We Are All Penn State -Penn State Values: The System That
Discourages Making Waves.
It wasn't just university leadership that enabled Jerry Sandusky. It was a system that discourages making waves at all costs—and it infects every corner of America. By Paul Campos.
The moral of the Jerry
Sandusky saga is this: Pennsylvania State University, as an institution,
decided that protecting Joe Paterno’s reputation and winning a few more football
games was more important than stopping the ongoing rape of young
boys.
Of course, no one ever said anything like that out loud. Indeed, it’s likely
that none of the many people who knew or suspected that Sandusky was a child
molester ever made a conscious calculation that protecting the football program
was more important than protecting the boys Sandusky was raping.
Such a level of conscious sociopathic indifference to suffering is fairly
rare. What isn’t rare are all the psychological, social, and legal mechanisms
that allow someone like Sandusky to flourish in the midst of Our Great Little
Town. For at least a decade, and probably far longer, State College was full of
people who deliberately closed their eyes to the truth about
Sandusky.
These people didn’t know the truth only because they didn’t want to know it.
The best example of this pattern of denial is provided by how Mike McQueary’s
witnessing Sandusky’s anal rape of a 10-year-old boy in a shower was, within 24
hours, transformed into “something of a sexual nature” when reported by Joe
Paterno to his formal administrative superiors and then within a few days into
what university president Graham Spanier characterized as “conduct that made
someone uncomfortable.”
Everyone knew, but everyone decided not to know—starting with Paterno, who,
despite his canny attempts to play the role of the naive and befuddled old man,
forced Sandusky off his staff all the way back in 1999, shortly after the first
formal criminal complaint (that we know of) against Sandusky was filed with the
police—a complaint that resulted in a 95-page police report, but, mysteriously,
no charges.
Sandusky’s coaching career was over, but neither Paterno nor anyone else
decided to do anything about the fact that Sandusky would spend another decade
using the university’s facilities to run his Second Mile charity for troubled
young boys—not even after McQueary caught Sandusky raping a child on
campus.
Newsweek and The Daily Beast's Diane Diamond reports from the courthouse after Jerry Sandusky was found guilty
The human capacity for conscious and unconscious rationalization in the pursuit of craven self-interest is nearly unlimited.
Instead, the powers that were—including Paterno, Spanier, athletic director
Tim Curley, and vice president for business and finance Gary Schultz, who we now
know kept a thick file on Sandusky—decided that, as president Spanier put it in
a deleted email that he sued to get back, the “humane” thing would be to cover up Sandusky’s ongoing career
of serial child rape.
Again, it’s unlikely any of these people ever thought of what they were doing
in those terms, i.e., in terms of what they were actually doing, as opposed to
what they told themselves they were doing. The human capacity for conscious and
unconscious rationalization in the pursuit of craven self-interest is nearly
unlimited, especially when those rationalizations are put forth in an
institutional context, with all the pressure such contexts put on people to be
“team players” and “constructive contributors” to the ongoing mission of those
institutions.
The single most chilling sentence in the legal record of the case is this:
referring to the rape of the child witnessed by McQueary, the Pennsylvania
attorney general’s office noted in its report last November that “there is no
indication that anyone from the university ever attempted to learn the identity
of the child who was sexually assaulted on their campus or made any follow-up
effort to obtain more information.” Relatively few people are prone to the sorts
of compulsions that can lead a man to the place where Jerry Sandusky finds
himself today. Far more of us will, sooner or later, find ourselves at risk of
committing the sorts of acts depicted in that quote.
In that sense, all of us are, or can easily become, Penn
State.

No comments:
Post a Comment