Author Rivas defends ‘black swan’ sightings

The author of Positive Memories, T. Rivas, has responded to the critique offered by Ethan Edwards following my most recent blog, A positive sighting of 118 black swans, in which I introduced the book. Announcing this response as a guest blog, as I now do, gives me the opportunity to correct an unfortunate false impression I left last time when I said “Rivas is not a trained scientist so far as I am aware.” I would have done better, clearly, to be more aware, because I have since learned that he has masters degrees in both psychology and philosophy. He writes:
Here’s my answer [to Ethan Edwards]:
–       As should be clear to any reader, erotic relationships do not just involve ‘adult’ sex in the sense of penetration. In fact, I explicitly state in the Discussion: “Consensual ‘pedophile’ erotic contact is by definition based upon the consensual erotic activities that minors typically practice with themselves or other minors. Especially in relationships with young children, normally there will be no penetration, but only kissing, caressing, petting, mutual manual stimulation, shared masturbation, or oral stimulation, with only rare exceptions. ” That’s the problem with the approach taken by readers such as Edwards who have made their minds up to such an extent that they don’t bother to read the whole book from cover to cover.
In my book, we’re not dealing with the caricature of pedophile erotic contacts as consisting of adult coital sex forced onto children, but with the eroticism characteristic of an individual minor that is voluntarily shared with an individual adult.
–       What does Edwards mean by iatrogenic contamination? These cases are all self-reported! So what kind of contamination by medical doctors (as I understand his terminology) could be involved? Is he simply accusing me of making up the accounts?
–       I’ve included Judith Levine in the category of erotic relationships, because as I explicitly state: “In exceptional ‘erotic’ relationships here presented there was hardly any physical contact, but I have not listed such cases under platonic relationships if the former child felt really in love with the adult and longed for such [physical] contact.”
–       In the case of Koekie, I explicitly write: “After the caravan, Ben visited her at the farm where they lived and they had some mild non-genital erotic contact.” So, Edwards simply hasn’t read this story carefully enough.
–       Edwards states: “I looked to see what hints I could get about an answer to my question: Would the relationship have been worse or better if the sex hadn’t been present? I thought 4 gave a clear indication that they actively wanted the sex, 2 hinted that the sex was more something they put up with, and for 13 it isn’t clear.”
My response: What’s important is that all these women are talking about the relationship as a whole and not just about the sexual part. None of the women states that they objected to the sex, felt ambiguous about it, or were harmed by it, while all of them indicate that they recall the relationship as something positive. If the erotic parts were really problematic, why on earth would they stand up for their positive memories of the relationship as a whole? Especially in these days with widespread anti-pedophile hysteria?
Edwards’ question whether the relationship would have been worse or better if the sex hadn’t been present, first of all is simply not a question that is asked in this book. This book centers around the question whether there are ANY erotic pedophile relationships that are remembered as positive and that have not caused any harm or painful ambiguity, based on the former minor’s own perception.
In none of the cases presented is there any reason to believe that the erotic aspects ‘ruined’ anything. And that’s what is important. It simply must mean there is nothing intrinsically detrimental about the erotic aspects as such, as long as they are voluntary and match the child’s personality. We’re not discussing the “ideal” type of relationship here, but simply whether an erotic relationship can be positive and harmless or whether it cannot. I wonder whether Edwards believes children should abstain from any type of erotic contact (and maybe even masturbation) because that would make their relationships (in the case of masturbation that would of course concern one’s relationship with oneself) more ideal? If so, what are his reasons for believing this? If not, why should the effect of voluntary pedophile eroticism be any different from that of all other types of eroticism? What should be so magical about pedophile eroticism, especially if we are talking about the exact same types of activities? Is it simply the adult’s age, the age difference or the older adult body? If so, how to explain any type of positive recollection of the pedophile eroticism (as such) by the former minor? We should have expected there would be none. Now that positive memories do seem to be reported, we should try to explain all of them away because we already know what reality is like before we’ve studied it. After all, what are data if we have the gift of infallibly knowing how things work a priori?
–     Edwards: “What astonished me was the leap from the data to the conclusions in this study: The existence of positive memories of relationships between adults and children can hardly be doubted anymore, and this enduringly raises the issue of sound criteria for morally acceptable relationships.’ ”
My comment: All of these cases concern positive memories of such relationships. So, eh, where exactly would the leap have to be? I utterly fail to see this. Unless Edwards demonstrates that most of these positive memories are not really positive memories, my conclusion seems very justified to me!
–      Edwards once more: “There is no way to compare positive to negative outcomes. If we want to say science has anything to do with this, we need data showing that when those criteria are met, harm does not happen or is very rare. What does the present data tell us about the occurrence of harm when strict moral criteria are met? Nothing, except that harm is not universal. Now, the chances of avoiding harm when strict moral criteria are met are surely much better than winning the lottery jackpot. They could easily be 50% or higher. How to estimate that value and its implications is an entirely different topic. (To keep this in context, there is no change to my personal view that adult-child sex is wrong and always will be.”
My response: well, this really is a matter of skipping the relevant parts of my book! I explicitly state the following things that are very relevant in this respect:
