By Emmett Tyrrell
Thursday, August 08, 2013
As Ariel Castro, the convicted kidnapper, rapist and baby
killer, shuffled off in chains to the hoosegow, I thought why was there so
little reportage or commentary about his idiotic statement made in an Ohio
courtroom. Is it because the man himself is so repugnant? Is it because his
transgressions against society are so repulsive? I think it is both and one
thing more.
Americans have heard all this claptrap before. We are
familiar with the rumblings of a sociopath. A sociopath, in plain language
unadorned by the psychiatrists' hocus-pocus, is a person who does not know
right from wrong, at least as regards his own behavior.
Few sociopaths even acknowledge society's sense of
outrage at their behavior. When Castro said, "These people are trying to
paint me as a monster. I'm not a monster. I'm sick," it was as though he
thought society was at fault for not recognizing his illness earlier on and
offering him therapy. Not life in prison but a 12-step program, and then he
could go out into society again. Cured! Ready to participate in all the
bountiful blessings of American life!
When he spoke of "My sexual problem," he could
have been speaking as the Mayor of San Diego, Bob Filner, who recently admitted
to his "problem" and has promised to undergo "two weeks of
intense therapy" so that he will never again harass women, one of whom he
placed lovingly in that time-honored act of sexual foreplay, the headlock! Two
weeks of therapy and he will be back in the mayor's office performing the
invaluable work that the people of San Diego voted him into office to do.
Meanwhile, in New York City Eliot Spitzer feels he is
fully qualified to be city comptroller. Spitzer, upon admitting to availing
himself of top-of-the-line hookers, stepped down from the governorship in 2008.
Yet, after a spell of counseling, therapy and serving as host on a CNN talk
show, he is presenting himself to the electorate as repristinated. And then
there is Anthony Weiner, who is running for mayor despite being forced from
Congress in 2011 for sending pictures of his genitalia and lewd emails to women
he did not know and lying to the public about it. This summer he entered the
mayor's race promising never to send such emails again. Then it was discovered
he did do it again. Now he is as convinced as Spitzer that his indiscretions
are behind him. They are things of the past. A few weeks ago he was running
neck and neck in the Democratic primary, and if he can hang in there long
enough he will be neck and neck again.
This argument that one's "sexual problem" is a
sickness rather than a vice is not new in American life. President Bill Clinton
survived impeachment by relying on it. So perhaps we can understand why the
fiend Castro should trot it out again.
Yet maybe we ought to turn our attention to the voters,
at least to the Democratic voters, who are supporting these candidates despite
their sexual aberrations. Bear in mind these sexual aberrations were committed
against women! How do you explain that the very Democrats that declaim against
the Republicans for waging a "war against women" are supporting
candidates that harass women, traffic in women and publicly expose themselves
to women?
I suggest that the answer is hypocrisy. Yet there has to
be more to it than that. All the above abusers of women are Democrats. When a
Republican gets caught misbehaving he generally is eliminated in his party's
primary. Why are the above rogues Democrats? And another thing: Why are they
disproportionately supported by women -- women who claim they are feminists? Is
a modern-day feminist a woman waiting for her picture of Anthony Weiner's
private part? That strikes me as bizarre.
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