harmony wrote:Pahoran wrote:She is the sole source of the accusation -- an accusation which is astonishing and unbelievable on its face. An accusation based upon so-called "recovered memories." An accusation that has all the hallmarks of the "ritual abuse" hysteria of the 1980's.
My sister was the sole source also, when she told my mother. Yet it happened. Just because no one believes doesn't mean it didn't happen.
Look, I don't want to pry into your sister's situation. In fact I know perfectly well that it
does happen.
But presuming that your sister's case was a "normal" one, when we look at the details of what Martha alleged, can't you see how
abnormal it is?
Martha's
sole basis for making the accusation was a set of "recovered memories." In other words, she had no inkling that her father had ever done such a thing until she convinced herself of it, with
someone else's help. Do you think such "memories" are reliable? Do you realise that, after the hysteria of the 1980's and 1990's, practically nobody relies upon them any more?
Yes, child abuse happens.
So do bogus accusations.harmony wrote:So yes, the believability of the accusation is inextricably connected to the credibility of the accuser.
So, no, it's not. What you're saying is that
no child abuse happens unless it can be proven beyond a shadow of a doubt.
I'm saying nothing of the sort. I'm saying that people who tell incredible stories, and some of those stories can be shown to be false, have no right to expect others to believe the stories that can't be proven -- or even supported -- one way or another.
harmony wrote:And I know that is not so. Child abuse happens, whether it is reported or not, whether there is a conviction or not, whether the abuser feels remorse or not. It happens. Just because you don't believe it happens, it happens, even in the best homes. Just because you have your head buried as deeply as my mother did doesn't mean diddly.
You have no evidence that my head is "buried." I have examined Martha's allegations. I do not find them credible. She claimed that her father molested her in the same tiny bedroom where her sister was asleep on the other bunk.
How?She claimed that her father wore an Egyptian sacerdotal mask while abusing her.
What?She claimed that this experience so traumatised her that anything Egyptian made her sick; yet she illustrated her father's remarkable
Egyptian Endowment. I have a copy; the illustrations are beautiful. Martha is very talented. But how could she have stood it, if what she claims was true?
harmony wrote:I'm not saying it happened in Martha's case.
Then why are you even posting? That is the
only question under discussion.
harmony wrote:I'm saying you can't disregard the allegation just because he's dead or she's lied in the past.
And I'm not saying we can.
I'm saying that, after looking at her allegations, how
clearly implausible they are, their connection with the whole "recovered memory" fiasco, and the many other clearly false statements she makes, there is simply
no good reason to believe her.
Let me tell you a story: one evening I got belted by a stranger when I tried to stop him belting his wife on a public street. (More fool me.) Now, if someone tells me that two carloads of people dressed as ancient Egyptians accosted them on another street in my town and beat them up, should I find that story credible because it resonates with my experience? If I was operating purely on emotion, I might; but if I stopped and listened to the details of what is being alleged, I might wonder. And when, in the course of telling the
selfsame story the person gets a number of easily verifiable details about my town wrong -- then haven't I the right to wonder the more?
harmony wrote:Now Harmony, I think I recall you saying somewhere that you had been abused. If that is the case, then I am very sorry; but you must also realise that you may, because of that experience, be disposed to too readily believe such accusations.
And I think you are too ready to dismiss such accusations, simply because of who the target is.
No, I dismiss them because they are (1) incredible on their face, (2) unsupported wherever they could be supported, (3) based upon junk science, and (4) told in connection with other tales that are clearly false.
harmony wrote:You cannot believe that someone as highly placed in the church could do that. You forget Apostle Lee, though. No one thought he would do that either... but he did.
He wasn't an apostle, and he was excommunicated. There was
actual evidence in that case. There isn't in this.
harmony wrote:The burden of proof still lies with the accuser. The presumption of innocence still applies to people accused of child abuse -- yes, even Mormons (ugh!)
There is no 'burden of proof' on anyone. The man is dead. Proof is immaterial.
So it's okay to sully his memory with baseless accusations?
I see.
Regards,
Pahoran