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Page Scandal: Political Corruption Precedes Sexual Corruption
by
Sheldon Richman,
October 25, 2006
For the sake of those vulnerable 16-year-old boys and girls who come to Washington each year, we should abolish the congressional page program immediately. Im not referring only to the danger posed by the sexual predators in Congress. Theres a more widespread danger that hardly anyone cares about: the congressional page program encourages high schoolers to worship and lust for power. In 20 years only three congressmen have been known to engage in sexual improprieties with pages.
But nearly all congressmen teach pages that raw government power is a good thing. In a society that thinks of itself as free, this is intolerable.
Actually there is a connection between sex and power in the page program. Some pages may permit congressmen to make sexual overtures precisely because no one who wants to be near power will advance by alienating a member of Congress. If we want to keep these kids sexually safe, lets disabuse them of their admiration for power.
The Washington Post illustrated the problem in a recent article about pages. Quotations from former pages make it clear that these high schoolers risk being corrupted because they are encouraged to think that wielding power is cool. But power forcibly taking money from people (taxes), spending it in ways they would never approve, and regulating their lives is not cool. It violates individual freedom. The more power the government has, the less freedom the people have. But the pages are misled into believing otherwise. This indoctrination must stop or they will be scarred for life.
Observe how the pages are seduced by power. In the Post article one young man said that Foley showed up at the page graduation and gave him his e-mail address. I started contacting him right away, the former page said. I knew a congressman that I ... talked to online. That was pretty cool.
Do we really want our young people admiring politicians?
If they are going to have a role model, shouldnt it be someone who at least makes an honest living?
When Foley got sexually explicit with one former page, the young man was afraid to ask him to stop. I didnt want to piss off a member of an institution that I really revered, he said. This particular ex-page, said the Post, played along, then slowed his responses until Foley took the hint and stopped. But he never reported Foley. He said, I figured maybe someday I will want to be involved in Congress. I didnt want to make an enemy.
As the Post commented, Most of all, his [Foleys] interest in the boys coincided with the ambitions of many of the teenagers, who craved contact with members in hopes of fostering political careers of their own.
Political careers of their own! See what I mean? Their
susceptibility to sexual corruption by pathetic, lonely,
middle-aged male politicians is made possible by their
political corruption. Who is teaching them that
power is romantic? Sending these kids to Washington only
reinforces their budding power lust and makes them marks
for political sexual predators.
Pages are taught to speak to a member only when
spoken to, the Post writes. This
institutional arrogance, which demands that congressmen
be treated like aristocracy, feeds the pages hero
worship and creates a dangerous mystique that can lead
only to mischief. One former page said,
Theres something that really feels good about
getting to hang out with people who are powerful and
well-known. I fear for this young man. Not only
will he be vulnerable to sexual exploitation; he probably
wont object when government violates his rights.
The Foley scandal is instructive because it exposes the
risks that young people take whenever they go to
Washington to work in the seat of power. We certainly
must condemn congressmen who take advantage of that power
and impose themselves on those kids. But the more
fundamental danger is that Washington teaches them that
power over their fellow human beings is something worth
having.
Sheldon Richman is senior fellow at The Future of Freedom Foundation, author of Tethered Citizens: Time to Repeal the Welfare State, and editor of The Freeman magazine. Visit his blog Free Association at www.sheldonrichman.com. Send him email.
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