Chapter 7 - Dr. Judith Reisman
Chapter 7 - Dr. Judith Reisman
Chapter 7 - Dr. Judith Reisman
Create successful ePaper yourself
Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.
experience orgasm are have probably been rendered psychologically incapable due to environmental<br />
(read, parental) inhibitions:<br />
The observers emphasize that there are some of these pre-adolescent boys (estimated by<br />
one observer as less than one quarter of the cases), who fail to reach climax even under<br />
prolonged and varied and repeated stimulation; but even in these young boys, this<br />
probably represents psychological incapacity more often than physiologic incapacity. 13<br />
Neither sexology’s ethical guardians nor most of Kinsey’s critics have sought further details about<br />
the “prolonged and varied and repeated stimulation” to which the children were exposed. And when<br />
the children did not respond with “orgasm,” how did they respond? When this author’s 1981 paper,<br />
“Child Sexuality or Child Sexual Abuse: A Critical Evaluation of the Kinsey Reports,” was retrieved<br />
from the Kinsey Institute files during the 1993 deposition of their then director, one of the many<br />
handwritten “corrections” found on that trip was that child orgasm tests were for the orgasmic “capacity”<br />
and not the “potential” of infants and children.<br />
The Kinsey team embellished the data even further, stating that the toddlers required a fresh<br />
social climate, and concluding that, in an “uninhibited” society, the majority of boys could be having<br />
orgasms by three or four years of age:<br />
In the population as a whole, a much smaller percentage of the boys experience orgasm at<br />
an early age, because few of them find themselves in circumstances that test their capacities;<br />
but the positive record on these boys who did have the opportunity makes it certain<br />
that many infant males and younger boys are capable of orgasm, and it is probable that<br />
half or more of the boys in an uninhibited society could reach climax by the time they were<br />
three or four years of age, and that nearly all of them could experience such a climax three<br />
to five years before the onset of adolescence. 14 [Emphasis added.]<br />
Evolutionarily speaking, what use would infants or young children ages three to four years have<br />
for an orgasmic capacity without a physiological basis for early sexual maturity? Even current Kinsey<br />
Institute Director John Bancroft acknowledges that there is a “biological basis” for the genitals, and<br />
that it is generative. Testosterone is inhibited in the male until roughly 12 years of age and, Bancroft<br />
says, a young boy’s “first ejaculation occurs” at about 13 years of age. 15 To sexualize toddlers and<br />
young children without any “biological basis” for doing so renders them freaks of nature.<br />
TABLE 31: “PRE-ADOLESCENT EXPERIENCE IN ORGASM”<br />
Kinsey believed that human beings and their responses could be categorized like the gall wasps he had<br />
collected earlier. This taxonomic technique is evident in Table 31 of the Male volume, “Pre-adolescent<br />
experience in orgasm,” which is a carbon copy in theory, structure, and groupings of his 1936<br />
insect table on “Cynips.” In Table 31, Kinsey reported the little boys’ ages and “orgasm” responses to<br />
stimuli. 16 Bancroft claims that Kinsey’s “meticulous” boy tables report the “data” Kinsey received<br />
from King, who he called an old “technically trained” forester17 and who, Pomeroy and others claim,<br />
had sexual relations with 800 children of both sexes).<br />
Kinsey stated that “some of the younger boys who have contributed to the present study” also<br />
described their “orgasm.” However, the charts show that 28 of Kinsey’s “younger boy” contributors/<br />
participants were infants, so unable to speak. Kinsey claimed in Table 31 that “orgasm” was “ob-<br />
THE CHILD EXPERIMENTS 139