Using Allegations of Rape in Grab for Power
By Jonah Goldberg
TownHall.com
Nine males were accused of
being part of a heinous rape. The alleged injustice
fomented a mob mentality. An enraged community
wanted to skip any talk of a serious investigation,
never mind a trial, and go straight to the
punishment.
I'm not talking about the now-discredited
allegations against fraternity members at the
University of Virginia, but of the legendary case of
the Scottsboro Boys, nine African-American teenagers
falsely accused of rape in Alabama in 1931. Despite
testimony from one of the women that she had made up
the whole thing, the Scottsboro Boys were convicted
in trial after trial. All served time either in jail
or prison.
Scottsboro is a landmark case in the history of the
civil rights movement and the American justice
system. Sadly, it was hardly an outlier. There's a
long, tragic history of African-American men being
wrongly accused and convicted of rape. The most
notorious recent example is the 1989 case of the
Central Park Five in which four African-American
teens and one Latino were wrongly accused and
convicted of brutally raping a white woman in New
York.
Clearly, the injustices involved in these cases are
far greater than what transpired at UVA. No one at
the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity faced the death penalty
or went to jail. But the lessons learned and
principles involved are timeless and universal;
everyone deserves the presumption of innocence.
Apparently, Zerlina Maxwell disagrees. She writes in
the Washington Post: "We should believe, as a matter
of default, what an accuser says. Ultimately, the
costs of wrongly disbelieving a survivor far
outweigh the costs of calling someone a rapist."
Let's cut to the chase. Maybe I live in a cocoon of
some kind, but it seems to me that as terrible and
unjust as it surely can be, the stigma of having
been raped is hardly as deleterious to one's
reputation as the stigma of being accused of being a
rapist. I don't think I know anyone who would
discriminate against a rape victim. I'd like to
think I don't know anyone who wouldn't discriminate
against a rapist.
Back to Zerlina Maxwell. She is a lawyer openly
advocating the defenestration of the bedrock of
American law: the presumption of innocence. More
amazing and sad, she's not alone.
In the wake of revelations that Rolling Stone
reported as fact an unsubstantiated story of
institutionalized gang rape, many feminist activists
have dug in, saying, in effect, the truth shouldn't
matter, or at least it shouldn't matter very much --
not when there's a "rape epidemic" engulfing college
campuses. I put the term in quotation marks because
I believe this alleged epidemic is largely a
deliberate political fabrication.
Obviously, rapes happen. But this "epidemic" would
have to coincide with a decades-long decline in
forcible rapes and a decades-long increase in public
intolerance for sexual assault and harassment.
Moreover, the primary evidence activists cite is a
bogus statistic, based upon a Web survey of two
universities.
So what's going on here? Beyond the hysteria and
legitimate concern, this is a power grab. It's no
coincidence that the Rolling Stone article spent a
great deal of time advocating for the expansion of
federal involvement in higher education via Title IX
of the Civil Rights Act.
As chronicled by Jessica Gavora (my wife) in her
book "Tilting the Playing Field," feminist
activists, with the aid of sympathetic journalists
and allies in the judiciary and the federal
bureaucracy, have used Title IX as a "far-reaching
remedial tool," in the words of the New York Times,
to reorganize higher education to their ideological
agenda.
They started with women's sports, but the model
remains the same: Interest groups foment outrage,
then enlist sympathetic activist journalists who
rely on the testimony of deeply invested "experts"
while partisan politicians exploit the allegedly
systemic problem to advance an ideological agenda
and demonize opponents as sexist bigots or rape
apologists.
The UVA story was the perfect -- too perfect it
turns out -- outrage at the exact moment the Obama
administration was pushing new Title IX regulations
that would erode the presumption of innocence in
rape cases on campus. There's no reason to expect
this fiasco will even slow that effort. So cheer up,
Ms. Maxwell. You're winning.