Wednesday, March 03, 2004

The Psychologists Didn't Tell Us it Was Wrong...

This is one of many more excuses, as Roman Catholic propagandists work overtime in their efforts to make excuses for priests who enjoy sex with boys. A new batch of Catholic flim-flam appeared in the Feb 23 issue of 'The Catholic News Service,' in an article titled, "Understanding of Child Sex Abuse has Evolved in the Last 50 Years."

The article is a summation of interviews with "leading North American experts" on sex abuse. Some highlights:

1. "In the late 1960s there was so little professional literature on people who sexually abused minors that 'you could read it all in one morning'..."

Comment - So......since psychologists 35 years ago weren't writing papers on sex abuse, the Roman clergy didn't know any better?

2. "Leading North American experts described a sharp learning curve on sex abuse in the United States and Canada and a few other countries around the world in the 1970s, '80s and '90s."

Comment - Ohhhhhh......no wonder US bishops let their priests have sex with thousands of boys - they were on a "learning curve" about sex abuse! Question - when will this "learning curve" end for the Roman clergy?? Answer - You should live so long!!

3. "They (the "experts") described a combination of pervasive societal, legal, professional, and organizational obstacles that made it far more difficult years ago to recognize child sexual abuse, report it, prevent it, arrest or treat perpetrators of abuse, or generally provide the tools to halt child sexual abuse as a major problem in society."

Comment - Those poor Catholic bishops. They faced so many "obstacles" that they just kept letting their priests have sex with boys. This is a Catholic lie - the "obstacles" were the Roman Catholic bishops themselves.

One tool "to halt child sexual abuse" would be to kick every last Roman priest out of the USA. This would protect thousands of children from the lusts of lecherous priests.

May Christ continue to expose the depraved nature of the Roman Catholic priesthood.