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Thread View: alt.politics.media
1 messages
1 total messages Started by colin drake Sat, 05 Apr 2025 03:45
FCC Chair Exposes the Media's DEI (Inferior Rightist) Hypocrisy - and the Right Is Melting Down
#1804
Author: colin drake
Date: Sat, 05 Apr 2025 03:45
38 lines
2490 bytes
>The FCC chair is calling out the institutions that have gotten a free pass
>on their corruption and illegal DEI practices for too long.

Like Trump with his useless gaggle of fools.

All rightists are inferior and therefor DEI hires.  White Christian male
rightists prefer sex with boys.

Some estimates exist on the total instances of sexual abuse within Protestant
Christian churches. One estimate comes from three of the largest faith-based
insurance companies that insure nearly 160,000 churches. These three faith-
based insurance companies reported 7,095 insurance claims of sexual abuse by
clerical members, church employees, congregation members, or others involved
within these settings from 1987 to 2007 (The Associated Press, 2007). These
reports indicate an average of 260 claims of sexual abuse per year. In
addition, Denney, Kerley, and Gross (2018) published one of the first
empirical studies on sexual abuse in the U.S. within Protestant Christian
settings that examined news articles reporting on arrests involving sexual
abuse, finding 326 total cases reported from 1999 to 2014. Most recently, the
Houston Chronicle published a series titled "Abuse of Faith," uncovering
sexual abuse and cover-up within the largest Protestant Christian
organization in the U.S. (i.e., the SBC). They identified 380 sexual abusers
and 700 alleged victims over 20 years (Downen, Olsen, & Tedesco, 2019).
Moreover, Downen et al. (2019) found that 35 Southern Baptist ministers were
hired at churches, despite being accused of sexual misconduct or abuse,
demonstrating a pattern of institutional issues in responding to alleged
sexual abuse.

It is clear that sexual abuse occurs within these organizations, thus
underscoring the importance of examining sexual victimization and related
contextual characteristics, such as offender types, that arise within this
setting. The need to further understand sexual abuse within this setting is
imperative since the impacts of sexual victimization are so severe. Effects
of sexual victimization include, but are not limited to, depression,
suicide/suicidal thoughts, substance use/abuse, posttraumatic stress disorder
(PTSD), eating disorder(s), and more (Bensley, Van Eenwyk, & Simmons, 2000;
Beitchman et al., 1992; Briere & Runtz, 1988; Dube et al., 2005; Gold, 1986;
Kendall-Tackett, Williams, & Finkelhor, 1993; MacMillan & Munn, 2001;
Najdowski & Ullman, 2009; Rossow & Lauritzen, 2001; Simpson & Miller, 2002).
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