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News
of the Day by
Peary Perry | |
By
now, we've all heard the news concerning the terrible tragedies at the Amish school
in Pennsylvania and the scandal surrounding Congressman Mark Foley.
Now
if you follow the news like I do, you can start to see a pattern in both of these
situations. The media and others are taking the position that these incidents
are the result of earlier abuse in the lives of the guys at fault. In the case
of the murderer in Pennsylvania, Mr. Roberts claims in his suicide note that he
abused young girls when he was ten or eleven years old and was consumed by guilt
which turned into anger which led him to enter a one room Amish school house and
shoot a number of innocent girls, killing five as of this morning. I can see how
this relates. Yeah, right.
So, let's see I do something really rotten
years ago, but never attempt to seek any help for this and never tell anyone about
what I did or how I feel, so that somehow gives me license to grab up a ton of
guns and ammunition and storm into a school house and murder people who weren't
even alive when I did whatever it was that I did?
Take this guy Foley.
He now claims that some member of the clergy abused him when he was a kid. So,
now he's gay and an alcoholic and has been discovered doing nastiness with teen-age
boys assigned to the page internship program at the House of Representatives.
I find his comments very confusing. He claims he was drunk when he made these
luring e-mails to these young boys. He claims he never let his sexual activities
get in the way of his responsibilities as a congressman. However, in one e-mail
released yesterday he claims to have left the floor of the house during a vote
to have cybersex with some young page.
Was he drunk at this time?
Was he supposed to be voting at this time?
Now, he is saying that he is
a victim and that the clergy who abused him when he was just a kid is at fault.
I ask you this. If he was abused, why didn't he tell someone when it happened
so that the person who abused him could be removed or confronted? Why not tell
someone right then and there to prevent abuse from happening to someone else?
Why wait for years and then after you get caught, blame some incident or some
person for something that you were a part of in the far distant past?
Both of the incidents turn my stomach, as they should yours as well. What kind
of a society are we living in, in which no one takes any sort of blame for his
or her actions? How sick is it to say that just because something bad happened
to me, then I have the right to inflect bad on you or others?
I find
myself searching for an answer for these questions and keep coming up short. One
thing I do notice which may be part of this dilemma and that is what we see on
our televisions. There is a new show coming out called…"Ugly Betty". It's a series
about a overweight, unattractive young girl and her trials and tribulations with
her new job.
This is supposed to be funny.
I am telling you the
truth folks when I say that our young kids have enough bad stuff in their lives
every day without what I consider to be 'put down' shows. Our kids, our friends,
our families need encouragement and positive talk from us, not negative comments
that tend to lower someone's self esteem.
What little they have.
We
have made a mockery of our family lives through sit coms that portray the father
as a stumbling, bumbling fool incapable of running his own household, much less
being a role model.
Our political system allows for two distinct classes,
them and us. We read about it each and every day and still those of us in the
trenches pick up our shovels and head off to the mines singing…"Hi, ho…hi, ho
..it's off to work we go." As if nothing was wrong in the world.
Folks,
I am telling you that we must wake up and smell the dog poop. There is something
rotten in our land and I'm afraid it is us. We must snap out of our collective
revelry and watch for the bad guys, no matter how good they seem. We are living
in a world in which our children and future children are being abused by wolves
in sheep's clothing.
My prayer is for all of us to listen to our children,
talk to our children, watch our children. If they seem disturbed, find out why.
Who wants to be the parents of either a Charles Roberts or a Mark Foley?
© Peary Perry Letters From
North America >
October 5, 2006 column Syndicated weekly in 80 newspapers Comments go to
www.pearyperry.com | | |