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The Al Mohler Crosswalk Commentary - 
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Monday, November 15, 2004

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>>  Kinsey as He Really Was--What You Won't See in the Movie

Brace yourselves. The movie, Kinsey, opened in theaters last Friday,
introducing a new generation of Americans to the infamous "father" of
sex research in America. Yet, the movie is really not a true portrait of
Alfred Kinsey at all. Instead of portraying the twisted and tormented
mind of this propagandist for the sexual revolution, the movie presents
Kinsey as an angel of light who brought America out of repression and
darkness.

Reviewers greeted the movie with excitement. A. O. Scott, writing in The
New York Times, declared that "Bill Condon's smart, stirring life of the
renowned mid-century sex researcher Alfred C. Kinsey, has a lot to say
on the subject of sex, which it treats with sobriety, sensitivity and a
welcome measure of humor." Mr. Scott neglects to mention that the movie
treats its "subject" without an adequate measure of truth.

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Rather than expressing outrage that a scandalous individual with a
well-documented pattern of sexual perversity is being celebrated, Mr.
Scott sees the movie as a mixture of entertainment and enlightenment.
"The director addresses sexuality with candor and wit, but it is the act
of research as much as its object that imparts to Kinsey its flush of
passion and its rush of romance," he celebrated. He went on the gush: "I
can't think of another movie that has dealt with sex so knowledgeably
and, at the same time, made the pursuit of knowledge seem so sexy. There
are some explicit images and provocative scenes, but it is your
intellect that is most likely to be aroused."

The reviewers for Newsweek acknowledged that "Kinsey's methods were far
from perfect," but they nevertheless celebrated both the movie and its
central character. Indeed, they commend Kinsey "who shattered any
vestiges of Victorian modesty, leading curious Americans from bedroom
peephole to upfront view between the sheets." In a sidebar, David Ansen
declared that the movie "is a celebration of diversity; its about the
solace knowledge can bring." Writing in The Wall Street Journal,
reviewer Joe Morgenstern declared that Kinsey doesn't try to sell or
exploit sex. According to Morgenstern, the movie "does remarkably well
as a cultural history of a vanished time" and "is intelligent to a
fault."

Alfred C. Kinsey is one of the most controversial figures in American
history--and for good reason. An entomologist by training, Kinsey turned
from his intense fascination with the gall wasp to the study of human
sexuality. He burst upon the American scene with his pioneering 1948
volume, Sexual Behavior in the Human Male. Eventually, Indiana
University was to establish the Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex,
Gender and Reproduction, and the name "Kinsey" was to be associated with
progressivist sex education, opposition to traditional sexual morality,
and liberation from fixed concepts of "normal" when dealing with human
sexuality. The Kinsey Institute has what many consider to be the world's
largest collection of pornography, sexually explicit art, and various
sexual objects. What the institute does not advertise is its links to
data gathered by child molesters and sex criminals.

By any measure, Alfred Kinsey was a tormented and conflicted figure.
Raised by a puritanical father and a withdrawn mother, Kinsey's
adolescence was marked by sexual turmoil and experimentation. As is now
well documented, the young Kinsey was involved in sadomasochistic sexual
behaviors and was driven by homosexual desire.

In a groundbreaking biography published in 1997, James H. Jones blew the
cover on the Kinsey myth. According to this popular and pervasive
mythology, Alfred Kinsey was a scientist who brought his rigorous
scientific skills and objective scientific interests to the study of
human sexuality. The real Alfred Kinsey was a man whose own sexual
practices cannot be safely described to the general public and whose
interest in sex was anything but objective or scientific.

>From the onset, Jones recognized Kinsey's central role in the sexual
revolution. "More than any other American of the twentieth century,"
Jones acknowledges, "he was the architect of a new sensibility about a
part of life that everyone experiences and no one escapes."

Nevertheless, the real Kinsey was hidden from the public. Jones
describes his project in these words: "As I burrowed into more than a
dozen archives, read tens of thousands of letters, and interviewed
scores of people who knew Kinsey in various capacities, I discovered
that his public image distorted more than it revealed."

As Jones reports, "The man I came to know bore no resemblance to the
canonical Kinsey. Anything but disinterested, he approached his work
with missionary fervor. Kinsey loathed Victorian morality as only a
person who had been badly injured by sexual repression could despise it.
He was determined to use science to strip human sexuality of its guilt
and repression. He wanted to undermine traditional morality, to soften
the rules of restraint, and to help people develop positive attitudes
toward their sexual needs and desires. Kinsey was a crypto-reformer who
spent his every waking hour attempting to change the sexual morays and
sex offender laws of the United States."

There was more to it than that, of course, and Jones marshals an
incredible mountain of documentation to prove this point. In the first
place, the adolescent Alfred Kinsey was deeply involved in masochistic
self-abuse. In Jones' words, "Somewhere along the line, he veered off
the path of normal development and was pulled down a trail that led to
tremendous emotional conflict and self-negating physical abuse."

Driven by wild sexual fantasies and determined to overthrow what he saw
as a repressive sexual morality, Kinsey eventually dropped his study of
insects and turned his study to human sexuality. Tragically, Jones must
acknowledge that the world of science "would have been better served had
Kinsey not allowed his lust for data to obscure his judgment."