(1) Some readers may wonder why I do not use statistics to analyze how often the psychological effects of these experiences are negative, neutral or positive. The reason is easy to understand: I’ve limited myself exclusively to cases in which the respondents themselves report that any noteworthy form of (inherent, non-external) harm was entirely absent.
This collection does not intend to explore if some cases of alleged abuse are, as such, harmless, and if so, what percentage falls in this category, but if there are any cases of voluntary relationships without (inherent) negative repercussions.   In other words, it does not start from the overly undifferentiated, conventional concepts of ‘sexual abuse’ or ‘pedophile encounters’, but specifically from relationships and contacts that were consensual from the minor’s perspective.
Therefore, questions such as: “Are boys and older children less likely to be psychologically harmed by ‘abuse’ than girls or preteens?” really do not apply here.
(2) This collection seems to establish clearly that neither the minor’s sex and age nor sexual contact as such are the direct source of any potential problems in the future. Taking the existence of harmful consensual relationships seriously, this implies the possible harm must be caused by other factors.
We already mentioned the phenomenon of what is sometimes called secondary victimization, i.e. a negative social re-interpretation of the relationship in terms of abuse. Also, some seemingly consensual relationships may not be consensual in certain important respects, such as the onset, frequency, or specific types of sexual contact. This may be caused by miscommunication and insufficient knowledge of the minor’s development and personality.
Herein lies a task for parents or other caretakers in that they should check in an open, unprejudiced manner if the minor really wants the relationship and its possible erotic aspects.
Special care should in this respect be given to children with psychiatric or developmental problems, to prevent confusion.  However, in the context of direct consequences of real consensual relationships, the two main problems I can think of are:
(a) misunderstandings about the intentions of the adult partner (e.g. about the duration of the physical aspects of the relationship – the minor would want the sexual bond to last, while the adult would not), and
(b) confusion in the former minor about his or her sexual identity.
The first problem is covered by the fourth ethical criterion.   [TOC adds: This appears to refer to a list of ten “Important ethical criteria” set out on pages 231-233 of the book. Criterion 4 begins, “The adult must be honest about the nature and extent of his or her feelings and affection for the child or teenager.” ]
The second problem is mainly related to specific same-sex ‘pedophile’ relationships in which the younger partner would not possess a gay orientation as an adult and would feel insecure about his or her adult sexuality. The solution to this problem obviously consists of a greater societal acceptance of homosexual feelings, phases, and experiments and is in this respect related to gay emancipation.
Some authors seem to think that a third problem might especially arise when a relationship was exceptionally positive. The former minor might become dissatisfied when it turns out to be difficult to find a new relationship of comparable quality.  Something like this (besides possible other imperfections of his relationship or adult partner) seems to have been claimed by Ted van Lieshout, the Dutch author of Zeer kleine liefde, and Mijn meneer. (Please note that this claim concerns the consequences of well-balanced ‘pedophile’ relationships, and not just of one-sided, overly sexual relationships that might indeed lead to insatiable sexual desires; see the seventh ethical criterion.) [TOC: Again, this is one of the ten ethical criteria set out in the book.]
However, in my view, this cannot at all serve as an argument against the ‘pedophile’ relationship, but only against the normal way many adults apparently relate to each other. To blame this on the ‘pedophile’ relationship is a bit like blaming an outstanding musician for the fact that many or most musicians are (in comparison) mediocre.
At most, the emancipation of positive, consensual relationships ought to go hand in hand with the promotion of good relationships between adults, as part of a more general relational or love ‘revolution’.
Furthermore, any possible dissatisfaction is directly related to the taboo on ‘pedophile’ relationships in that the former minor may find it difficult to be open about what he or she is missing in relationships with other adults.
Nowadays, if this issue is at all discussed, it is mostly regarded as a negative consequence of the ‘pedophile’ relationship itself. Even to the extent that any positive relationship should really be considered abuse, because a ‘pedophile’ would in this view invariably take the risk of making a ‘normal’ love life for the child impossible.
Some also claim that a positive ‘pedophile’ relationship may lead to a general preference for older partners, as if such an alleged preference would be inherently problematic. Similarly, some claim that peers may seem less attractive due to a lack of erotic experience, as if such a ‘defect’ could not be overcome by the initiative of the former minor.
Others even believe that the relationally experienced minor will end up being less attractive than average to potential partners of the same generation. This is odd, because quite a lot of candidates will find an experienced lover more rather than less appealing.
Although the quality of a positive, consensual ‘pedophile’ relationship could be successfully approached as a general standard for affection or sexuality, even such a relationship is still usually regarded as an undesirable, abnormal interference by an adult in the life of a vulnerable child. I have the impression that some scholars welcome any possible complications after the relationship, as long as they can use them as an argument against consensual ‘pedophilia’.
Supporters of a popular myth of the inherent unpredictability of harm typically refuse to differentiate between the consequences of morally sound relationships and the impact of irresponsible contacts, and between secondary victimisation related to social condemnation of a relationship and real, intrinsic abuse.
Many things in society ought to change, but something positive deserves to be protected.
(3) Only from a conservative, closed-minded outlook on life and human values may it seem obvious that some phenomena which are consensual and psychologically harmless should still continue to be regarded as immoral. Starting from any other approach, personal experiences are obviously more important than prejudices and caricatures.
I will only respond to any further comments by Ethan Edwards after he’s read the whole book page by page and really shows he’s digested its contents 🙂

