
Republicans
Protected a Pervert, Not Kids
By
Cliff Kincaid
October
4, 2006
NewsWithViews.com
Rather
than deal with the fact that the Republican Congressional
leadership has protected open and closeted homosexuals in
its ranks, some conservative radio talk-show hosts are
blaming the recent publicity over the Mark Foley scandal on
a Democratic plot somehow linked to George Soros. They
contend that Democrats engage in more horrible conduct. But
these claims and charges, from partisans who put loyalty to
the Republican Party over morality, are clearly designed to
cover up the fact that Foley, a House Deputy Majority Whip,
was known to be a homosexual and that any contacts he was
having with former pages were, on their face, entirely
inappropriate. House Republican leaders failed to protect
the children.
House
leaders say they were misled by Foley about his contacts
with young boys. But they knew that Foley was a homosexual,
or at least they were aware of reliable reports to that
effect that had not been denied by Foley. They stood by him
nevertheless. This is the “big tent” theory taken to an
absurd and dangerous extreme. But they had done the same
thing with Rep. Jim Kolbe, who had come out of the
homosexual closet. Indeed, the 2006 annual convention of the
Log Cabin Republicans featured a dinner honoring the
“openly gay” congressman. The event featured video
tributes to Kolbe from Vice President Dick Cheney and
Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert, who called Kolbe a
“strong and dedicated public servant in Congress.”
House
GOP leaders wonder why the sexually explicit emails surfaced
now, just weeks before the November elections. House leaders
contend that they only knew about one set of emails, in
which Foley asked for a page’s photo and age, and not the
other more offensive ones. This position concedes that House
leaders knew that Foley had been corresponding with a former
page with personal questions of a sensitive nature but that
because Foley contended the exchange was “innocent,”
they are off the hook. They insist that they raised the
issue with him and couldn’t do anything more, except
recommend that he terminate contact with that particular
page. This position is not tenable because the Republican
leadership knew—or should have known—that Foley was a
homosexual. His homosexuality was the subject of stories
back in 2003.
Even
if all that the House leaders say is true, the facts still
show that they were aware that he was having questionable
Internet exchanges with a former page. But did it not strike
Republican leaders that it was strange that Foley, 52, was
corresponding with a young boy only 16 years of age? Or was
it rationalized because Foley was a Republican and member of
the House leadership?
As
I reported in my previous column, Foley himself attended the
2003 national convention of the Log Cabin Republicans. After
the Foley scandal broke over the weekend, however, Foley’s
name and picture were removed from the organization’s
website.
The
so-called conservative media should do a better job of
covering this scandal. On Monday, the supposed right-wing
Fox News Channel aired a “debate” on the matter, with
the two sides represented by liberal Democrat Bob Beckel,
who got caught in his own sex scandal, involving the
procurement of a prostitute, and Tammy Bruce, a lesbian
Republican. “Being homosexual has nothing to do with
attraction to children,” declared Bruce. “I agree. I
agree,” Beckel said. But then she seemed to contradict
herself, saying, “All I want frankly is a gay person in
office who is not a sexual compulsive. I mean is that too
much to ask for? I don’t think it is.”
Bruce
has appeared at functions sponsored by the Log Cabin
Republicans, the homosexual activist group whose executive
director had defended Foley’s refusal over the years to
respond to questions about his homosexuality. That laid the
groundwork for the scandal we are now seeing unfold.
In
his October 2
Washington
update, Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council refused
to toe the politically correct Republican line. He declared:
“Foley,
an unmarried 52-year-old representative, had always refused
to answer questions about his sexual orientation. Now that
his emails and messages to teenage male pages have been
revealed, it appears clear that Foley is a homosexual with a
particular attraction to underage boys. While pro-homosexual
activists like to claim that pedophilia is a completely
distinct orientation from homosexuality, evidence shows a
disproportionate overlap between the two.
Although
almost all child molesters are male and less than 3% of men
are homosexual, about a third of all child sex abuse cases
involve men molesting boys—and in one study, 86% of such
men identified themselves as homosexual or bisexual.
Ignoring this reality got the Catholic Church into trouble
over abusive priests, and now it is doing the same to the
House GOP leadership. They discounted or downplayed earlier
reports concerning Foley’s behavior—probably because
they did not want to appear ‘homophobic.’ The Foley
scandal shows what happens when political correctness is put
ahead of protecting children.”
That
is the bottom line: the House Republican leaders did not
protect the children. They protected one of their own, a
known homosexual making overtures to a young boy. Regardless
of whether some of the more offensive Internet messages were
held back for political impact, the House Republican leaders
could have avoided the scandal if they had taken steps to
rid their leadership and membership of known and active
homosexuals. They have only themselves to blame.
If
Hastert and other top House leaders don’t resign, look for
many pro-family conservatives to sit out this November’s
elections.
©
2006 Cliff Kincaid - All Rights Reserved
Cliff
Kincaid, a veteran journalist and media critic, Cliff
concentrated in journalism and communications at the
University of Toledo, where he graduated with a Bachelor of
Arts degree.
Cliff
has written or co-authored nine books on media and cultural
affairs and foreign policy issues.
Cliff
has appeared on Hannity & Colmes, The O’Reilly Factor,
Crossfire and has been published in the Washington Post,
Washington Times, Chronicles, Human Events and Insight.
Web Site: www.AIM.org
E-Mail: kincaid@comcast.net
http://www.newswithviews.com/Kincaid/cliff120.htm