What exactly was Kinsey up to? He and his close band of young male
associates went about collecting an enormous body of data on human
sexuality, first looking at male and later at female populations. In his
research on the sexual behavior of males, Kinsey brought his ideological
and personal passions to the forefront of his supposedly scientific
work. He arbitrarily decided that human beings are to be located in a
continuum of development between heterosexual and homosexual poles. He
developed a six-step chart and argued that men and boys are arrayed all
along this line between absolute heterosexuality and absolute
homosexuality. He would later argue that almost forty percent of all
males would have some homosexual experience. Of course, hidden from
public view was the fact that Kinsey was doing his very best to
rationalize his own homosexuality--or bisexuality as later commentators
would explain--and was not at all the objective scientist collecting
neutral data from a responsible population base.

Among the many problems inherent in Kinsey's research is the fact that
he relied upon reports and sexual studies taken from prison populations,
including sex criminals. Therefore, Kinsey's notion of "normal" was
drawn from a decidedly abnormal population sample.

The most troubling aspect of Kinsey's research is the data he collected
on the sexual response of children--especially young boys. Chapter Five
of Sexual Behavior in the Human Male considered the sexual experience of
boys, including infants. Kinsey wanted to prove that children are sexual
beings who should be understood to have and to deserve sexual
experiences. In this chapter, Kinsey is largely dependent upon the data
contributed by "Mr. X," a man who had molested hundreds of boys ranging
from infants to adolescents. As Jones explains: "Viewed from any angle,
his relationship with Mr. X was a cautionary tale. Whatever the putative
valued as science of Mr. X's experience, the fact remains that he was a
predator pedophile." Over decades, this man abused hundreds of young
boys, tortured infants, and, as Jones explains, "performed a variety of
other sexual acts on preadolescent boys and girls alike."

Kinsey did not condemn this man, but instead eagerly solicited his
"data." As a matter of fact, Kinsey went so far as to attempt to pay Mr.
X for further research and once wrote to him, "I wish I knew how to give
credit to you in the forthcoming volume for your material. It seems a
shame not even to name you."

Those words betray a moral monster of the most horrible depravity and
assured criminality. Alfred Kinsey celebrated the fact that this man had
sexually tortured children and, as Kinsey's own published work
documents, had sexually abused two-month-old infants.

All this was explicit in the data published in Kinsey's 1948 volume, but
he was nonetheless celebrated as a sexual pioneer and as a profit of
sexual enlightenment.

Unbeknownst to the general public, Kinsey was also involved in sex acts
with his staff and in the filming of hundreds of persons involved in
sexual activity--including footage taken of his own masochistic sex
acts. He and his colleagues paid adolescent boys to perform sex acts on
film and turned the Kinsey house into a studio for pornographic
documentation. In one incredibly weird twist on the story, Mrs. Kinsey,
or "Mac" as she was known, is remembered to have brought refreshments to
the participants at the conclusion of their sex acts and video sessions.
She was herself filmed in various sexual situations and Kinsey
encouraged his associates to engage in sex acts with his wife.

What does the cultural elite now make of all this? The New York Times
review acknowledges that the movie takes a great risk "in attempting to
deal frankly with its hero's own sex life without succumbing to
prurience or easy moralism." In reality, however, the movie doesn't deal
frankly with Kinsey's perversions at all. The reviewer concedes,
"Sometimes his scientific zeal shaded into obsession, and his methods
went from the empirical to the experimental in ways that remain
ethically troubling."

Ethically troubling? Is that all The New York Times can muster in
response to Kinsey's own self-documented and published reports of child
molestation?

In Sex the Measure of All Things: A Life of Alfred C. Kinsey, Jonathan
Gathorne-Hardy laments the fact that Kinsey is not given the respect of
his fellow scientists that he believed he deserved. Nevertheless, even
Gathorne-Hardy acknowledges, "The recent digging up of Kinsey's private
life, incidentally, is not going to help him" in this respect.

Gathorne-Hardy wrote his book largely in response to the damage to
Kinsey's reputation inflicted by Jones' biography. Amazingly,
Gathorne-Hardy claims: "Wherever we know something of his sexuality it
is at once apparent that, while it hardly ever, if ever, impaired his
integrity as a scientist, it had a decisive effect on his work. And
where it does once or twice seem to impair that integrity, the effect is
either not very significant-or else it is obvious. There is a
transparency."

This is moral nonsense. Of course, this author attempts to make lemonade
out of Kinsey's lemons in more than one way. At one point,
Gathorne-Hardy goes so far as to claim that Kinsey's bisexuality was a
great asset for his scientific work. "Kinsey was bisexual,"
Gathorne-Hardy notes, "an almost ideal position, one might think, for
someone who was studying sexual behavior in both sexes." Who might think
this?

We have become a society that celebrates men like Alfred C. Kinsey and
produces movies that present such a man as an agent of enlightenment
rather than as a tortured soul fighting his internal demons while
soliciting data on the sexual molestation of young children--and filming
any number of persons involved in any number of perverted sex acts.

In a letter he once wrote to his associate Clarence A. Tripp, Kinsey
conceded, "The whole army of religion is our central enemy." Kinsey knew
what he was up against, and his ambition was not merely to collect data,
but to overthrow the entire structure of Christian morality in the realm
of human sexuality.

Instead of being rightly classified as a criminal along with the likes
of Dr. Joseph Mengele and other Nazi scientists, Alfred C. Kinsey is now
lionized and celebrated in a movie starring Liam Neeson as the
supposedly heroic figure. What does this say about Liam Neeson? What
does this say about us?

____________________________________

R. Albert Mohler, Jr. is president of The Southern Baptist Theological
Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky.  For more articles and resources by
Dr. Mohler, and for information on The Albert Mohler Program, a daily
national radio program broadcast on the Salem Radio Network, go to
www.albertmohler.com.  For information on The Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary, go to www.sbts.edu.  Send feedback to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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