Support AlterNet
Do you value the information you're getting from AlterNet? Please show your support with a tax-deductible donation.
Feedback
Tell us how we're doing.
BBC Plays Judge and Executioner
Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace:
Unemployed and on the Verge of Losing Everything: "I Don't Know How I'll Make It"
Rachel Neumann
DrugReporter:
This Is Your Country on Drugs: How the DARE Generation Got High
Ryan Grim
Environment:
Wildfires Are Linked to Global Warming -- But Media Obscure the Relationship
Sam Kornell
Health and Wellness:
Labor Rallies for Health Care, But Keeps it Vague
Jane Slaughter
Immigration:
Meatless Mondays: Do Something Good for the Earth and Your Health
Kathy Freston
Media and Technology:
Will the Tragedy of Michael Jackson's Life Be Inherited By His Kids?
Patricia J. Williams
Movie Mix:
This Time, Pixar Has Gone Too Far
Eileen Jones
Politics:
Breadline USA: Why People Are Going Hungry in the Land of Plenty
Sasha Abramsky
Reproductive Justice and Gender:
Why Are People Obsessed with Their Kids?
Vanessa Richmond
Rights and Liberties:
In Iran, Fears That a Prominent Prisoner Detained In Election Upheaval Could Die in Jail
Katie Mattern
Sex and Relationships:
Why the Left Looks Like a Big Hypocrite in the Sanford Affair
JoAnn Wypijewski
Take Action:
Pressuring Obama to Make the Right Decision on Health Care is AlterNet's Top Campaign of the Week
Byard Duncan
Water:
David v. Goliath: Help Michigan Citizens Protect Their Water from Nestle's Bottling Operations
Leslie Samuelrich
World:
High Noon in Honduras
Laura Carlsen
For some years, critics have commented that the trend in "reality TV" will end with someone being killed for public entertainment. Strangely, when it did happen on British TV, nobody commented.
The three-part BBC2 series The Hunt for Britain's Pedophiles is so ghoulish that even champions of the child-protection industry have avoided comment. The series has regaled the public with barely disguised child pornography with such relish that it is difficult to see the difference between the emotional charge of outrage or titillation the filmmakers are trying to provoke.
But they saved the best till last.
Joining a police raid on a sex offender, the BBC was thrilled that ferret-keeper Mark Hansen allowed them to film him in situ while his overstuffed council flat was turned upside down. To the filmmakers' delight, Hansen spoke frankly about his perverse compulsion and his life of prison terms punctuated by police surveillance.
All parties concerned adopted the cod-psychology of sex-offender treatment, with its central proposition that offenders are not in control of their urges. Hansen admitted what he did was wrong, but claimed that he couldn't help himself. The police reduced the proposition to cliché: "The leopard doesn't change his spots." Only later did one inspector complain that if the offender can't help himself, are they supposed to provide a pedophile support group?
But is there really a social type called "pedophile", who is driven by irresistible psychological drives to commit sexual offences? Surely it is wrong to speak of "a pedophile," but rather of someone who commits the act of paedophilia. It is an act of moral depravity, no doubt, but the desire to cordon off the pedophile wing of society, just as we have the "sex offenders" wing of the prison, is a way of reaching for moral absolutes in an age where there are few to be found.
Are certain people hardwired to commit sex offences against young children? UK Home Office research on reconviction rates has indicated that sex offenders in Britain as a whole are less likely to reoffend than other kinds of offenders, and that reconviction of sex offenders aged over 30 is "exceptionally low."
Despite the level of public anxiety over the crime, it remains exceptionally rare in Britain -- with around 900 charges under crimes specifically dealing with sexual offences against children, and perhaps 1000 more acts against children dealt with under other sexual offences. The majority of these offences are one-offs committed by family members or people the children know - while, by the Home Office's admission, there are only a "handful" of the kind of predatory pedophiles that the BBC has focused on.
But watching The Hunt for Britain's Pedophiles, there was something unnerving about Hansen's openness. Even in the age of reality TV you might expect a greater sense of self-preservation. The follow-up to the interview came the next day, when it was reported that he had killed himself that night, rather than face another prison term -- and, presumably, the shame attached to the broadcast of the interview.
The BBC took his suicide note as consent to broadcast, while the inspector said that "the streets are safer". What is he suggesting -- death sentences for child pornographers? In the end it was not the gameshows that offered the public humiliation and suicide of a participant as public entertainment, but a "serious" documentary.
Liked this story? Get top stories in your inbox each week from AlterNet! Sign up now »
| More News and Analysis: | ||
|
Wildfires Are Linked to Global Warming -- But Media Obscure the Relationship Environment: As climate change intensifies, wildfires are going to increase in the U.S. Publicizing the link could help drive home the danger of global warming. By Sam Kornell, Miller-McCune Magazine. July 6, 2009. |
Unemployed and on the Verge of Losing Everything: "I Don't Know How I'll Make It" Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace: Luz Guerra has already lost her job. Now she might lose her car, her home and her health insurance. By Rachel Neumann, AlterNet. July 6, 2009. |
High Noon in Honduras World: The drama in Honduras has moved from the small, impoverished country to the international stage. By Laura Carlsen, AlterNet. July 4, 2009. |