Trust Me -- I'm Profeminist!Anyone who reads this blog can rather easily come to the conclusion that I oppose violence against women and that I support women’s full equality with men. In my writing I advocate for the rights of women, and for the safety of children. So of course this makes me one of the good guys, right? Because, after all, any guy who says all of this great stuff simply must be on the side of the angels. He must be a guy we should all feel totally safe with and have utter faith in. We should even trust him with our kids. Right?
Unfortunately, it’s not that simple.
For a chilling reminder that those of us who champion the rights of others cannot always be trusted, one need only consider the case of Mark Foley, a former U.S. congressman from south Florida who was co-chairman of the Congressional "Missing and Exploited Children Caucus." Foley fought for tougher penalties against child sexual predators, and he crafted a law designed to ban internet ads that featured children in sexually suggestive ways. Unfortunately, all the while (it turns out) Foley was also sending sexually explicit electronic messages to teenagers who volunteered as Congressional Pages.
In his defense, Foley would later claim that these young people – although underage – were in fact older than those who are typically targeted by pedophiles, and that what he did was just “an error in judgement.” But the reality is that the messages Foley sent were almost certainly illegal (law enforcement officials in Florida ultimately decided not to prosecute the case, citing lack of cooperation from politicians in Washington, DC), and it turns out that Foley had committed this so-called “error in judgement” continually for a period that lasted over 10 years! Foley is far from being the only person to negate his advocacy through acts of disgusting betrayal. When Raymond Lahey was the Bishop of Antigonish, Nova Scotia, he oversaw a financial settlement between the Diocese and people who had been sexually abused by priests within that Diocese. At the press conference where this historic agreement was announced, Lahey said:"I want them to know how terribly sorry we are, how wrong this abuse was, and how we are now trying to right these past wrongs." Just one month later Raymond Lahey was arrested at the Ottawa airport after returning from a vacation in Southeast Asia. He had child pornography on his laptop computer Even in overtly profeminist circles I have observed some very bad behaviour:
The lesson I take from all of these stories is not that we should trust no one, but rather that no one should be presumed to be safe simply because he says the right things. Sadly – and, to me, infuriatingly – some of us profeminist men will in fact turn out to be predators: the proverbial “wolf in sheep’s clothing.”
So how do we keep ourselves safe from the guys who talk a good line but in reality do very bad things? Here are some ideas:
|