Originally Posted by
Aylen
... Here is the report in full. 291 pages.
...
http://www.usccb.org/issues-and-action/child-and-youth-protection/upload/The-Nature-and-Scope-of-Sexual-Abuse-of-Minors-by-Catholic-Priests-and-Deacons-in-the-United-States-1950-2002.pdf..
What I saw first off here was "USCCB" and immediately thought, and wrote in my reply to you, of the "USCCB with their slick and worldly ways of trying to hide and divert the truth". They are a shame of the Church, and they need to be disbanded. So when I see that this study is funded by the USCCB, I know to look for the dishonesty involved. Even if carried on by a reputable "independent" agency, their paycheck for the project is covered by the USCCB, so we need to examine the USCCB involvement. For this I have the usual expectations of them.
I really wanted to be done with this topic for a few days, but that "USCCB" in your link nagged at me. So I researched it, and it didn't take long to find the problem with this report.
The problem with the report is spelled out in an interview with sociologist Father Paul Sullins, whose new study documents a strong linkage between the incidence of abuse and homosexuality in the priesthood and in seminaries, seen is this link, but I will give give a brief summary. That article is just over four full pages on my printer (but far from the USCCB's 291!).
[Of course one can see an obvious motive in putting out a 291 page report. Very, very few will read the 291 pages, so the USCCB and their media buddies will link it, after providing their own synopsis of what the study means. The "story" for this study is that homosexuality doesn't have anything to do it the pederast problem. What?! But this is how this body of bishops-who-can't-be-trusted reports the conclusion, using facts from this apparently otherwise well-researched study.
In the interview linked above with Fr. Sullin, two big dishonesties of the USCCB emerge. First, in their habit of hiding things, they hide the facts of where the statistics come from! When the USCCB gave their facts to the John Jay Institute to study and compile, the USCCB withheld all the names of the dioceses. Why?? Fr. Sullins says:
....."Well, I don’t know why that was. Typically, you will de-identify individuals because you don’t want to impugn the reputation of individuals. That makes a lot of sense. But if you have an institution where you have a widespread problem, whether it’s abuse or embezzlement or theft or whatever, you’d like to know in what sectors of that institution that occurred more frequently than others. Typically, you would like to say, “Well, over here in this division, they had a great record. Let’s try to see what we can do to make the whole institution more like this division, so as to reduce this unwanted behavior.” That did not occur here. Could it be that the bishops, some bishops, did not want to know, did not want to have people know what dioceses were better and what dioceses were worse? I don’t know.
.....We know from what John Jay College did report that there were a number of dioceses who had no or very few instances of sex abuse over the last 50 years. We don’t know what those are. That might be a kind of a cover-up, or not letting us know everything that we would like to know in order to address the abuse.
.....Now, by contrast, the recent grand jury report from Pennsylvania put everything out there. We know exactly where and when each instance of abuse occurred. I do look at that data to some extent in this report, and it’s very helpful, but we have a possibility to do much more investigation and report on data like that, which will begin to let us know: Were there dirty dioceses and clean dioceses? We’d like to know that about seminaries. Were there dirty seminaries and clean seminaries? We have these reports of homosexual subcultures and seminaries that have been affected by abuse. We don’t know what seminaries those are. Wouldn’t it be helpful to us if there was a handful of seminaries that were really spawning this kind of behavior and lots of clean seminaries that weren’t? It would really help us a lot to be able to know that in order to address this problem and to eliminate it as best we can and for the safety and security of our children, particularly our young boys."
So the USCCB is hiding facts that will help us solve the problem. But this, from the USCCB, is no surprise to many of us.
The other huge problem is with the USCCB and the JJI's strange conclusion that the abuse was unrelated to the presence of homosexual men in the priesthood. But Fr. Sullin uses a more honest method of looking at the facts in the JJI report and discovers a near perfect statistical correlation between homosexuality and the abuse incidence. Surprise, surprise that statistics are used to tell the opposite of what they actually say.
[To find out how he got this from the JJI report, skim about halfway down the article linked above, and start reading at the third paragraph after the isolated interview question in italics, "When you read the John Jay Report when it first came out, what was your initial reaction to it?"].
So my instinct was right when I saw "USCCB" in the link you provided. Instinct based on past experience.
Here are some of Fr. Sullins very balanced and fair conclusions from his study. This is from one section of those conclusions, a question and his answer:
It’s almost axiomatic among a number of very prominent figures in the Church that there is no correlation, and they cite the John Jay Report. And then we can add to that anyone who tries to investigate that type of a correlation is often accused of either scapegoating homosexual priests or of outright homophobia. What is your response to that?
....."I’ve been called homophobic and hateful before for studying these kinds of things. I would say that if it’s a choice between being called homophobic and allowing more young boys to be abused, I would choose to be at risk for being called homophobic.
.....The question is: Are we on the side of abusers? Are we on the side of victims? I think that the words of Our Lord about the importance of young children and the horribleness of those who would lead such young children astray in my mind outweigh anything that someone could call me. I’m not hateful toward anyone, to my knowledge. … I don’t think that these results in any way imply that homosexual persons are natively inclined or internally inclined to commit abuse at a greater rate than heterosexual persons.
.....In fact, we know that that’s not the case. Most child abuse that happens in most settings is perpetrated by heterosexual males. It's usually in families, and so I don’t think that in any way we can infer these results to something that generally happens with homosexual persons.
.....I do look at the influence of these homosexual subcultures in seminaries, in encouraging and promoting abuse. And I find that it explains about half of the high correlation of the abuse with the percentage of homosexual priests. So something was going on beyond just mere sexual orientation to encourage this horrible immoral activity that has wrought such harm to so many victims.
.....My experience in studying homosexuals has been this: that to people who hate the truth, the truth looks like hate."
I appreciate very much that Father Sullins makes it clear that these actual study results do not put the blame on homosexuality. There is a homosexual SUBCULTURE in the seminaries that seems to be directly connected with the root problem. That is, a subculture that happens to be homosexual. Heterosexuals have subcultures, too. The offending seminaries need to be thoroughly studied, and it will be no surprise if it comes out that what the USCCB is trying to hide from us is that these seminaries are under the jurisdiction of bishops who make regular trips to St.Gallen, Switzerland, and that this is what exactly what it looks like in every other way: a planned infiltration. I expect it will be a group of seminaries and dioceses ridden with the abuse problem, and lots of seminaries NOT. That is what the USCCB will turn out to be trying to hide, IMO. They are protecting their cronies.