By Mona Charen
Friday, December 05, 2014
Rolling Stone magazine and its reporter Sabrina Rubin
Erdely are facing a great deal of skepticism about a story called “A Rape on
Campus: A Brutal Assault and Struggle for Justice at UVA.” The article tells
the story of “Jackie,” a University of Virginia student who says she was gang
raped at a fraternity party early in her freshman year.
There are solid journalistic reasons to question Erdely’s
reporting. She failed, as Slate and others have objected, to get any statements
from the accused, while offering feeble and conflicting accounts about why,
first saying that the young men were hard to find, and then explaining that the
victim was uncomfortable about having them contacted.
Richard Bradley, a former editor of George magazine who’s
seen hoaxes, urges skepticism about this story because it fits a little too
neatly into a preferred leftist narrative — southern college, white fraternity
boys, and the campus rape culture. Fair enough. Others recall the panting
eagerness of the press (and members of the faculty at Duke) to believe the
worst about that school’s lacrosse players back in 2006.
As someone who believes that campus rape is a genuine
problem, I found some aspects of the Rolling Stone tale not credible. The young
woman claims, for example, that she was pushed into a glass table that smashed
beneath her and then gang raped by seven students on cut glass. She says she
then stumbled from the frat house bleeding and disheveled, yet her friends
discouraged her from going to the hospital because it might quash their plans
to rush at fraternities.
Without knowing more, it’s impossible to say what the
truth is about this woman’s experience — though I imagine that something
traumatic happened to her. But if, for whatever reason, we learn that all or
part of her story isn’t true, it should not be seen as some grand refutation of
the problem of rape. “If false, Rolling Stone story could set rape victims back
decades” headlined the Washington Examiner. Why?
Tawana Brawley was found to be lying, but her dishonesty
didn’t invalidate every rape claim in America. The Left likes to put people in
categories: women good; men bad. Black inner-city residents good; white police
bad. Environmentalists honest; businessmen liars. And on it goes. For a time,
when the nation was gripped by an epidemic of child-abuse hysteria, we were
told that “children never lie” about these things, even as coached tots were
telling tales of being sexually abused in spaceships with samurai swords. The
Left will have its fables, whatever the strain on logic and common sense.
We don’t need “Jackie” to be honest to know that campus
rape is real. We have reports throughout the nation, lawsuits, complaints, and
word of mouth. One study put the number of sexual assaults at 100,000 a year,
which may be high, but good data are elusive for crimes that nearly always
entail he said/she said and are accompanied by shame.
Certainly the activists’ demand that campuses handle
these cases without traditional protections for the accused — such as the right
to confront witnesses or be represented by counsel — represents a gross retreat
from constitutional principles, and it’s a separate scandal that many colleges
are doing just that. But neither should we dismiss these reports as simply the
result of “post-sex regrets” by young women.
For centuries, western civilization recognized that women
were vulnerable to sexual violence and abuse. Painstakingly, we erected a
complex architecture of mores and laws to protect women from the worst kinds of
men. Some of those protections now seem ridiculous — such as the notion that a
lady would never permit herself to be alone with a strange man, not even in an
elevator. But no one should be surprised that when the guardrails of sexual
behavior were swept away in the flood of the sexual revolution, predatory men
were handed a golden opportunity. A 2002 study by David Lisak of the University
of Massachusetts and Paul Miller of the Brown School of Medicine found that 90
percent of rapes on college campuses are committed by serial offenders. A small
percentage of men is committing most of the crimes.
There is a rape culture — it’s the hook-up culture that
the Left invented and celebrated as liberation. Until it’s reversed, the rapes
will continue.
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