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of

37 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

A new study on how “stigmatization of CSA” influences men with “childhood” illegal sexual experience:

And yesterday’s text on different institutions men with “childhood” illegal sexual experience can address to:

yes, these posts are mostly for you, for your personal information, not for the blog. If you want, I may inform you by mail, not here

a study on “secondary victimization” in court:

This is just to say that Ipce published a fourth and final edition of my book Positive Memories a few days ago. See: https://www.ipce.info/host/rivas/positive_memories.htm

[…] of objections. Those which criticized the book itself were rebutted by the author in a guest blog Author Rivas defends ‘black swan’ sightings. In a companion piece, he now goes into a deeper general analysis – deeper, indeed, than I have […]

Tom, your comment on how change happens, and how our individual actions can be linked to those changes, is worth further comment. However my point is not about how much change I think can be caused by what I do, no my concern is the freedom to do anything at all.
To be reduced to silence, and to realize that you put yourself there, is no fun. I encourage people to stay free, stay in a position where they can be part of any change process for the good as it unfolds. I have too many friends who are either scarred because they went to prison, are in prison now, or are on there way there.
Finally, I do not want to see your website pulled down because of comments that are in themselves small but can be used by someone in a position of power to harm you/others/us.

The original unstoppable youth culture/counter culture begun with 1950s Anglophone/U.S. Rock n Roll. A huge ongoing (almost bloodless) revolution in attitudes against repressive Victorian cant and hypocrisy. ‘Deliver us from days of old’ to quote Rockin ’50s bard Chuck Berry.
Today’s new ‘Rock n Roll’ youth culture/counter culture are Web-empowered naturally sex-keen under age carefree cyber kids, ‘Generation Sex’. Asserting their humanity, with global sexting and DIY/C.P. beyond anyone’s control, and unstated, mocking mantra,”My Mind, My Body, My Choice – Mind Yer Own.”
Just this week yet another UK case where multiple under-age girls were supposedly ‘saved’ from ‘evil paedophiles’ by evangelising cops and (anti)-Social Services. Completely out of touch authorities again naevely shocked to find that those proactive aMused ‘chldren’ do not see themselves as ‘victims’.
That is until now, state-victims being mercilessly ‘groomed’ back to body-guilt supposed ‘normailty’ by zealous, anti-Social Services and brainwashing overpaid psychos – de facto ‘State Child Abusers’.
While, now in the fray is an experienced Brit femme barrister rightly suggesting that to match current realities, the UK AOC be reduced to 13.
Interesting times, except for the likes of Gil and yours truly rightly musing, “What took them 50 years to almost catch up with their own kids?”
[TOC adds: “…now in the fray is an experienced Brit femme barrister rightly suggesting that to match current realities, the UK AOC be reduced to 13.” Indeed so. Congratulations on scooping Heretic TOC, who will be blogging about this news shortly!]

Tom your comment about limits about what can be said, plus the need for an author to remember how some texts can lead to silence (an inability to say anything at all), is very sound advice. I am not referring to fear; I am referring to a set of rules in discourse that keeps changing; and keeps deciding what can be said.
I would see it as folly to find ourselves making statements that may make an author feel good about using some term, or acknowledging a given part of what they see as real, but the end result is all talk ends. Of course there is that other path – revolution, violence, revolt. At this point I am not standing before that path.
Resistance, to be effective, has to work with a balance that helps a reader see what is hidden without being crushed by brute force.
[TOC adds: Yes, Peter, and if, as they say, I had my time again, I might choose a different discursive path, neither revolutionary nor assimilative, but pitched more carefully than the first time around. Would that make a diffference? Not much, but in vast societies no individual’s discursive mode changes much. It takes an Alexander Fleming or a Tim Berners-Lee to really change things, and they do not proceed primarily by “discourse”.]

