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Bob
Barr
Antiheroes
From Rome, Ga., to Iraq, we've lost our bedrock
values
from Creative
loafing - May 13, 2004
Newspaper
stories so glowing that politicians would kill to receive similar publicity.
Attention on "The Oprah Winfrey Show." Scholarships to several
colleges. A made-for-TV movie already being openly discussed.
A generation
ago, such accolades likely would be rewards for a young man with an
impeccable record of achievement. Perhaps an Eagle Scout. Certainly
a young man with an unblemished record in his community.
In today's
world, where bad is good and up is down, this sort of attention and
hero status is lavished on one Marcus Dixon of Rome, Ga. And just what
is this young man's claim to fame? What accounts for his hero status
among many in America, including demigoddess Winfrey? The one fact
that has propelled this 18-year-old, 6-foot-6 football player to national
stardom is that he had sex with a 15-year-old girl -- that, and the
fact he was convicted of statutory rape for his pleasure romp.
Granted,
some of the massive attention lavished on the strapping young Dixon
was because his initial conviction netted him a mandatory and lengthy
prison sentence under Georgia law for child molestation. Then, his
conviction on the more serious charge was overturned by the state Supreme
Court.
This resulted
in his release back to his family in Rome, just in time to sort through
the flood of offers coming his way. His legal guardians, in interviews,
cannot say enough about this wonderful young Adonis, never apparently
breathing a word of reproach for his being singularly unable to control
his obviously excessive libido (the encounter with the 15-year-old
apparently was not the first, or even the second, reported incident
of what used to be called "inappropriate" sexual behavior).
Cutting
through all the chaff regarding the propriety of the more serious charge
-- on which I take no position, not being sufficiently familiar with
the facts of the case -- what does it say about our society that hero
status now is bestowed on an 18-year-old for nothing more than having
sex with a 15-year-old? It tells us, perhaps, the same thing as when
an admitted liar and plagiarist, Jayson Blair, recently received a "high
six-figure" advance for writing a book detailing his deception
while working as a writer for the once-highly esteemed New York Times.
It tells
us that we as a society no longer have bedrock values. No longer do
we appear willing to prioritize our values so that base behavior is
deemed unacceptable, and qualities that once gave rise to exceptional,
even heroic, achievement are held up for emulation and praise. Not
only is the dull now sufficient for scholastic advancement and excelling
in athletics the basis for immunity from accountability, but sex with
minors is heralded as an appropriate basis on which to place the athlete
on a pedestal.
It is ironic
that the public deification of Dixon took place the same week that
Americans (and the rest of the world) were treated to photos of American
MPs in Iraq engaging in disgraceful and unlawful treatment of prisoners
under their care. The images -- now burned into America's collective,
if short, memory -- were of male and female MPs forcing prisoners to
engage in explicit and lewd sexual behavior. The American service personnel,
male and female, obviously had a grand old time doing this. Many, from
the president on down, expressed shock and surprise at the behavior
the photos revealed.
I ask, why?
Why does this surprise them? What in this behavior is surprising, other
than perhaps that the MPs were so immensely stupid that they took digital
photographs of their depravity? Aside from that obvious conclusion,
however, the simple fact is that these MPs come from the same cultural
milieu in which Dixon felt free to engage his every sexual whim with
whomever he chose, the same cultural milieu that causes thousands of
his fellow Americans to proclaim him a hero for his actions.
It's sad,
but I find none of this particularly surprising. Terribly upsetting,
but not surprising. And I won't be surprised, either, if the same book,
movie and TV types who sought Blair and Dixon, find their way to the
disgraced MPs.
Former
U.S. Rep. Bob Barr is a frequent commentator on political and social issues
and the chairman of the American Conservative Union Foundation's 21st Century
Center for Privacy and Freedom |