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Society and Sex Offenders

Chuck Colson

BreakPoint

April 3, 2007

Wisconsin and Ohio are considering bills that would require serious sex offenders, particularly those who prey on children, to affix neon green license plates to their vehicles. Sponsors say that the goal behind this legislation is not only crime prevention, but also to raise public awareness.

That leaves an obvious question: raise public awareness so that we can do what? Unleash a wave of vigilante-style violence against former sex-offenders? Terrify people in parking lots? Or perhaps our goal is to assure that these offenders will never re-integrate into society again.

Wisconsin and Ohio are not the first states to go this route. Last year, Mississippi plastered the faces of imprisoned sex offenders on one hundred billboards across the state. Yet this well-intentioned effort to protect children may actually end up traumatizing them: The billboards send the signal that danger is lurking around every corner. And I know of no evidence that this, in any way, deters further crimes.

Let me be clear: Sexually based offenses, as the announcer on Law and Order: Special Victims Unit puts it, are “especially heinous”—none more so than those committed against children. We must protect children and hold offenders accountable for their crimes.

But at the same time, we have also got to give them the opportunity for change: Prison Fellowship volunteers do this every day, bringing the transforming power of the Gospel into our nation’s prisons.

But what do we do about sex offenders once they have served their time? How do we protect the public and potential future victims? It’s a really tough issue, because the repeat offense rate is so serious. But I know this: Neon green license plates are not the answer.

They are not the answer because laws inspired by fear or the need to “do something”—whatever “something” might be—are seldom good laws. Look at the three-strikes-and-you’re-out legislation in California. The state felt it had to do something about repeat offenders. So, three felonies, and you go to prison for life.

That sounds good, except when you consider what purpose is served by sending a shoplifter to prison for twenty-five years to life. Oh, and then there is the problem, too, that the state cannot manage its exploding prison population.

But there’s another dynamic at work here. Now, I am not Freudian, but if I were, I would wonder if there is not a bit of compensation going on. Could it be that our society punishes sex offenders harshly out of displaced anger over the sex-soaked society we have created?

Seeking newer and harsher penalties for sex offenders coincides with the hyper-sexualization of our children. Coincidence? I don’t think so.

A recent Washington Post article describes 10-year-old girls sliding low-riding jeans over “eye-candy” panties, while 12-year-olds blurt out lines from sexually suggestive pop songs. Meanwhile, preteen boys pose provocatively for Calvin Klein ads.

And pornography—one of the leading causes of sex offenses against children—is held to be a right that trumps the protection of children.

Let’s get smart! These are things we can do something about, instead of just sitting around debating the color of license plates.


 

Chuck Colson is the Founder and Chairman of Prison Fellowship and the host of the radio program 'BreakPoint with Chuck Colson.' BreakPoint is a program of The Wilberforce Forum, a division of Prison Fellowship. It's mission is to develop and communicate Christian worldview messages that offer a critique of contemporary culture and encourage and equip the church to think and live Christianly.

Copyright 2007 Prison Fellowship. Used with Permission.

Learn more about the new Wide Angle worldview curriculum and how you can purchase it. Call 1-877-322-5527.


 

Most Recent User Comments
laubachs
4/6/2007 3:03 PM
Sexual Sin is extremely addictive and rarely (if ever) cured. That is why God ordained sex was only to be for the marriage bed. I agree that secular and christian modernist society (and the Biblical church's silence) has greatly promoted the rampant sexual sin in our society. But the penalties for sexual sin against a child don't deter sex offenders. Violating a child sexually destroys their life: often leading them into a life of sexual sin (i.e. homosexuality, promiscuity, pornography, etc.), destroys their self-worth, distorts their understanding of God as a loving Father, etc.

Leniant penalties for child sex offenders are rediculous. They should never be allowed to reintegrate into society. Though I don't agree with green licence plates for the fear it would strike in the hearts of innocent children. The Fear of God prevents sin. God gave the government the "sword for a reason." If we want to protect our children, only the penalty of death would keep the innocent safe.
zamdad
4/5/2007 1:42 PM
I have to agree, this is ridiculous. While sex offender registration began as a good thing, the law of unintended consequences is taking it to the extreme. As a probation officer I supervised a caseload of sex offenders for five years. I know many of the men and women who have been convicted of crimes that cause them to register as predatory offenders, and I know them well. Very few of those on the registry are truly predators. The majority are normal people who made wrong moral choices that are often encouraged by cultural values.

It seems that we, the general public, want there to be monsters out there that we can fear. The media plays on our desire to have the boogey man and highlights the horrific things that occur at any given opportunity. What better way to learn who the boogey man in the community is than to look on the sex offender registry? Then we know who to fear and who to keep our kids away from. Now lets make it even easier to manipulate our fears by giving the boogey man an official neon green, boogey man license plate.

For too long now the culture has been influencing the church. It’s time for the church to turn things around. For far too long now the church has dodged the issue of sexuality. Because we have kept our heads buried in the sand on this issue, the popular culture has worked its way into the heart of the church. Clothes for young girls are marketed to sexualize our kids at younger and younger ages. We, the church, have the power to stop this exploitation one family at a time, but we feed the sexually explicit cultural machine with our dollars every time we buy clothes for our kids or buy products that promote cultural filth.

For the five years I supervised sex offenders, I had the privilege of participating in sex offender treatment sessions. Talk about discipleship. I had the privilege of getting far beneath the masks of men and women to explore attitudes values and beliefs that affect thinking which triggers behav
Brooke313
4/3/2007 11:30 AM
This is rediculous. How are people supposed to integrate back into society if we expose them in bright neon colors? I am married to a registered sex offender. His crime was not against a child, but it was horrible nonetheless. I don't think the answer to this problem is to have neon green licence plates. I think that Prison Fellowship has the right idea. These men and women need to hear the gospel and how it can change their lives. If we spent as much time sharin as we do being afraid of people, the world would be a much better place.
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