I can see some further difficulty here, trying to imagine the ‘individual’ in ‘vast societies’ influenced by somebody or other I for one has never even heard of, from right around the other side of the planet somewhere.
I am a very highly intelligent and very well educated man, but I have never heard of this Alexander Flemming or Tim Berners-Lee, or whoever. They have no influence or effect on me in any way whatsoever. They might as well not exist, or never have existed.
The people who ‘really changed things’ in my life are senior Aboriginal elders (I won’t name them because they are now long dead) who took me through their ceremonies over 35 years ago now; made me no longer an ‘individual’ in a ‘vast society’ but a human being in my own right.
The very real trauma suffered as part of that process lies not in the realisation of oneself but in the return to ‘civilisation’, to witness through new eyes how very badly everybody is being treated, and in consequence without realising it themselves perhaps how badly they treat one another.
When addressing such issues of alienation, Otherness and the self, I yet suggest that the ethnographic approach has a great deal to be said for it.
But of course, again, that is what all my writing is about. Edmund in his review of my most recent novel wrote that he had never read anything like it. Perhaps it’s time for more people to start reading an entirely different literature, engage an entirely different discourse, and in doing so begin to realise themself as a human being and move forward in their life finally.
That’s what I am saying all the time, or trying to.

Gil’s laser simply reaches the parts that other drinkers or non-drinkers, can only dream of.
Much of the globe is still vast ruralia. Including Western Australia with vital livestock and vermin control. So, safe firearms (and genitals) drills are important early facts of life.

there are techniques that i would use in a sexual encounter with a young friend,while removing clothes for instance,when you are at the point of no return,i would say to him do you want me to continue or shall i go make us both another cup of tea.that is just to make sure its what he wants in his mind,and he is not just trying to please me.its true about kids and adolescence holding the power,if they dont reply to you its frustrating but theirs nothing you can do.but when they call you,you can always forgive them.
TOC adds: We had better be clear about this: “techniques that i would use” has the verb in the conditional tense i.e. would use if it were legal to do so. But it is not. Most of us here are hardly likely to forget this, but we could all too easily be accused of doing so. So please, everyone, make sure that on this blog you do not condone, or appear to condone, illegality. Discussion here of what might happen in a more relaxed culture is to be regarded as purely theoretical. I say this because the language of this post is right at the borderline of acceptability. The expression “if they dont reply to you its frustrating” suggests more than a theoretical scenario to me. It suggests something of which the writer has direct experience. I am not going to moralise about that (why would I?) but I cannot allow it to pass unremarked. I must emphasise the illegality and that in the present state of the law the consequences upon discovery can be all too serious for both parties. Looked at in purely theoretical terms, though, I think the writer has a good point.

“Make us both another cup of tea” while he’s waiting to make up his mind on a blow job or not? Sorry, this bit I found really very funny.
Any more tea and he’d be up pissing all the time. Tea is quintessentially diuretic; better to offer him a light beer, and have everyone relaxed and enjoying themselves. I mean, how old is he? I’d expect 14-15 from what you write.
This namby-pamby, woosie bloody ‘child until age 18’ is a very large part of the problem the world currently faces, turning out dependent little wimps not men and women capable of dealing with life in all its many shapes and forms.
My considered and well-informed view is that from 12-13 they are young men and women; familiar with the facts of life from age 8, and allowed their introduction to the rest of their life. The sooner they are equipped to face reality, the better; the same reason from age 6 to teach them firearm drill, to drive a car, and take swimming lessons.
Or maybe their self-appointed ‘protectors’ imagine I’m trying to bribe them with such ‘favours’ somehow, like, so I can touch their pee-pee . . . or the front of their pants (with which ‘crime’ I was in fact arrested and charged), which RQD rightly sets aside as thoroughly loopy . . .
Sorry people, it’s not that I don’t enjoy being here, only that most of the ideas being expressed throughout this entire business are so utterly inane, so unrealistic, at best so comical, it takes a real effort not to react.
[TOC adds: “firearm drill”? Gimme a break! Indeed, we could all do with a break from firearms, not just kids.]

Merely trying to keep things in perspective, from this end at any rate.
I’ve written this before, on many occasions, that if you don’t know your ropes out here in this landscape you will die. Here, we say ‘perish’.
I know first hand of 7-8 year-olds, on the other hand, who’d come running into the house yelling, “Mum, Mum, the tanks are leaking, there’s all these drops of water coming out of the sky!”
“It’s not the tanks, boys, it’s rain. Go and have your bit of fun while it lasts.”
So the children, all of them, strip off and go running out to play in it. Hard clay pans with a bit of rain on them form a slippery mud surface, like an ice rink. Best fun ever.
But you’re not allowed back inside, trooping mud into the house. The mother will line them all up along the clothes line and hose them down first.
I simply made them come in through the laundry and straight into the bathroom to shower it off.
Children learn their firearms early, like everything else, because they are never too young to be taught to be careful. The younger the better. I have a mate, about the same age as my younger son, with a little boy not yet two who is already handling his father’s rifles.
Read my books finally.
[TOC adds: You write, “I’ve written this before, on many occasions”, and no doubt you’ll do so many times again, like everything you write. Your repetitiveness is one reason among many why I won’t be reading your books.]

