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  No, I Didn't Blame Woodstock for the Catholic Priest Sex Abuse

By Karen J. Terry
The Salon
June 23, 2011

http://www.salon.com/news/catholicism/?story=/politics/war_room/2011/06/23/catholic_sex_abuse_report


This originally appeared at The Crime Report

Sound bites should not be confused with facts.

By the time we officially released our report (which can be found here) on "The Causes and Context of Sexual Abuse of Minors by Catholic Priests in the United States, 1950-2010" on May 18, 2011, the media had already seized on incomplete leaks of the report to give it a spin that had only a tangential relationship to what we wrote.

It's time to put the record straight -- and to chart a way forward so that the pattern of abuses we studied is never repeated.

To do that, it's important to understand the background of the report and what it was intended to accomplish. Our mandate was to understand what led to the problem of child sexual abuse by Catholic priests from 1950 to the present day.

We studied individual priests who abused, the Church leaders who were responsible for overseeing them, and the broader social context in which the abuse took place.

A study of this complexity does not easily lend itself to an accurate sound bite.

Nevertheless, one early media report in a national paper attributed the explanation of social factors as a "Blame Woodstock" excuse, a phrase that went viral and was cited more than 14,000 times within the next two days.

The truth is, at no point in the report did we "blame" Woodstock or simplify the explanation of the abuse crisis to the "swinging sixties," as some papers reported.

Another fallacy contained in the early media reports included the "fact" that we did not address the problematic actions of the bishops. Critics suggested that since we relied only on data from the dioceses, the bishops influenced the study findings.

 
 

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