| A 30-minute documentary entitled The Children of Table 34, released by
the Family Research Council, shows that Alfred Kinsey's famous research
on human sexuality was either fraudulent or based on "criminal
experimentation on children funded by taxpayers." The video charges
that Kinsey incorporated into his research data from the rape of
children and infants, and that he used these records of perversion and
criminality as the basis for his influential conclusions about normal
childhood development, published in his two books, Sexual Behavior in
the Human Male and Sexual Behavior in the Human Female.
In a booklet that accompanies the videotape, Robert Knight of the
Family Research Council observes that the Kinsey Reports, when they
first appeared in the late 1940s and early 1950s, "ignited a
controversy over sexual morality that persists to this day. Both painted
a picture of Americans of all ages awash in secret sexual
experimentation." The philosophy of Kinsey and his cohorts
"placed all sexual acts on the same moral, social, and biological
level whether in or out of wedlock, between two people of the same sex
or opposite sex, or even when sex involved children or animals."
The Kinsey Reports, says Knight, "provided the 'scientific'
foundation for America's sexual revolution."
That assumption remained unchallenged until 1981, when Dr. Judith
Reisman presented a critique of Kinsey's research at the Fifth World
Congress of Sexology in Jerusalem. "She began asking questions that
have yet to be answered," says Knight. "How did the Kinsey
team obtain the data on children? Did parents give consent? Was there
any follow-up on the recorded experiments? Where are the children
now?"
Nearly 10 years later, Dr. Reisman attempted to answer some of those
questions with a book called Kinsey, Sex and Fraud. The book, says
Knight, "reveals shocking evidence that children were sexually
abused by adults in the name of science."
But that was just the beginning of the tragedy. Kinsey's bogus and/or
criminal research became the basis for a burgeoning sex-education
industry. "The Kinsey data are the sole source of child sexuality
data, since no other researchers have been willing to risk criminal
prosecution for reporting on or conducting systematic molestation of
children," Knight explains. "The Kinsey conclusions, based on
the data, have permeated America's educational institutions and are the
major behavioral model on which sex education programs are designed for
children."
Today, sex education programs in schools across America
"systematically strip children of sexual modesty, ridicule the idea
of sexual restraint ... and reduce parents' roles to that of
consultants, not authorities in their children's lives. The
justification for this radical departure from traditional sexual
morality begins with the Kinsey Reports," says Knight.
"Kinsey's work remains an underpinning for many ongoing
federally-sponsored research programs," he adds, noting that a
group with close ties to Kinsey, the Sex Information and Education
Council of the United States (SIECUS), was chosen in 1994 "to
evaluate sex education programs throughout the United States and to make
recommendations to the federal government."
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