
ourselves not merely as defenders of our own personal rights to
privacy and sexual expression, but as the champions of the right
of all persons – regardless of age – to engage in the sexuality
of their choice. We must recognize homosexual behavior for what
it is – a natural potential of the human animal.”
By
1998 Thorstad was blasting the gay movement because it had “retreated
from its vision of sexual liberation, in favor of integration and
assimilation into existing social and political structures … increasingly
sought to marginalize even demonize cross-generational love.” Translation:
the tacticians who won the internal battles, and therefore prevailed,
realized that “We are everywhere” was a slogan that could sell.
Man/boy love wouldn’t sell. Call it an “incremental” strategy, if
you will.
It
is going to be a long, long struggle to re-establish in mainstream
Catholic culture an understanding and acceptance of what the Catholic
Catechism teaches on homosexual acts – namely, that they are intrinsically
disordered, and under no circumstances can be approved, while at
the same time men and women who have homosexual tendencies must
be accepted with respect, compassion, and sensitivity.
A
generation ago the first part of that was not disputed. It
might be said that some of the trouble in
Boston right now could be traced to successive
bishops’ going overboard on the second part, on behalf of one of
their priests. After all, priests are in the business of forgiving
and healing people. It is understandable that a bishop would
err in favor of thinking the best about and being quick to forgive
his priests.
The
homosexual movement has been very successful at removing the sensitivity
and stigma formerly associated with non-heterosexual attractions.
The whole sexual liberation movement, hetero as well as homo, has
expertly manipulated public opinion for close to half a century.
People are so afraid of “judge not, lest ye be judged” that they
feel they must tolerate anything. Had these de-sensitizations not
been so successful, Fr. Geoghan might not have gotten away with
as much as he did for as long as he did.
Whereas
in 1954 it was politically correct for seminary authorities to look
hard at a young man’s sexual orientation, fifteen years later it
was politically correct to be “open” to “new expressions”. And thirty
years later, in many Catholic seminaries and diocese, it was positively
retrograde to disapprove of homosexuality or to acknowledge its
ties to pederasty.
It
is worth remembering that the 1960’s and 70’s were years of total
turbulence in the Roman Catholic Church, with order only gradually
becoming visible in the 1980’s and 90’s. Part of the zeitgeist
of the 60’s was “don’t trust anybody over 30”. Well, people
under 30 hadn’t had much experience with priestly pederasty, thanks
to the vigilance of people over 30. But inherited wisdom was
out of fashion, and the cautions of older and wiser men were laughed
at. Maybe the old ways weren’t perfect – but was the new one?
Under which system were more innocent people injured?
The
families of those victimized in Boston
are probably wishing some things hadn’t gone quite so
out of fashion. Some might be wishing that somebody in the Church
had been a bit more “repressive” of Fr. Geoghan a lot sooner. Some
even might be wishing that the right person in the Archdiocese of
Boston had read Fr. Rueda’s book and heeded it.
No Question A Generation Ago
There’s
no question that Catholics had the right message a generation ago,
says Marshner. The message was that homosexual acts are “intrinsically
disordered,” but that those with homosexual tendencies should be
accepted with respect, compassion and sensitivity,
Then
came the sexual revolution and the normalizing of homosexuality
by the American Psychiatric Association in 1972. After that, the
whole culture changed. Should we blame only the Catholic church
for this? They were caught up in the times. But what is more important
is whether or not we have learned anything.
The
town of Amherst and
the Globe are following the same route today that the Cardinal took
ten years ago. They see a friend who appears kindly and friendly
and they find it hard to believe he would molest anyone.
Their
desire to protect their friend is understandable, but how can they
be doing so when they now realize the misery and unhappiness that
their friend will cause?
If
anyone still believes that a molester always looks like a monster,
they had better rethink their position. Most of them are just like
Fr. Geoghan and Principal Myers, nice, friendly guys who want to
help.
Quotes
from the Globe articles make this abundantly clear. In one, two
experts critical of Law were quoted, one of whom said, “It was highly
known by [the 1980s] that sex offenders were highly likely to repeat
their behavior.” That is true, but if Cardinal Law is
being pilloried because of his actions in the 1980s, what does that
say about the conduct of Amherst
and the Globe in 2002?
Or
how about this quote from the Globe? “Medical evaluations
of Geoghan, which repeatedly cleared him to return to parish work
after incidents of sexual misconduct in the 1970s and ’80s, changed
dramatically in the mid-1990s.” But this is 2002. How about people
like Principal Myers? Why aren’t we judging him by the new standards
the Globe has articulated?
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