WorldNetDaily shares with us the apparent explanation of its creepy obsession with (female) teacher-(male) student sex. It comes in the form of a March 22 article by David Kupelian that appeared in the teacher-student sex issue of WND’s Whistleblower magazine. It’s alarmist in the WND kind of way, but it’s not a bad read until it starts embracing dubious statistics and gets overly moralistic.
Kupelian states, “Recently, there has been a seeming explosion in a special type of teacher sexual abuse – female teachers having sex with underage teenage boys, who as a rule are willing participants in the sex,” without disclosing that WND has played a role in making it seem like an explosion. As we’ve previously noted, WND has repeatedly printed a laundry list of alleged incidents it found on a gossip site without telling its readers that the alleged incidents on the list date back as much as 15 years. But Kupelian offers no solid evidence that there actually is an “explosion” in female teacher-male student sex.
Kupelian also touted an alarmist claim by researcher Charol Shakeshaft that “the physical sexual abuse of students in schools is likely more than 100 times the abuse by priests,” despite the fact that this number is extrapolated from another survey and has no direct research to support it. But it’s not until he recounts that study in detail before Kupelian noted that one criticism of Shakeshaft’s work called it “a misuse of the data” and that Shakeshaft herself “acknowledged many factors could alter the analysis.”
In making his moral case against teacher-student sex, Kupelian plays it black-and-white in portraying anyone who doesn’t follow his point of view as supporters of a “secular, de facto atheistic worldview” who believe “there is just no logical reason adults shouldn’t be able to have sex with children or whatever else they please.” And what is Kupelian’s point of view? It’s roughly summed up by this statement: “The sexual revolution glorified the destruction of Judeo-Christian civilization and the morality at its core.” He also claims that “artificial birth control, abortion, [and] alternative sexual acts” is “an absurd end-run around God and His obvious restrictions on sex.”
Apaprently, in Kupelian’s world, there’s no room for moderation; he seems unable to grasp that a person can oppose adults having sex with minors and not be a fundamentalist Christian like himself. After all, there is a nonreligous basis for laws against sex with minors, the idea that a minor, because he or she is a minor, cannot consent to sex. Kupelian might want to check into that sometime.