Repetitive? I guess we can all say that of each other, though I don’t bother, myself.
For me personally, far better to be a ‘repetitive’ human being with an integrity and personality of his own, living outside of dull, boring, definitively mindless ‘vast societies’, ‘mass societies’, and spending all his life whinging about it.
It all swings around who has the bigger problem in life, the bigger problem with life, doesn’t it?
Have fun.

Although I must confess to not having read his book, Rivas has done an excellent and exhaustive job of defending his positions against what I see as rather underwhelming attacks. I commend him for his forbearance. However, with all due respect, I believe there are reasons to think that the mentoring and role model based sexually expressed relationship between a boy and an older male is qualitatively different from various other gender/age combinations. Among others, Rind et al. (1998) pointed out that girls are more likely than boys to feel harmed by childhood sexual encounters with older males, and Janus and Best noted boys are more forward in sexual explorations (1981, cited in The Missing Mechanism of Harm” ( HTOC Feb 13, http://www.shfri.net/mech/mech.cgi )
Nevertheless, boy/older male “bonding” would not seem to be a prerequisite for one off sexual experimentation and exploration. If I remember correctly, some time back Hardwick referred to the “transient intimacies of children,” a catchy phrase I purloined for “Mechanism.” And I am also reminded of Paul Wilson’s observation that “Young boys are sexually active from a very early age and will pursue their sexuality whenever they can find an opportunity to do so. . . Priests, doctors, psychiatrists, and others have invested sex with magical powers . . . [but boys] . . . saw sex as being no more than just a game. . . ” (1981, 129-134,cited in The Role of Androphilia in the Psychosexual Development of Boys, http://www.boyandro.info ).
Observations and investigations, however, reinforce the concept of the “attraction a [boy] may experience toward an [older male] whom he . . . sees as a model or teacher” ( Frederiksen, 1993, also cited in “Androphilia”), as well as the curiosity that especially prepubertal/early adolescent boys have for sexual explorations with peer and older males. But whether transient or bonded, in consensual sexually expressed boy/older male relationships, as noted by Rivas and many others, the evidence is that such experiences are preponderantly experienced as positive and helpful.

Surely here(tic) home of ‘Not The Dominant Drivel’, not ‘back’ but ‘black’ swan, Cygnus atratus; native to homeland of Pedominantus Gil?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_swan
[TOC adds: Ooops! Well corrected. Many thanks!]

My apology that my time is taken up with a lot of other work lately (my novel ‘A Somewhat Different Life’ is now on Amazon), yet I return here to see the same old techniques being applied between belligerents hell bent on refusing to agree on anything at all.
Yes, I do understand what ‘Ethan Edwards’ is seeking to adumbrate, but he is not as usual doing it very well.
I support Titas, as a man who clearly knows what he is talking about.
His report is no mere discursive construct to be ‘unpacked’ but a valid field report compiled by an obviously well-trained researcher.
Being exposed directly to empirical reality can for some be shocking, in the current jargon ‘traumatising’; I grant that. In Anthropology and the social sciences it has long been known as culture shock.
It happens when cherished beliefs in which a person has invested a great deal of ego are exposed to facts.
The simple fact here is, and I have myself reported this time and time again, that for children ‘sex’ is merely bonding intimacy. For most adults, most of the time, ‘sex’ is still predominantly bonding intimacy.
What people seek in a relationship is caring and affection, trust, confidence, usually a level of identity merging, an end to ‘me’ and the start of ‘us’.
Whatever intimacy and touching and caressing and fondling and being together we can do to that end is what we do in fact. It is in our human nature to do so.
Age and sex make no difference; for men and women and boys and girls alike bonding is always the first priority, and only after that can fucking legitimately take place; else it is rape.
The problem is, and here I refer back to beliefs and conditioning, in the contemporary Anglophone West the population is conditioned to believe that fucking is always the first and only thing, when it is not.
I think myself that the real problem here is that those nations like to see themselves as ‘manly’, as ‘heroic’, not as caring and gentle, thoughtful, playful, and I should add playfully erotic, smiling and happy.
But pay no attention to me. Go see for yourself, experience for yourself.
After that it makes no difference what people want to believe, because after that empirical reality takes over; their humanity is authenticated.

Yes, agreed, Tom, yet even the childhood and coming-of-age ephemera (which is in the nature of play) lead soon enough to more stable and permanent relationships, especially where fond memories of the liaison most commonly feed more rewarding and substantial thoughts of others in one’s life.
The clear, empirical field evidence, again, points to the very real long-term harm caused not by even ephemeral childhood intimacy but by denial, repudiation, abuse and neglect; the screaming, yelling and beatings; induced feelings of guilt and shame, that the body is ‘dirty’ and touching any part of it ‘sinful’, leading unequivocally to marital failure and chronic inability to form stable relationships later.
That reality of childhood lies at the very heart of our men’s support networks; our anger and frustration management and grief counseling. Some of us run these groups recruited directly out of church congregations, rightly concerned that the men are unable to feel any emotion or respond adequately to human closeness; to be loving and forgiving and resilient.
Perhaps we should be telling those stories too, and lend these otherwise good arguments a long overdue perspective.
Right now the divorce rate in this country anyway, within the first five years of marriage, is climbing well over 50%.
Go figure . . .

