Victim: Father was Paid by Kinsey to Rape her and Report to him on the Attacks
http://www.wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=213213
SEXUAL SABOTAGE
Stunner! Kinsey paid my father to rape me
Subject of 1940s 'research' goes public with horrific details of abuse by dad
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Posted: October 17, 2010
7:42 pm Eastern
By Brian Fitzpatrick
© 2010 WorldNetDaily
Editor's
note: The following report is part of WND's ongoing, multipart
investigation into alleged crimes committed by sex-research pioneer
Alfred Kinsey and his Kinsey Institute.
WASHINGTON – A victim of
sexologist Alfred Kinsey's "research" during the 1940s is coming
forward with the stunning claim that her father was paid by Kinsey,
universally regarded as the "father of the sexual revolution," to rape
her and then report to him on the attacks.
Nearly 70 years after
being molested repeatedly by her own father, "Esther White" (a
pseudonym) is speaking out in hope of prompting Congress to investigate
the controversial research. White said she would be willing to testify
in person on Capitol Hill if an investigation results in opening the
Kinsey Institute files to public scrutiny.
"He was giving me
orgasms and timing it with a stopwatch," White told WND. "I didn't like
it, I went into convulsions, but he didn't care. He said all little
girls do this with their daddies, they just don't talk about it."
White was 7 when her father began abusing her.
"There's
no question that Kinsey broke a number of laws and conspired to break a
number of laws to conduct his faux research," said Matt Barber, a law
professor and associate dean at the Liberty University School of Law.
Kinsey's
1948 and 1953 books on human sexual behavior contain tables of
information about sexual responses in children as young as 2 months old.
Several tables record how long the children needed to be stimulated to
achieve "orgasm," and others record how many orgasms the children
achieved in given periods of time.
Esther White's data would have been used for this table in Kinsey's first book, though the book focused on male sexual behavior
"Kinsey
was not a legitimate scholar. He was not objective," said Janice
Crouse, Ph.D., the head of the Beverly LaHaye Institute, the think tank
at Concerned Women for America. "Instead, he found people who could
produce the results he wanted. ... He was very interested in changing
the sexual mores. ... He believed any sex act between consenting adults
and even children was acceptable, even healthy." Kinsey and his
researchers are widely credited with having redefined sexual morality in
America.
"Esther White"
White said Kinsey "enticed"
her grandfather, who became a personal friend of Kinsey while studying
at Indiana University, to participate in the research, and that her
grandfather in turn recruited two of his sons to molest their own
daughters for Kinsey. She described Kinsey as "insane," "evil" and
"Satan incarnate."
White says her father and grandfather were
paid by Kinsey and that Kinsey was aware of what her father was doing to
her. She recalls that her father filmed some of those sessions and sent
the home movies to Kinsey. She also witnessed Kinsey handing her
grandfather a check.
"In 1943, when I was nine," White told WND,
"I found a sheet of paper that had boxes on it and my father was
checking off things he was doing to me. He grabbed it away from me and
put it in a brown envelope.
"It was a form with little boxes
down the left side of the page, and a list of statements describing
sexual acts. He was supposed to check things off, whether he did that or
not.
"One of the statements included the words 'timed orgasm.' I
didn't know what 'orgasm' meant, so I asked him and he told me. That's
why he was using a stopwatch.
Esther White's data would also have appeared in this table from Kinsey's 1953 book on female sexual behavior
"My
dad took movies of what he did to me. They were home movies, the camera
was one of those wind-up types. ... I think he sent them to Kinsey.
"Esther White" at age 9
"Kinsey
did interview me, he asked me some questions, things like whether I
loved my family. My father had told me what I needed to say to him, we
wanted to make a good impression. I found out later we had to make a
good impression because we were getting paid for this.
"When
Kinsey was about to leave, my grandfather said, 'What about the check?'
Kinsey said, 'I almost forgot,' and I saw him give my grandfather a
check. Kinsey said 'I made it out to both of you because I didn't know
which one was going to get the money.' That was in the winter of 1943."
Researcher
Judith Reisman, Ph.D., began raising questions about how Kinsey
collected the data in 1981. Since then, the Indiana University-based
Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender, and Reproduction has
continually denied that Kinsey recruited child molesters to conduct
ongoing research.
