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“Bill O'Reilly is not looking out for the
kids,” wailed a blogger. He ought to lose his job for his “base-line
idiocy” and perverse inhumanity, sermonized Keith Olbermann, suddenly
sounding a lot like the man he calls “Billo.” “I’ve really had it, you
know, with people judging,” came Sean Hannity’s signature
inanities. “This was an 11 year-old boy, ripped away from his family,
and people are suggesting maybe he just enjoyed being away from
school.”
The contretemps were over O'Reilly’s response to the case of Missouri
kidnapping victim Shawn Hornbeck. The boy disappeared in 2002, and
“turned up four years later—alive, the alleged captive of a pizza-parlor
manager,” to quote Newsweek. O'Reilly has been clobbered ever since he
dared to suggest that, horrors, the kid probably enjoyed his new-found
freedom: “He didn't have to go to school. He could run around and do
whatever he wanted."
Indeed, in Newsweek’s telling, “The 11-year-old boy no longer had to go
to school. He could watch TV and play videogames all day. He was given
an iPod, a computer, an Xbox 360 and a bike.” At 15, he had a girlfriend
and a best friend, with whom he regularly rode his bike, went
skateboarding, hung around the mall and played videogames.
Shawn surfed the Web. On at least four occasions he was stopped by
police late at night and given a ride home. Not once did he so much as
mutter under his breath, “I’m that kidnapped kid.” And get this: young
Shawn even filed a police report when his brand-new bike was stolen, but
failed to mention that its owner had been nicked too.
Tony Douglas, the bosom buddy, would sleep over at Shawn’s place. He
attests to the chummy interactions between Shawn and his kidnapper,
Michael Devlin. Shawn, in turn, spent holidays with Tony. A “neighbor,
Krista Jones, observed Devlin teaching the boy to drive his pickup
truck, while others saw the two pitching a tent outside the apartment.”
These are the unsettling facts in the Hornbeck case. Naturally, they
make people uneasy. If not for the ersatz experts waiting in the wings
to rape reality with dubious theoretical constructs, a torpid public
might have grappled with some of these discomfiting realities.
Newsweek, Olbermann, and our execrable experts asserted that Shawn “was
almost surely threatened with gruesome consequences if he said a word
about his abduction to anyone else.” Based on what evidence? The freedom
Shawn was given to come and go as he pleased? One Dr. Terri Weaver got
carried away in trying to explain why, while on his bike rides, out with
his girlfriend, at the mall, or at a slumber party, Shawn failed to dial
911 on the cellphone he owned. Devlin could have threatened to kill the
boy’s family and pets, she hyperventilated. Another tele-twit asserted,
sans proof, that Shawn had decided to sacrifice his needs to save his
family. To date, there is no evidence that the boy was molested. Devlin
is charged with “felony kidnapping and felony armed criminal action,”
but not with sexual assault.
O'Reilly also picked apart the “Stockholm syndrome,” something that
really got the assorted resident experts going. (The stupidest and most
vulgar of the psychology profession dominate the cable and talk show
circuit; members of the Skeptics Society or the Society for a Science of
Clinical Psychology they are not.) The sages had diagnosed Hornbeck
in absentia with this Syndrome, which is said to arise when the
kidnapped individual is deprived of basic needs. These are gratified
grudgingly by the assailant, to whom the victim is purported to become
emotionally attached. At best, “Stockholm Syndrome” describes an
adaptive, purposeful behavior—a survival mechanism, not a disorder.
It most certainly doesn’t describe Shawn, although there were shades of
it in Natascha Kampusch. This Austrian girl was “yanked off a suburban
street when she was 10 and confined to a squalid, windowless
[underground] cell for more than eight years,” reported MSNBC. Kampusch
was confused, even ambivalent about her captor. But she told herself,
“Surely I didn't come into the world so I could be locked up and my life
completely ruined.” So she read, listened to classical music, taught
herself to knit, and eventually made a dash for it.
As did Steven Stayner find the strength to flee his tormentor. In 1972
he was “kidnapped at age 7 and sexually abused,” writes Newsweek. Eight
years later, “when his kidnaper brought a 5 year-old home, Steven took
the little boy and made a run for it—hitchhiking 40 miles and going to a
police station in Ukiah, Calif. ‘I couldn't see Timmy suffer,’ he told
Newsweek in 1984. ‘It was my do-or-die chance.’”
In January of 2006, a 13-year-old German girl was abducted, sexually
assaulted, and held in a crate, at the complete mercy of her captor.
However, when her abductor took her and the dog for a walk, she managed
to drop notes on which she had scribbled, “Help.” And helped she was.
Olbermann insisted that by raising questions about Shawn’s conduct—in
effect daring to impute a modicum of free will to the young boy—O'Reilly
was guilty of “blaming the victim.” Nonsense on stilts. Shawn’s poor
response to his predicament does nothing to change that he was a victim
of a craven criminal. It does, however, amplify the fortitude shown
by Steven Stayner, Natascha Kampusch, and others like them.
©2007 By Ilana Mercer
WorldNetDaily.com,
January 25, The Valley Morning Star (February 4), & Washington County News, Holmes County Advertiser (February 7)
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