Response to Rivas.
“I will only respond to any further comments by Ethan Edwards after he’s read the whole book page by page…”
I had not read the entire book from cover to cover, but I had read the subset of case studies I was interested in along with all the introductory and following material. I trust you aren’t saying someone needs to read all of the case studies to comment on the book?
My response had two aspects. One was indeed a criticism of the book. I saw it arguing that the existence of positively experienced relationships was enough evidence to say that they were fundamentally OK, and all that was left was sorting out the details of what precautions would minimize the risk of harm. Nothing you have said (in the book or in your response) changes my conviction.
I take as a given that the best precautions are far from 100% effective, given all the uncertainty in human evaluations of others’ mental states. As long as they are not 100% effective, saying adult-child sexual activity is OK is impossible without taking account of the percentages of harmful outcomes and their severity.
The other aspect of my reply was to use the valuable data you collected to address questions that were of interest to me. You are interpreting much of what I wrote in this respect as a criticism of your book, which it is not. I was re-analyzing the data, not faulting your original analysis according to your rules and purposes. My “later perceptions of harm without iatrogenic contamination” was an admittedly terse reference to an earlier post where I had said that consensual activity at the time can be followed by harm later without it being society’s attitudes that is the cause of the harm. It was no criticism of your study.
But then we do return to which assumptions are most useful for considering what society should allow or forbid.
“If the erotic parts were really problematic, why on earth would they stand up for their positive memories of the relationship as a whole?” Perhaps for roughly the same reason that people choose to stay in marriages with some ugly aspects to them: the good outweighs the bad. If your purpose is to show that adult-child sexual activity is OK, it makes sense to bundle it with the emotional relationship and evaluate it as a whole. If you want to know whether such activity by itself is OK, you want to factor the emotional relationship out of the equation, which is what I do with my question.
“In none of the cases presented is there any reason to believe that the erotic aspects ‘ruined’ anything.” Well, sure. If it had, then the case wouldn’t be included in your sample. But it’s still of interest given that the person overall thinks the relationship was good to know whether the sex was positive, neutral, or a not-too-terrible negative. In the cases I looked at, this is not clear — which is no fault of your study as you set it up.
“there is nothing intrinsically detrimental about the erotic aspects as such…” If you replaced “intrinsically detrimental” with “detrimental in 100% of cases” I would agree that your data supports the conclusion. “…as long as they are voluntary and match the child’s personality.” Your data cannot support that. Children who gave voluntary consent and where the activity matched their personality who grew up to regret the relationship (perhaps very much) would not show up in your sample. (Nor would kids who did NOT consent, grew up to feel positively about the relationship, but haven’t chosen to speak out. There are many possibilities.)
“I wonder whether Edwards believes children should abstain from any type of erotic contact (and maybe even masturbation)” If you had read the rest of my comments in the discussion, you would have seen that I don’t.
“Only from a conservative, closed-minded outlook on life and human values may it seem obvious that some phenomena which are consensual and psychologically harmless should still continue to be regarded as immoral. Starting from any other approach, personal experiences are obviously more important than prejudices and caricatures.” Evaluated after the fact, some adult-child sexual relationships are surely positive. It is not prudishness or conservatism that makes me say it is always immoral. Morality in an action comes from what a person knew when they made a decision, not how it actually turned out. Uncertainty matters a great deal. As… [snipped: here Ethan repeats a previous post].
I have half a mind to write up the factors that in my view conspire to make adult-child sex always wrong. It’s a sort of “perfect storm” of vulnerabilities, high costs, small benefits, and adult self-interest tending to cloud judgment. But I suspect if I did Tom would decline to post it here. [TOC: Yes, I would decline to post it, on the grounds that children’s need for protection is a daily part of the “dominant discourse” with which we are familiar. It would be merely emotive and would cloud any argument you make. In fairness, I think there are good points in both the posts you have made today. Wish I had time to address them myself.]

