Dan_Kap(שולט){f,yt,D,תכ} |
לפני 19 שנים •
13 בדצמ׳ 2004
The Kinsey Conspiracy
לפני 19 שנים •
13 בדצמ׳ 2004
Dan_Kap(שולט){f,yt,D,תכ} • 13 בדצמ׳ 2004
I got this NY Times article from the Jewish Power Exchange mailing list:- Frank Rich: The Plot Against Sex in America December 12, 2004 WHEN they start pushing the panic button over "moral values" at the bluest of TV channels, public broadcasting's WNET, in the bluest of cities, New York, you know this country has entered a new cultural twilight zone. Just three weeks after the election, Channel 13 killed a spot for the acclaimed movie "Kinsey," in which Liam Neeson stars as the pioneering Indiana University sex researcher who first let Americans know that nonmarital sex is a national pastime, that women have orgasms too and that masturbation and homosexuality do not lead to insanity. At first WNET said it had killed the spot because it was "too commercial and too provocative" - a tough case to make about a routine pseudo-ad interchangeable with all the other pseudo-ads that run on "commercial-free" PBS. That explanation quickly became inoperative anyway. The "Kinsey" distributor, Fox Searchlight, let the press see an e-mail from a National Public Broadcasting media manager stating that the real problem was "the content of this movie" and "controversial press re: groups speaking out against the movie/subject matter" that might bring "viewer complaints." Maybe in the end Channel 13 got too many complaints about its own cowardice because by last week, in response to my inquiries, it had a new story: that e-mail was all a big mistake - an "unfortunate" miscommunication hatched by some poor unnamed flunky in marketing. This would be funny if it were not so serious - and if it were an anomaly. Yet even as the "Kinsey" spot was barred in New York, a public radio station in North Carolina, WUNC-FM, told an international women's rights organization based in Chapel Hill that it could not use the phrase "reproductive rights" in an on-air announcement. In Los Angeles, five commercial TV channels, fearing indecency penalties, refused to broadcast a public service spot created by Los Angeles county's own public health agency to counteract a rising tide of syphilis. Nationwide, the big three TV networks all banned an ad in which the United Church of Christ heralded the openness of its 6,000 congregations to gay couples. Such rapid-fire postelection events are conspiring to make "Kinsey" a bellwether cultural event of this year. When I first saw the movie last spring prior to its release, it struck me as an intelligent account of a half-forgotten and somewhat quaint chapter in American social history. It was in the distant year of 1948 that Alfred Kinsey, a Harvard-trained zoologist, published "Sexual Behavior in the Human Male," a dense, clinical 804-page accounting of the findings of his obsessive mission to record the sexual histories of as many Americans as time and willing volunteers (speaking in confidentiality) would allow. The book stormed the culture with such force that Kinsey was featured in almost every major national magazine; a Time cover story likened his book's success to "Gone With the Wind." Even pop music paid homage, with the rubber-faced comic Martha Raye selling a half-million copies of "Ooh, Dr. Kinsey!" and Cole Porter immortalizing the Kinsey report's sizzling impact in a classic stanza in "Too Darn Hot." Though a Gallup poll at the time found that three-quarters of the public approved of Kinsey's work, not everyone welcomed the idea that candor might supplant ignorance and shame in the national conversation about sex. Billy Graham, predictably, said the publication of Kinsey's research would do untold damage to "the already deteriorating morals of America." Somewhat less predictably, as David Halberstam writes in "The Fifties," The New York Times at first refused to accept advertising for Kinsey's book. Such history, which seemed ancient only months ago, has gained in urgency since Election Day. As politicians and the media alike pander to that supposed 22 percent of "moral values" voters, we're back where we came in. Bill Condon, who wrote and directed "Kinsey," started working on this project in 1999 and didn't gear it to any political climate. The film is a straightforward telling of its subject's story, his thorniness and bisexuality included, conforming in broad outline to the facts as laid out by Kinsey's most recent biographers. But not unlike Philip Roth's "Plot Against America," which transports us back to an American era overlapping that of "Kinsey," this movie, however unintentionally, taps into anxieties that feel entirely contemporary. That Channel 13 would even fleetingly balk at "Kinsey" as The Times long ago did at the actual Kinsey is not a coincidence. As for the right-wing groups that have targeted the movie (with or without seeing it), they are the usual suspects, many of them determined to recycle false accusations that Kinsey was a pedophile, as if that might somehow make the actual pedophilia scandal in one church go away. But this crowd doesn't just want what's left of Kinsey's scalp. (He died in 1956.) Empowered by that Election Day "moral values" poll result, it is pressing for a whole host of second-term gifts from the Bush administration: further rollbacks of stem-cell research, gay civil rights, pulchritude sightings at N.F.L. games and, dare I say it aloud, reproductive rights for women. "If you have weaklings around you who do not share your biblical values, shed yourself of them," wrote Bob Jones III, president of the eponymous South Carolina university, to President Bush after the election. "Put your agenda on the front burner and let it boil." Such is