It's quite difficult to begin figuring out the truth from the bullshit in this article, not least because, as with nearly all the mainstream press, the Telegraph's apparent editorial policy is to keep a firm clamp on the nature of the so-called "pedophilia" scandals. Tough to keep that one under wraps when there are publicly available reports that demonstrate that over 90 per cent of the victims were adolescent boys and young men between 14 and 17. That's not pedophilia, kids. There's another name for that.
But one does wonder, and wonder, how long the bishops can keep up this incredible pretense:
The crimes of the past, he says, will not be repeated. "It is a difficult and painful issue. It is vital that we ask advice from people from outside the Church, and that they take the lead. The sexual abuse of children is the most hidden crime, and it's taken a long time to be understood.
"Let me give an example: there was a priest in Birmingham who in the late Sixties or early Seventies was reported to the police by the diocese and brought before the court. He was given a £600 fine and told not to offend again. It wasn't just the Church that didn't understand the nature of the offender and the gravity of the offence. Remember, there was a movement in the Seventies to make sexual intercourse with minors of 14 legal. So there was a whole different culture.
I'll just give you that last one again, shall I?
"...there was a movement in the Seventies to make sexual intercourse with minors of 14 legal. So there was a whole different culture.
Yeah, you read that right. That's really what he said.
Whatever you were smoking in seminary in the 70s, Your Grace, must have been pretty powerful.
That culture is still in full swing, (so to speak). Lobbying and producing BBC documentaries on the pope.
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