What we know from the Temple University data is this: So long as it’s not accompanied by force, CSA is not associated with long term problems, but a certain percentage of girls and boys do react negatively at the time. People see this as justification for current laws. I don’t; let me explain why. [TOC: “Temple University data” = Rind et al. meta-analyses]
Children are at the mercy of adults, and adults cajole children into doing a variety of things that elicit negative responses from them, none of which, with the exception of things like pee-pee touching, result in legal intervention. An adult might coerce a child into riding a rollercoaster, and the child might leave the ride with tears in their eyes, but the adult in question will not be put on a registry. An adult might coerce a child into watching a scary movie, and the child might lose sleep, but the adult will not be arrested. For doing either of the aforementioned things, said adult might be labeled a social nuisance and given the evil eye, but it’s generally understood, at least among good leftists, that the true purpose of the legal system is policing systemic inequalities, not shaming the village idiot. (I should note here, however, that I’m a prison abolitionist.)
More to the point, no adult-child interaction can be disarticulated from power, so if we are to isolate sexual interaction as somehow being different, we have to justify this by proving it’s more likely to be harmful. Keeping in mind the Temple University data, also consider this: Every year, thousands of children die in car crashes, compared to zero who die from body-part touching. So where are the people asking whether children are fully cognizant of the risk associated with automobiles and capable of giving informed consent to ride along? Surely all nonessential adult-child driving – i.e., not to places like school – ought to be made illegal to protect the less powerful party?
No one asks the above questions because it’s understood that risk is inevitable in life, and we just need to learn to live with it – unless sex is involved, then no risk, however small, is ever considered acceptable. Huh, Ethan?
Note to Tom: I’ve been having some problems posting here. In particular, WordPress seems to enjoy screwing up my spacing and paragraph structure (check out my very first post on this blog to see what I mean). If you notice any such bullshit, please be so kind as to fix it. BTW, I just finished Liaisons and thought it was quite good. Have you considered trying to get it reprinted by an edgy publisher like Feral House?) [TOC: I tried Feral House in 2005, when I was updating an earlier draft following MJ’s trial. Like a number of other publishers recommended as “edgy” they didn’t even bother to reply: guess I was over the edge, even for them. But are there any really edgy publishers around these days? It’s a complaint about modern publishing that there is a certain blandness; often the imprints that claim to be radical turn out to be owned by conglomerates who don’t really want too much rocking of the boat.]

If you go to this thread (the comment section on the previous topic)
http://tomocarroll.wordpress.com/2013/05/02/a-positive-sighting-of-118-black-swans/#comments
and search for “democracy” you will see an argument I put forth about parents as the people who make risk/benefit decisions for children, which addresses many of your points.
Using your criteria, the door is open to all kinds of repugnant behavior where a child can consent at the time and we would likely find no long-term harm. I can convince the neighbor’s child to give me his grubby 20-dollar bill in exchange for three really shiny pennies. I can get him to yell racial slurs at the top of his voice (if no one who would be terribly traumatized is in earshot). I can ask if he’s brave, and when he consents to a test, strangle him to the point of panic but no serious medical danger; he consented, and while he maybe didn’t like it at the time, there’s probably no long-term harm.
Or perhaps you want true youth liberation, and I can convince the neighbor’s 10-year-old to run away from home with me if I offer him enough candy.
I do think the penalties for mild adult-child sex are often too severe.

Feral House has balls the size of the Epcot Center to be ignoring you while they publish Sotos’ rape fantasies.

RQD wrote, “Children are at the mercy of adults, and adults cajole children into doing a variety of things that elicit negative responses from them,” and “more to the point, no adult-child interaction can be disarticulated from power.”
Any ‘power’ lies in the children. Any adult having anything at all to do with children is in their power. Tried raising any? I tell you, they dominate all your attention, all your time and energy, and then some. The Chinese rightly call them Little Emperors. You are completely at their mercy.
In the context of this discussion, if you try to get into bed with a child, for example, there is hell to pay. If you try to stop a child from getting into bed with you there is still hell to pay; a negative sum game entirely in their favour.
The ‘lurking paedophile’ is especially vulnerable, much more so some other who has been labelled anyway and under scrutiny. It is always children who will come to check first, wanting to know if the rumours are true and doing anything they like trying to prove they are.
The question is always only ever concerned with how to contain and direct that power of children. That’s the reason they are made to go to school to a certain age, until they have ‘come to their senses’. That is very precisely my academic focus, and has been for 30 years.
The reason for any coercion is to counter the trouble they can cause.
Read Diane Purkiss ‘Troublesome Things’, and Steve Bruhm and Nat Hurley, ‘Curiouser: On the queerness of children’. There is no English equivalent, beyond ‘imp’ perhaps; the closest term I can find is the Spanish ‘duende’. Look it up.
My argument is that when dealing with children the proper role to be played is ‘in loco parentis’. The danger we all face is that the bureaucratic late-modern state has taken over, wanting to own and condition children to their own future use as ‘good citizens’, with that role being changed subtly before our eyes to ‘in loco dux’.
This paedophile hysteria has been beaten up to ‘fatten’ the population, which in bureaucratese means to condition people to official thinking on some issue before they impose their intended ‘solution’ to the ‘problem’. Scrutinise the pattern for yourself.
And yes, of course, if you really want to keep children safe make them fasten their seat-belt, ban junk food, turn off the TV, and don’t let them swim alone. That’s fairly standard.