the perceived clout of this Republican base at government agencies like the F.C.C. that it need only burp and 66 frightened ABC affiliates instantly dump their network's broadcast of that indecent movie "Saving Private Ryan" on Veterans Day. In the case of "Kinsey," the Traditional Values Coalition has called for a yearlong boycott of all movies released by Fox. (With the hypocrisy we've come to expect, it does not ask its members to boycott Fox's corporate sibling in the Murdoch empire, Fox News.) But such organizations don't really care about "Kinsey" - an art-house picture that, however well reviewed or Oscar-nominated, will be seen by a relatively small audience, mostly in blue states. The film is just this month's handy pretext for advancing the larger goal of pushing sex of all nonbiblical kinds back into the closet and undermining any scientific findings, whether circa 1948 or 2004, that might challenge fundamentalist sexual orthodoxy as successfully as Darwin challenged Genesis. (Though that success, too, is in doubt: The Washington Post reports that this year some 40 states are dealing with challenges to the teaching of evolution in public schools.) "Kinsey" is an almost uncannily helpful guide to how these old cultural fault lines have re-emerged from their tomb, virtually unchanged. Among Kinsey's on-screen antagonists is a university hygiene instructor who states with absolute certitude that abstinence is the only cure needed to stop syphilis. Sound familiar? In tune with the "moral values" crusaders, the Web site for the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has obscured and downplayed the important information that condoms are overwhelmingly effective in preventing sexually transmitted diseases. (A nonprofit organization supporting comprehensive sex education, Advocates for Youth, publicized this subterfuge and has been rewarded with three government audits of its finances in eight months.) Elsewhere in "Kinsey," we watch desperate students pepper their professor with a series of uninformed questions: "Can too much sex cause cancer? Does suppressing sex lead to stuttering? Does too much masturbation cause premature ejaculation?" Though that sequence takes place in 1939, you can turn on CNN in December 2004 and watch Genevieve Wood of the Family Research Council repeatedly refuse - five times, according to the transcript - to disown the idea that masturbation can cause pregnancy. Ms. Wood was being asked about that on "Crossfire" because a new Congressional report, spearheaded by the California Democrat Henry Waxman, shows that various fictions of junk science (AIDS is spread by tears and sweat, for instance) have turned up as dogma in abstinence-only sex education programs into which American taxpayers have sunk some $900 million in five years. Right now this is the only kind of sex education that our government supports, even though science says that abstinence-only programs don't work - or may be counterproductive. A recent Columbia University study found that teens who make "virginity pledges" to delay sex until marriage still have premarital sex at a high rate (88 percent) rivaling those that don't, but are less likely to use contraception once they do. It's California, a huge blue state that refuses to accept federal funding for abstinence-only curriculums, that has a 40 percent falloff in teenage pregnancy over the past decade, second only to Alaska. No matter what the censors may accomplish elsewhere, the pop culture revolution since Kinsey's era is in little jeopardy: in a nation of "Desperate Housewives," "Too Darn Hot" has become the national anthem. A movie like "Kinsey" will do just fine; the more protests, the more publicity and the larger the box office. But if Hollywood will always survive, off-screen Americans are being damaged by the cultural war over sex that is being played out in real life. You see that when struggling kids are denied the same information about sexuality that was kept from their antecedents in the pre-Kinsey era; you see that when pharmacists in more and more states enforce their own "moral values" by refusing to fill women's contraceptive prescriptions and do so with the tacit or official approval of local officials; you see it when basic information that might prevent the spread of lethal diseases is suppressed by the government because it favors political pandering over scientific fact. While "Sexual Behavior in the Human Male" was received with a certain amount of enthusiasm and relief by most Americans in 1948, the atmosphere had changed radically by the time Kinsey published his follow-up volume, "Sexual Behavior in the Human Female," just five years later. By 1953 Joe McCarthy was in full throttle, and, as James H. Jones writes in his judicious 1997 Kinsey biography, "ultra-conservative critics would accuse Kinsey of aiding communism by undermining sexual morality and the sanctity of the home." Kinsey was an anti-Soviet, anti-New Deal conservative, but that didn't matter in an America racked by fear. He lost the principal sponsor of his research, the Rockefeller Foundation, and soon found himself being hounded, in part for his sympathetic view of homosexuality, by the ambiguously gay homophobes J. Edgar Hoover and Clyde Tolson. Based on what we've seen in just the six weeks since Election Day, the parallels between that war over sex and our own may have only just begun. http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/12/arts/12rich.html?ex=110386 5395&ei=1&en=526c5a54558c2dff Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company |
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Mistress Gatta |
לפני 19 שנים •
30 בדצמ׳ 2004
another side of medal...
