Baby P and the
Child Abuse Industry
Written by Stephen Baskerville
March 14th 2009
The Baby P killing reveals the child
abuse industry at its most cynical. The Soviet-style ineptitude revealed daily
is the product not of poor training or underfunding but of the logic inherent in
bureaucratic politics.
We have long known what causes child abuse and why children like Baby P die. The vast preponderance of child abuse and child deaths occurs in single-parent homes. Very little abuse takes place in married, two-parent families. London’s Family Education Trust long ago demonstrated that children are up to 33 times more likely to suffer serious abuse and 73 times more likely to suffer fatal abuse in the home of a mother with a live-in boyfriend or stepfather than in an intact family.
Figures from the
Yet instead of allowing fathers to
protect their children, fathers are forcibly and systematically removed from
their homes and children by family courts with the active support of social work
bureaucracies. Ironically, this is often effected using trumped-up charges of
child abuse against fathers, though statistically biological fathers are
responsible for very little abuse. Judges claim they remove fathers, even
without evidence of abuse, to ‘err on the side of caution’. In fact they are
erring on the side of danger, and it is difficult to believe they do not realize
it. Thus the child abuse apparatchiks remove the children’s natural protector,
whereupon the real abusers — the single mother and her boyfriends — are free to
abuse his children with impunity. Groups like Fathers4Justice and protesters
like Jolly Stanesby are vilified for calling attention to the confiscation and
abuse of their children, when they are merely responding as any parent can be
expected to do when someone interferes with his child.
The sanctimonious hand-wringing now
on display in
Refusing to face these truths also
means an increasingly repressive state machinery and authoritarian habits of
mind that are unhealthy in a free society. Urging citizens to watch and report
on their neighbours should they detect ‘signs’ of abuse, and requiring
professionals to do so, can only foster a society of busybodies and snoops and
will certainly mean more harassment of innocent parents and removal of their
children, as is already happening.
Child abuse is entirely preventable.
The current epidemic grew up with the welfare state and the divorce revolution,
with the resulting proliferation of fatherless homes. It continues because of
entrenched interests employed pretending to combat it. It is a textbook example
of bureaucratic government creating a problem for itself to solve. As Dickens
observed ‘the one great principle of the English law is to make business for
itself’. Appalling as it sounds, the conclusion seems inescapable that we have
created a massive governmental machine staffed by officials with a vested
professional interest in abused children.
Stephen
Baskerville is associate professor of government at
Fathers and Men's Rights Activist
"Immo Facta Quam Verba"
Jeremy Swanson FRA: http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=860360343&hiq=jeremy%2Cswanson