This is what I imagine comes to mind when Ethan conjures up the typical pedophillic encounter: a guy with a face like Gary Oldman’s in the Seventh Seal forcing a crying child’s mouth open with his long, brittle, Nosferatu-esque fingers so he can stick his Gooey Duck tongue down their throat, all set to the soundtrack of the Swans album Cop.
For all I know, he could be right………. but probably not.

This is very, very interesting; I’ve learned something entirely new today.
An odd few of the academics around WA, usually at the 2nd and 3rd rate universities, use this term ‘reputable’ when speaking of publishers without ever being clear about what they are saying.
Now here I discover finally, after all these years, that ‘reputable’ in publishing means ‘capable of generating mass media coverage’. I always thought reputable meant honest, ethical, upstanding.
I stand astonished. My view and my life experience is that the anglophone mass media is decidedly disreputable, arrogant, sensationally self-righteous, and for the most part thoroughly grubby.
It is the mass media which beat up this paedophile hysteria in the first place; anything they can’t confirm empirically by proper investigation they invent, to generate whatever panic they feel like, and continue to get away with it.
The mass media especially have been subject to the most strident criticism and probing enquiry, apparently to no effect.
One might take the view that those with an interest in the telling the truth, to report reliably, to concern themselves with good writing and high editing, proofreading and production standards will rather tend to collaborate, and stay away from them.
Or am I still missing something here?

Its worth noting that, by Ethan’s own logic, if a study came out tomorrow showing that 30% of children react negatively to their first taste of Spam but show no long term trauma, it would be solid ground for moral condemnation of adults who feed children the canned meat.
Also, the comparison of tricking a child out of their money with body part touching is loopy. I appreciate the effort, though.
Now if you’ll excuse me, I have memories to recover of the multiple molestations
I suffered at the hands of Robert Goulet and Don Ho. Cha-Ching! *
*joke

Thanks Tom for making available a space to gain sharper understandings of an author’s intentions.
I recall a discussion I had with an academic who was my supervisor for a post-graduate research paper. The man has a good mind and I think he understood me, however the academic views we hold were and remain different. I think I frustrated him somewhat. That tension in our relationship actually lead to an exchange I now see as very positive – it brought clarity. I was accused of being “a 1980s intellectual!”
What that accusation offers is a very important observation, and in my mind it links up with this new book by Rivas. As he states in this blog-piece, these accounts are self-reports of positive relationships, offered by the younger partner, of past sexually open (sometimes expressed) friendships. In the 1980s there was a value put on these accounts, what I often refer to as ‘voices’, – people in ‘socially excluded’ positions. Many argued these accounts can contribute to social change. A very well known example of this has been the gay liberation movement.
There was social support for an emancipatory process, and the tool of using personal accounts was seen as ‘valid’ for some, but now the permission to use such accounts has been withdrawn. My academic supervisor exressed just this concern, … “Peter, can you imagine what your outlook could lead to?” and I recall the judgement he made, looking back on the 1980s, “… and look where it got us.”
I do not see my academic friend as against what the gay lobby gained socially and politically; I am saying the valuing of personal accounts for those in socially marginal and ‘criminal’ relationships is not allowed to be applied to a discussion of pedophilia.
Of course my supervisor and I agreed to disagree. Please, allow me to be balanced in my account, this guy is not a ‘bad’ man, he has a good mind; his views reflect a very significant shift inside many academic subcultures that has unfolded from 1980 up until what is happening now.
I think this new book by Rivas is very positive because, if I read his intellectual perspective correctly, he remains open to the ongoing emancipation of all human relationships. I am with him! I am convinced the resistance to shutting down these marginal voices is important.

Peter, I know because I was there, but the real fun was in the 1950s, 60s and 70s. By the 1980s the backlash had started.
It was not the post-war sexual liberation but the conservative backlash and the post-Vietnam ‘war on drugs’ that “got us” where ‘we’ now dare not look.
Three of the great film makers documenting the period are Louis Malle (Murmur of the Heart 1971, Black Moon 1975, Pretty Baby 1978), David Hamilton (Bilitis 1977, Laura: Shadows of a Summer 1979, Tender Cousins 1980, A Summer in St. Tropez 1983, First Desires 1984) and by no means least the maestro, Bernardo Bertolucci.
Bertolucci’s clear statement and rejoinder lies not in his highly explicit boy’s coming-of-age ‘Novecento’, nor even in the more adult ‘Last Tango in Paris’, but in his 1970 ‘Il conformista’.
Maybe tell your ‘supervisor’ to do some homework finally, or failing that do it for him. I am thoroughly weary of these dullards and their trepidity colonising our very intellectual life.
Or better, take up the challenge and start writing again, bringing it all back, which is my reply . . .

My apology, of course, the onset of HIV/AIDS hasten a great deal of imposed control especially focused on sex. How can I possibly have forgotten?

37
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x
Scroll to Top