By MIA FREEDMAN
This morning I read some media headlines and hundreds of tweets that said a public figure had compared paedophiles to gay people. If true, it’s the kind of story we would jump to cover on Mamamia. We have a proud and fierce reputation for advocating for marriage equality and we are champions of the LGBTQI community. It’s something I’ve fought passionately for my whole life.
So on any other day we would have ripped into this issue and joined the outrage.
Except today, as I write this, the person being accused of such heinous things is me. And I’m mortified.
Not because I have ever or would ever compare homosexuality to paedophilia – that idea is repugnant to anyone with an IQ above room temperature – but because I accidentally gave ammunition to haters and bigots and caused the words homosexuality and paedophilia to appear in the same sentence in headlines and a Twitter pile-on.
Like this:
Let me be absolutely clear: I unreservedly apologise to anyone I have upset, confused or outraged and to anyone who thought I would ever ever ever stand with bigotry or homophobia.
I know the facts: there is no link between homosexuality and offending against children. And after the hundreds of hours of live TV and radio I have done, I should have known better; it’s dangerous to try and make a complex point about such an important topic in 10 seconds.
Top Comments
No, I don't believe you should be neccessarily apologising. I understand more of what you are getting at with your original point than your explained one. Society doesn't believe gay people choose to be gay and straight people choose to be straight. That is is true. There is no denying it. So the only real mistake by Ms Freedman here is including that in her discussion. It's a true fact but it's not neccessarily relevant to the original topic.
The real problem with this poorly chosen comparison is the inherent suggestion that paedophiles are the subjects of an indiscriminate sexual orientation. Sure, this is presented in the context of developing better social ‘coping mechanisms’, but such a suggestion also inadvertently posits paedophiles as ‘victims' of a socially unacceptable sexual preference which, to a degree, also justifies their behaviour… This is very dangerous territory, Ms Freedman