"Kinsey was not a pedophile in any shape or
form. He did not carry out experiments on children; he did not hire,
collaborate, or persuade people to carry out experiments on children,"
according to an early 1990s document currently cited on the Kinsey
website in a section titled, "Allegations about Childhood data in the
1948 book, 'Sexual Behavior in the Human Male.'"
"Kinsey never
carried out experiments on the sexual responses of children or employed
or trained anyone else to do so for him," wrote former Institute
director John Bancroft, M.D., in a 2005 article, "Alfred Kinsey's work
50 years on," currently available on the Kinsey Institute website.
At
least one former Kinsey Institute director, however, departed from this
line, according to Barber. Kinsey's successor, Paul Gebhard, Ph.D.,
assumed the leadership of the Kinsey Institute when Kinsey died, and ran
the organization from 1956 to 1982.
"Kinsey's colleague,
Gebhard, acknowledged they were coordinating with nursery school
directors and operators and parents and grandparents of these kids to
obtain the so-called research," Barber told WND. "He admitted they
knowingly were collaborating with these people as they molested the
children, and were making use of the fruit of the poisonous tree in
Kinsey's research.
"There's pre-Kinsey and post-Kinsey," Barber
continued. "Unfortunately we live in a post-Kinsey world and have
suffered as a culture tremendously for it ... the U.S. Supreme Court has
cited Kinsey's research in Romer, Lawrence v Texas, and other decisions
having to do with sexual orientation. Those decisions were made based
on fraudulent information from Alfred Kinsey and his brood of perverts."
Kinsey's research findings have been used to change laws regarding sex
around the world.
Crouse told WND people today "think he's the research guru who knew everything about sex.
"Only a handful of academics understand how fraudulent he was," she said.
"He
had very limited sampling, he did not follow the correct academic
procedure for having legitimate samples. He used an extraordinary amount
of personal stories about sexual behavior. He was a pseudo-scientist, a
fraud, though his work is still cited in academia.
"People
don't realize the people in Kinsey's studies were not normal, average
Americans. They were prostitutes, criminals, the only folks willing to
be involved in such slimy research. It was not legitimate research at
all. It has been one of the biggest hoaxes perpetrated against the
American people in our history."
White compared Kinsey's
research to the U.S. government's 1940s syphilis research in Guatemala,
which elicited a flood of Obama administration apologies on Oct. 1.
"I
think the experimentation done with government funding is an ongoing
issue," White told WND. "That's what was going on with Kinsey.
Scientific experimentation. They didn't care about people, they cared
about statistics. I was a statistic just like those people in Guatemala
were."
Reisman pointed out that the U.S. government apologized for what it did in Guatemala, "but that was all over long ago."
"This
was all done in the United States and still is being used to gut our
laws and destroy our morality," she said. "He is still the father of the
sexual revolution and all that flows from it. And poor 'Esther' just
stands there and says 'What about me, what about all the people this was
done to?'"
Robert Knight, director of a 1995 documentary, "The
Children of Table 34," which addressed the Kinsey controversy, said
Esther's testimony "scratches the surface of one of the 20th Century's
greatest and most enduring scandals."
"Millions have been hurt
by the false view of sexuality hatched in criminal fashion by Alfred
Kinsey and his associates," Knight said. "If Esther's story and that of
other victims was widely known, the Kinsey castle would come crashing
down, bringing with it a sex education establishment dedicated to raping
children's innocence, plying them with condoms and pushing them toward
either the abortion clinic or a gay bar."
Reisman noted that the
lead expert witness in the lawsuit challenging California's
pro-traditional marriage Proposition 8 initiative cited Kinsey.
"It's
like quoting Mengele for medical expertise, and everybody just accepts
it," Reisman said. "The Kinsey Institute just published a new study
about children's orgasms, and everybody just accepts it. I feel like I'm
in 'Alice in Wonderland.'"
Knight said the Kinsey researchers "were aiding and abetting child molestation."
"Their
hands are dirty and they need to be exposed," said Knight, currently a
senior writer for Coral Ridge Ministries. "It's so bad, they can't admit
to it. It's crushing. So the charade goes on."
Reisman told WND
the Kinsey Institute is so afraid of being sued by the victims of the
Kinsey research, it has repeatedly threatened to destroy its files if
brought to court.
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