Thursday, November 10, 2011

The Glass House Stone

I'm trying not to read anything or see anything or listen to anything with regard to the Penn State child molestation case. I figure any set of circumstances where the press is using "rape" as the least offensive semi-euphemism to avoid explaining in detail what is known to have happened, my psyche knows enough to pre-emptively recoil.

Suffice it to say I haven't stopped to read any of the graphic bits of viscera oozing out of the now notorious grand jury indictment. By inference (and I have a computer, a television and a radio, so it's a pretty heavy and ubiquitous drumbeat of inference inference inference inference...), I've puzzled together that at one point, one grown man stumbled onto the scene of another grown man assaulting a child in just about the most hideous manner possible and... left the scene quietly and went to tell his dad?

I'm a thinker. This isn't the same as being gifted or especially intelligent. I'd like to argue that I'm sometimes those things as well, but the blunt-force trauma of my physical beauty makes it too hard to convince people I'm something more than a buffet for the senses. Underneath this thicket of lustrous, dense, professionally tousled hair, a wild mind roams free. Like a panther, but made of synapses and propelled through the depths of trackless creativity and existential despair on the back of a snorting, untamed hippocampus. Some people should be carved in marble or immortalized in oil on canvas. I should be airbrushed onto the side of a panel van.

As a thinker, I often find myself involuntarily picking a fight with my initial impressions and/or conventional wisdom. So my first thoughts here after hearing about the non-intervening witness are of the conventional sort: staggering incredulity followed by rage and helplessness and despair. But then the thinking part rises up and I go: hang on. We're talking about what would likely be a pretty horrific physical intervention. And in situations like this, what have child molesters been known to do in order to avoid exposure? The stakes are really all or nothing for both the intervener and the victim should the would-be rescuer come out on the wrong end of a challenge.

And maybe it was just paralysis caused by the horrendous weight of the moment. A subordinate sees a universally respected superior engaged in something one hopes would have been until then genuinely unimaginable. It will be one word against another, where the Other has a half century of built relationships and support networks in place to, if not exonerate, then obfuscate and delay and redirect and, eventually, punish.

And maybe as the father of three boys, I've forgotten what the world looks like through the eyes of a non-parent. In every social situation, we make a calculation of how much of ourselves we are willing to wager. If our relationship is superficial and nonthreatening, we'll talk about weather or the route we took to get to the place we're now meeting; I push the smallest part of myself into the middle of the table with the understanding that I'm risking, at worst, some awkward silence or mutual disinterest. If I'm professionally ambitious, I push more of myself in, risking rejection and failure. If I'm in a romantic relationship and I want to win actual human intimacy, I push almost everything in, knowing I risk heartbreak and depression and long nights alone with my old Morrissey records should I lose.

I say "almost everything" in the last one because there is, I think, one more step where the interaction is inherently negative. In response to a threat to myself, someone I love or any analogue thereof, having been introduced to the true nature of the stakes by witnessing not just human births but those of my actual offspring, I can easily imagine a scenario in which I'm willing to truly risk everything, up to and including my own life, to defend a child suffering an assault of the type I've been very careful not to too closely describe for the sake of my own too-easy comfort.

But again, is this only because I'm father? I play the scenario over and over in my mind and 100 times out of 100, win or lose, I throw myself at the perpetrator and there is always, always blood. The only details that vary are Whose? and How much?

Maybe that's an evolutionary response package opened up on the day I successfully reproduced. I'm not a particularly brave man. I take alternate routes at work if I know I can avoid the awkwardness of deciding to smile/nod at a barely-known colleague. And I also get that we can only know when faced with the choice, like the Jeremy Davies character from the otherwise-mostly-terrible Saving Private Ryan, maybe we're less than we imagine.

I take all that into consideration, and then I think: nah. That guy was a pussy. I don't want to get too sidetracked because, you know, he didn't molest any kids. It's important to maintain our perspective. But seriously, fuck that guy.

7 comments:

Marsupial said...

There were other options. Sandusky was, apparently, walked in on more than once, and by other people who have been since fired. Geez, I don't know, how about... leaving and calling the cops? Taking a pic with your phone and... calling the cops?!? There are more things you can do than A) jump the guy, or B) walk away.

I hate talking about serious stuff on this blog. Can we change the subject? How about that Michele Bachman???

Poplicola said...

I admit there are deeper and more subtle gleanings to be made, but I'm having trouble seeing through the red mist clouding my vision on this. It's a failing to some degree, I know. The primary remedy is to become better informed, but I can't imagine reading more and knowing more, honestly. Courage fails.

I'm not crazy about the seriousness in this forum either. I had a joke premise in there when I set out, but I can't remember what it was, for the life of me. Being a parent, in cases like these, should be legally admissible as a form of brain damage.

mrgumby2u said...

The one thing I thought of that might mitigate inaction on the part of the witness was if he too had been subjected to rape as a child, possibly even by Sandusky, and PTSD rendered him unable to act appropriately. I don't know how that works, though. I guess I'd rather attibure it to that than cowardice, either physical or moral. I can't account, though, for what it might have been that kept the other assorted witnesses and enablers over the years from putting a stop to it.

Poplicola said...

All valid points which is just demonstrates why I'm not in favor of the death penalty. Ask rational people in the throes of evolutionary protective instinct and they'll spoil for blood and murder. I've calmed down some. But if someone gets punched, I'm still OK with it.

kittens not kids said...

MY only hypothetical mitigating factor is some kind of male mass hysteria over being confronted with the sight of something sexual involving two males. the fact that one of those males was a child maybe didn't register properly, so horrified were the witnesses by the sight/thought/idea of something that *looked* kinda gay. This is really all I can come up with that isn't "wow, these people are all shitheads." I'm pretty willing to buy that they're all shitheads; football people usually are anyway, and the fact that no one - and there were multiple ones - raised a serious ruckus over this proves it a million times over.
I also hate to say this because I don't like gender essentialism, but I do think that if there had been women around, it would be a very rare female who would let child molestation/rape go unreported.

This is what dumbass obsession with football and sports and winning gets you - dipshits who protect their coaches even from the fallout of raping children. It's beyond grotesque.

Poplicola said...

To your first point, it sounds like you're making a point about homophobia, but (and maybe this is just me) the left turn into sexual assault on a child feels like a non sequitur. I don't know what the right answer is, but it seems like you're making a stab at the hetero male mindset in a case like this and, while I can only speak for my liberal self, in my own mind, even in the moment like that, child rape has as much association with gayness (of even the most juvenile conception) as it does with vector calculus or the process by which tropical depressions form.

To your second point, I mostly agree except to say I think it has less to do with sports and more to do with male-dominated, exclusive-entry hierarchies in general, like the Catholic Church of my forebears.

kittens not kids said...

There is that weird gay men are pedophiles are gay link in the minds of an awful lot of people. I also want to point out that state college PA draws from a similar demographic as my illustrious institution, and that demographic is kids who are just an iPhone away from being country bumpkins. What I mean is: a lot of the folks round about middle Pennsylvania are precisely the kind of people who have never knowingly encountered a gay person before, and who probably have at least a vague sense that pedophilia and queerness are connected. None of this is justification; it's all just rampant speculation. And without being explicit, I can imagine that a person's reaction, upon encountering the crime in action, might be "i don't even know what i'm looking at."

I think a lot of things conspired to keep all these witnesses quiet, not just fear/awe of the penn state football machine and their own personal assholery (though those seem to be the top two).

the whole thing is absolutely ghastly.