לפני 19 שנים •
30 בדצמ׳ 2004
Mistress Gatta • 30 בדצמ׳ 2004
THURSDAY
DECEMBER 16 2004 ShopNetDaily Page 1 News Page 2 News VideoNetDaily G2 Bulletin BizNetDaily LocalNetDaily Commentary Classified Ads Letters People Search Health Weather TV Guide MusicNetDaily Movies Stocks -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Frank Rich's plot against America -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Posted: December 16, 2004 1:00 a.m. Eastern Editor's note: This column deals with information that may not be suitable for children. Parental discretion is advised. © 2004 WorldNetDaily.com Lulled by the siren call and the lotus blossoms of Circe, Frank Rich resembles nothing less that a man stoned as he frets over "The Plot Against Sex in America." But Frank is no Odysseus – he needs more wit to find his way home. On Page 1 of Sunday's New York Times' Arts&Leisure section, a poor, befuddled and naive Frank Rich is hysterically pushing the panic button in a sweat lest someone spoil the sappy fun he claims to enjoy. Sexuality, he warns, is on the endangered species list. Rich was traumatized – yes, I would say traumatized – that "the bluest of TV channels, public broadcasting's WNET, in the bluest of cities, New York" rejected (temporarily) advertising for what Rich views as "the acclaimed movie 'Kinsey.'" Well, Variety rejected paid advertising from Dr. Laura, me and others, documenting Kinsey's child sexual-abuse protocol. Maybe Frank will write a protest about that? Speaking in standard New Yorkese, repeating the words he memorized at the feet, knees or whatever of hundreds of other elite, uneducated and mindless "critics," Rich gives us Liam Neeson as (sigh, here we go again) the "pioneering Indiana University sex researcher who first let Americans know that nonmarital sex is a national pastime." Ah, Mr. Rich, blush! You're exposed, sir! Like all the others, you too never read Kinsey's books. You used the short Fox publicity blurbs, didn't you?! Admit it now and you'll feel better! And you, a New York Times critic at that. Indeed, your benighted literary bankruptcy is embarrassing. Let me spell it out for you. If "nonmarital sex [was] a national pastime" in the 1940s, Americans – other than Kinsey – would have noticed, really. Why? Well, you see, despite the moronic and uninformed claims in Kinsey's books, most Americans could read then, too. And although, in those years, the nation boasted thousands of newspapers nationwide, we even read the New York Times (it was also published then and they had "reporters"). I know you believe everything Condon says, but trust me on this. In the 1940s, Americans had eyes and ears, just like today. And we knew pretty much what our next door neighbors were doing. Even atheists like Lionel Trilling and Abe Maslow knew what people were doing – and not too many were witless enough to be doing what Kinsey said they were doing. But, lets not heed the "scholars." Let's try some logic ourselves, shall we? Now, I'll go slowly with this next sentence so that you may possibly follow the line of thought. You see, pre-Kinsey contraception was commonly by prescription and abortion was illegal. (Well, the foolish founders thought abortion was killing. Now we are smarter.) OK, so far? Now Frank, Kinsey said he found a 6 percent "illegitimacy" rate. OK, you explain to the New York Times' readers how that works. Were girls burying babies en masse in their urban backyards? The last I saw, it was prom night in the 1990s when we found babies dumped in garbage cans. So, try telling us how Americans had a national pastime of "fornication" without mass-producing babies? Try telling us how we had such a "national pastime" without massive venereal disease – up well over 400 percent since? Tell the New York Times' readers why there were no epidemics of genital herpes, human papilloma virus, chlamydia, AIDS or the other 20 or so new STD epidemics that plague our children today? And why even syphilis and gonorrhea were finally under control? Remember, every couple had to take that VD test before they could get a marriage license. My goodness, what prudes! Mr. Rich, sir, you have a statistical reality adjustment to make here. But you liberal elitists seldom allow the truth to interfere with your anti-religious dogma. Next, you say that Kinsey taught "that women have orgasms, too." Again, you are exposing your unlettered state, good sir. Sex manuals on how to provide women's orgasmic satisfaction were widely read. And, radical as it is to say so these days, the Bible has a hold on women's "satisfaction" more than Condon and his obtuse Kinsey. Mr. Condon's film likened "satisfactory" sex to the attack of a lusting gorilla. Sorry, most women find such pounding and posturing to be nasty and brutish. The eyes are the window to the soul. The Neeson-Kinsey