Fraud of 10 percent
How Bad Science Helped
Launch the ‘Gay’ Revolution
By Robert H.
Knight
September 18, 2002
Franklin Kameny of
Washington, D.C., is often described as the "dean" of homosexual
activists. Mr. Kameny claims to have coined the term "gay is good,"
and was instrumental in having D.C.’s sodomy law repealed.
Recently, he made an
amazing statement regarding one of the totems of the sexual revolution, the
claim that one in every 10 people is "gay." Here’s his quote, from a
letter in the September 6, 2002, Washington Blade:
"I personally created
the ‘10 percent figure’ in late 1960 for use in my position to the U.S.
Supreme Court, in my own case. The figure was based upon a reasonable and
plausible, intentionally conservative and understated interpretation of the
Kinsey data, which were the only statistics then available.
"The 10 percent
figure subsequently achieved a life of its own, and was universally accepted and
used. Whatever its initial accuracy, I am convinced it is much closer to reality
than the ridiculously low figure of 1 or 2 percent, derived from highly
questionable and unreliable research."
Mr. Kameny is right about
the way the 10 percent myth was used. Journalists, lawyers and educators began
citing it without a hint of skepticism. The result was the creation in the
public mind of a false "minority" group that began to co-opt the moral
capital of the civil rights movement. It didn’t matter that it was all based
on bad science.
Alfred C. Kinsey’s
research, which helped launch the sexual revolution, was utterly exposed in Dr.
Judith Reisman’s and Edward Eichel’s 1990 book Kinsey, Sex and Fraud: The
Indoctrination of a People (Huntington House-Lochinvar). The British medical
journal Lancet said the authors "demolish the two [Kinsey]
reports."
Kinsey deliberately
weighted his samples with homosexuals, convicted criminals and other unorthodox
subjects. The authors also expose how Kinsey used children in sex studies to
concoct a theory of "child sexuality" that is the guiding force today
behind sex education curricula promoted by Planned Parenthood and the Sexuality
Information and Education Council of the United States (SIECUS).
Studies published by the
University of Chicago, Family Planning Perspectives, the British
Medical Journal, the National Health Interview Survey of the U.S. Centers
for Disease Control, and many others indicate an incidence of homosexuality of 1
to 2 percent in Western countries.
Although the National
Research Council, an arm of the National Academy of Science, initially supported
the Kinsey research in the late 1940s and early 1950s, a reassessment emerged in
1989. Here is an excerpt from AIDS: Sexual Behavior and Intravenous Drug Use,
edited by Charles F. Turner, Heather G. Miller, and Lincoln E. Moses (National
Academy Press, National Research Council, 1989), p. 82:
"It has long been
recognized that one of the greatest faults of the Kinsey research was the way in
which the cases were selected; the sample is not representative of the entire
U.S. population or of any definable group in the population. This fault limits
the comparability and appropriateness of the Kinsey data as a basis for
calculating the prevalence of any form of sexual conduct."
The book also notes that
Kinsey’s agenda for sexual liberation tainted his research: "The very
claim for the legitimacy of science in the area of sexuality was an attempt to
change the ‘rules of the game’ that defined what conduct was normal and what
was abnormal.
"Kinsey went even
further, however. He attempted to counter the traditional religious view that
sexual virtue was entirely composed of heterosexual activity in the pursuit of
reproduction inside the bonds of marriage, as well as the orthodox
psychoanalytic revision of this traditional view, which admitted the existence
of other forms of sexual expression but treated them as either perversions from
or preludes to the sexual ‘normality’ found in mature heterosexual committed
relationships." (p. 86)
In 1997, in his book Alfred
C. Kinsey: A Public/Private Life, biographer James H. Jones revealed
Kinsey’s prodigious appetite for sadistic varieties of homosexual sex,
voyeurism and other perversions, and how they inspired his social agenda:
"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.
… 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. …Kinsey was a crypto-reformer who spent his every waking hour
attempting to change the sexual mores and sex offender laws of the United
States." (p. xii)
Based on his own
imagination, Kinsey created his famous 7-point Kinsey scale of sexuality, with
heterosexuality at 0 and homosexuality at 6 (bisexuality being a
"balanced" score at 3.5). He drew a line from 0 upward and rightward
to make a perfect diagonal, as if human sexuality could be precisely and
geometrically charted. This entirely fabricated "scientific" scale has
been used in sex education books, court cases and legislative hearings to
contend that homosexuality and bisexuality are normative. Kinsey concocted the
scale even before he had done any substantial interviewing of data subjects,
according to his co-author, Wardell Pomeroy.
Dr. Reisman, who has
pursued the Kinsey myth for three decades, authored another book in 1998,
showing how Kinsey’s research became the foundation for America’s sexual
revolution. In Kinsey: Crimes and Consequences (First Principles Press,
1998, 2000), she also chronicled how Kinsey and his disciples systematically
weakened America’s sex offender laws by inserting the fraudulent Kinsey data
into cases, law review articles, and presentations before state legislatures.
Kinsey’s legacy in the
form of a cultural blitzkrieg against sexual restraint – and therefore against
marriage and family — has been enormous. He just might be the most influential
fraud in American social history.
As far as "gay"
activist Franklin Kameny’s boast of using the Kinsey research as his lodestar,
it’s a welcome and revealing confession, although it is doubtful that Mr.
Kameny would see it that way.
Robert Knight is the
director of the Culture and Family Institute, an affiliate of Concerned
Women for America. Knight wrote and directed The Children of
Table 34, a Family Research Council video documentary about Alfred Kinsey.
Culture and Family
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