Droopy wrote:After this latest nightmarish exercise in leftist moral hysterics that makes every adult male, every father, every Bishop, every scoutmaster, and every Church leader a potential child abuser, and brands every adult male in the nation as a potential risk the moment they are out of sight or alone with a child, I think I'll begin to take my own advice much more seriously.
The final Oprahfication of the world has begun as TD attempts to resurrect the long discredited child sexual abuse hysteria of the mid-eighties to mid-nineties in the interest of stigmatizing male LDS church leaders and driving a wedge of distrust and suspicion between male adult role models in Priesthood leadership positions - all of them, simply because of the the fact that they are male adults - and the children of members.
Droopy, you are truly a legend in your own mind.

Where has ANYONE here said that EVERY adult male, bishop, etc. is guilty of child abuse? No one has said that. You are conveniently making sweeping generalizations to make your point. Frankly, your claiming that all posters here are clamoring together as part of some leftist conspiracy is as tiresome as Scratch's previous feuds with DCP.

What I do find interesting, though, is that the Church is VERY careful about "appearance of evil" when it comes to the following situations:
Missionaries are not allowed to be fed by a single LDS woman, or in a household where the husband is not present.
Members of the opposite sex not married to each other are not to be alone in the same room or alone in a car together.
Recently, the Church HAS actually changed its policy regarding primary workers. Now, primary classes must be team-taught, preferably in a husband-wife situation, and classroom doors are to remain open.
The inconsistency between these actions and a bishop asking youth questions of a sexual nature behind closed doors should be apparent.