character who (how shall I say this?) goes after his new young bride like a gorilla attacking a hunk of raw meat, unable to see who (or what) he is assailing, is hardly the person to teach anyone about love, romance or "orgasms." Women married to homosexual men uniformly complain, not to put too fine a point on it, that during sex the wives could have been anyone ... or anything. Do women want the Condon-Kinsey heave-ho bump-and-grind, or – as the Hebrew Bible says in the Song of Solomon – "Let his left hand be under my head and his right hand embrace me." Of course, that means you would have to see your wife. Nothing here for Condon or Kinsey. As though he were still imbibing lotus leaves, Rich says our "pioneer" is the first to prove "that masturbation and homosexuality do not lead to insanity." Of course, Condon largely lied about the sexual ignorance of the 1940s and Rich is a copycat. However, let us ask the literary critic P. Meehan to describe Kinsey's insanity, since he did it so very brilliantly: The disclosure that Kinsey was a homosexual can scarcely be a surprising one, given the nature of his utopian vision. But he was, as well, a voyeur, an exhibitionist, and a sadomasochist, descending at times in his masochistic moods into outright lunacy, thrusting the bristled end of a toothbrush deep into his urethra and pulling with force on a rope tied around his scrotum; on at least one occasion he noosed his scrotum in this way, looped the free end of the rope across an overhead pipe and wrapped it around one of his hands, and then, gripping the rope tightly, stepped off a chair, suspending himself in midair for a period that seems to have gone unrecorded, and which, incredibly, left him in one piece, albeit hospitalized. This for you, Mr. Rich, is "sanity"? I am glad that Frank is so distressed that Channel 13 almost censored the ad for Kinsey. I now would like him to get busy finding an American station that will screen the 1998 English, Yorkshire Television documentary, "Secret History: Kinsey's Paedophiles," which has never been shown in the USA. Like Frank said, "This would be funny if it were not so serious – and if it were an anomaly." The entire United Kingdom got to learn the real truth about "Kinsey's Paedophiles" – not the pabulum dished out by Condon. But no American broadcaster will show "Kinsey's Paedophiles." Open letter to Mr. Rich: I'll send you a copy of "Kinsey's Paedophiles" if you'll review it for the New York Times. Talk about cowards! I dare you to challenge your own bigotry long enough to do that! You used the public-relations copy on this "intelligent" film to repeat the bunk about Kinsey's "candor" vs. the "ignorance and shame in the national conversation about sex." But, Frank, we can measure real sexual ignorance. It is measured by the post-Kinsey rates and new kinds of venereal disease – by the rates of abortions, rapes, child sexual abuse, juvenile sexual abuse of children, incest, divorces, "out of wedlock pregnancies" and other identifications of sexual well-being. By all of these measures, modern sexual conduct has a massively higher ignorance rate than did sex in the 1940s. Every hard measure of sexual ill-health is off the charts now that "nonmarital sex really is a national pastime." Frank, you used the Kinsey PR that says the film is "straightforward." Sure. How do you know? Well, it is based on "Kinsey's most recent biographers." No, hagiographers, not biographers. None told the real skinny, not even James Jones. For, yes, Kinsey did solicit, court, cultivate and even in some cases pay men to rape infants and children for his books. Yes, he taught them to rape with stop watches, with "cinema." And your hiding your eyes won't make it go away. Lastly, Frank, you are ranting about the alleged failure of "abstinence-only sex education," programs that are finally bringing down teenage sexual activity. Why? Do you have a problem with the idea that children avoid sex until they mature, until they even marry someone who will love, honor and cherish them, until death they do part? What a mean-spirited cynic – ignorance is not bliss. But, Frank, you may be right about one thing. With leftist libertarians running the mass media and creating a nation of "Desperate Housewives," Kinsey is in little jeopardy. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Dr. Judith Reisman is president of the Institute for Media Education and is the author of "Kinsey, Crimes & Consequences." |
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דום31(שולט) |
לפני 19 שנים •
27 במרץ 2005
לפני 19 שנים •
27 במרץ 2005
דום31(שולט) • 27 במרץ 2005
That's a very interesting article that was brought to our knowledge.
I salute Kinsey. When that movie is released on video I will eagerly borrow it. |
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