The dangers of cussing like a sailor
Since 01-12-06
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Subject: The dangers of cussing like a sailor
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/chi-0601110157jan11,1,7610024.story?coll=chi-opinionfront-hed
The dangers of cussing like a sailor
The
altar of victim advocacy takes on salty language
Kathleen Parker, a syndicated columnist for the Orlando Sentinel, a Tribune
newspaper: Tribune Media Services
January 11, 2006
Navy Lt. Bryan Black, a U.S. Naval Academy faculty member, thought he was just
shooting the breeze when he told a midshipman that getting on a battleship
turned him on.
Such was the sentiment, at least, though the language was saltier than the
Chesapeake Bay, where an inspired Black was serving as safety officer on an
oceanographic cruise aboard a "yard patrol craft."
Unfortunately for Black, among the midshipmen was at least one sensitive female.
He also made some equally spicy comments about his ex-wife, of whom he
apparently is no longer fond, that were overheard by, but not spoken in front
of, female midshipmen.
Now he faces a special court-martial and three criminal charges.
I can't write what Black specifically said, but suffice it to say I've heard
worse walking the half-block from my office to Groucho's Deli without need of
smelling salts.
Not so Samantha Foxton, apparently, who complained that Black's remarks bothered
her. He apologized. At that point, Black thought the matter had been put to
rest, as did the first investigating officer, who recommended that Black receive
a letter of reprimand and counseling.
That sounds reasonable, but these are not reasonable times. Once Foxton's female
superior, Lt. Cmdr. Michelle Whisenhunt, caught wind of Black's rich commentary
on the seductive powers of seafaring vessels, the freefall began. Whisenhunt
conducted her own investigation, interviewing only women, and now Black is
charged with
(1) failure to obey a lawful general order or regulation;
(2) conduct unbecoming an officer; and
(3) indecent language.
His court-martial is unusual even by today's strict sexual harassment standards,
according to Black's attorney, Charles Gittins, who says Black is being
sacrificed on the altar of victim advocacy to appease critics still complaining
about previous service academy scandals. Other recent trends and events also
have conspired to make Black's timing as unfortunate as his vocabulary. Perfect
storms sink more than ships.
Black's case surfaced last fall at the same time that U.S. Sen. Barbara Mikulski
(D-Md.), a member of the Naval Academy's Board of Visitors, was asking academy
leaders why sexual harassment persists after years of studies, surveys,
investigations and recommendations. (Hint: years of studies, surveys,
investigations and recommendations that pose women as victims and men as
abusers? Just a thought.)
Under such pressures, the superintendent of the Naval Academy, Vice Adm. Rodney
Rempt, has announced a zero-tolerance campaign against sexual harassment. Rempt
has urged midshipmen and staff to attend for the third consecutive year a
production of "Sex Signals," an adults-only play, ironically billed as
realistically graphic, about how mixed signals between men and women can cause
misunderstandings.
Let's see: Salty language in real life bad; salty language in play depicting
real life good. No wonder sailors sometimes get confused.
Meanwhile, didn't playwright David Mamet already cover that in "Oleanna"? Of
course Mamet's play brilliantly shows how words can be twisted out of context to
suggest sexual harassment where there is none. The service academies probably
will invite that production to campus about the time Donald Rumsfeld gets his
ear pierced.
Despite ongoing concerns about sexual harassment, complaints are, in fact, down,
according to recent surveys, including one published, but not highlighted, by
the Department of Defense (Service Academy 2005 Sexual Harassment and Assault
Survey).
Moreover, a 2004 report by the Defense Department's inspector general found that
fraudulent complaints are considered a problem by 73 percent of academy women
and 72 percent of men.
This is not necessarily good news if you're in the business of victim
advocacy--and it is a business, perhaps soon to become a career choice if Rep.
Louise Slaughter (D-N.Y.) has her way. Slaughter is the sponsor of a 95-page
bill that would create a Pentagon Office of Victim Advocacy. We may never win
the war on terror, but we'll by golly win the war on hurt feelings.
Slaughter's bill has met with little success thus far, but the Pentagon is
working on the idea. Elaine Donnelly, president of the Center for Military
Readiness, reports that the Pentagon contracted with the Wellesley College
Centers for Women to study the idea of an OVA and make recommendations.
Wellesley has submitted a report for which it was paid $50,000, but the Pentagon
has not released it.
Meanwhile, we'll have to wait until Jan. 30, the court-martial date, to learn
what really happened as Black waxed poetic last fall, because Foxton and
Whisenhunt have declined to be deposed under oath. Why? Because they "just don't
wanna," says attorney Gittins.
Those who lament that boys will be boys will have to concede that, sometimes,
girls will be girls.
E-mail: kparker@kparker.com
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Contributed,
YNCS Don Harribine, USN(ret)
Any
man or woman who may be asked in this century what they did to make life
worthwhile in their lifetime....can respond with a great deal of pride and
satisfaction, "I served a career in the United States Navy."