| The following includes the New Republic article of Oct. 3, 1994, and correspondence between Cameron and Pietrzyk discussing the aftermath of the New Republic attack article. |
OCTOBER 3,1994
THE
NEW REPUBLIC
By Mark E. Pietrzyk
In the world of anti-gay activism, researcher Paul
Cameron is something of a darling. When columnist Pat Buchanan wrote about AIDS
and gay death in March 1993, he cited a study by Cameron. When columnist Don
Feder wrote about gay servicemen and child molestation in July 1993, he also
cited Cameron. Two years ago Cameron served as the scientific consultant for
both the Oregon Citizens Alliance and Colorado for Family Values, the main groups
pushing antigay referenda on those states' election ballots. Statistics from
Cameron's studies were included in "Gay Agenda," a videotape produced by the
religious right and widely circulated during last year's debate on gays in the
military. Also last year, officials of the U.S. Navy and Army circulated Cameron's
studies around the Pentagon as they tried to block Bill Clinton's softening
of the gay ban. More recently, officials of Clinton's Justice Department cited
a Cameron study in a brief prepared in connection with a gay ban lawsuit.
So who is Paul Cameron? Not the dispassionate, respected analyst that these
boosters would have you believe. Cameron is chairman of the Family Research
Institute (FRI), an arch-right Washington think tank that counts neanderthal
GOP Representative Robert Dornan of California among its national advisory board
members. Cameron himself is also a demonizer of gays: several times he has proposed
the tattooing and quarantining of AIDS patients and the extermination of male
homosexuals. Most important, he is the architect of unreliable "surveys" that
purport to show strains of violence and depravity in gay life.
Until 1980 Cameron was an instructor of psychology at the University of Nebraska.
When his teaching contract was not renewed, he devoted himself fulltime to a
think tank he founded called the Institute for the Scientific Investigation
of Sexuality (ISIS), where he touted himself as an expert on sexuality, particularly
on the societal consequences of homosexuality. During the 1980s he published
hysterical pamphlets alleging that gays were disproportionately responsible
for serial killings, child molestation and other heinous crimes.
Shortly after Cameron made these claims, several psychologists whose work he
had referenced- including Dr. A. Nicholas Groth, director of the Sex Offender
Program at the Connecticut Department of Corrections charged Cameron with distorting
their findings in order to promote his anti-gay agenda. When the American Psychological
Association (APA) investigated Cameron, it found that he not only misrepresented
the work of others but also used unsound methods in his own studies. For this
ethical breach, the APA expelled Cameron in December 1983. (Although Cameron
claims he resigned, APA bylaws prohibit members from resigning while under investigation.)
In 1987 Cameron moved to Washington and created FRI, a "non-profit educational
and scientific corporation." Ever since, he has been a virtual one-man propaganda
press, periodically revising his brochures and distributing them to policyrnakers.
"Published scientific material has a profound impact on society," he has said.
Unfortunately, the misrepresentations persist. Distortions and sloppy methods
continue to shape Cameron's studies. As anyone who has taken a statistics class
knows, a survey is valid only if the sample it uses is representative of the
whole population. Sex surveys pose a particular problem, since many people who
normally would be included in a representative sample are loath to discuss their
private lives. That, however, hasn't deterred Cameron from his work.
Consider, for instance, his 1983 ISIS study, a survey of the sexual and social
behavior of 4,340 adults in five American cities. Although thousands of heterosexuals
allegedly responded to his survey, Cameron could get only forty-one gay men
and twenty-four lesbians to respond. The extremely small sample size should
have invalidated any conclusions about the sexual behavior of the gay population.
In any case, the skewed results of the survey show that Cameron did not get
an adequate random sample of heterosexuals either. He claims to have found that
52 percent of male heterosexuals have shoplifted; that 34 percent have committed
a crime without being caught; and that 12 percent have either committed or attempted
to commit murder. Most people would toss out such a survey, but Cameron published
the results in several pamphlets and in "Effect of Homosexuality upon Public
Health and Social Order," an article in Psychological Reports.
In one pamphlet, Murder Violence and Homosexuality, Cameron asserts that you
are fifteen times more apt to be killed by a homosexual than by a heterosexual
during a sexual murder spree; that homosexuals have committed the most sexual
conspiracy murders; and that half of all sex murderers are homosexuals. Cameron
based these conclusions on a sample of thirty-four serial killers he selected
from the years 1966 to 1983. He stacked the deck not only by including phony
figures (he counts in his sample the claims of Henry Lee Lucas, who subsequently
recanted his boast that he murdered hundreds of people) but by examining only
those serial killers with an apparent sexual motive. This allowed him to include
John Wayne Gacy and his victims but to exclude the great majority of serial
killers who are heterosexual, according to sociologist Jack Levin, the author
of Mass Murder: America's Growing Menace.
In Cameron's writings on child molestation-the pamphlet Child Molestation and
Homosexuality and two published articles, "Homosexual Molestation of Children/Sexual
Interaction of Teacher and Pupil" and "Child Molestation and Homosexuality -he
concludes that gays have perpetrated between one-third and one-half of all child
molestations; that homosexual teachers have committed between onequarter and
four-fifths of all molestations of pupils; and that gays are ten to twenty times
more apt to molest children than are heterosexuals. These figures are said to
be based on the content of other child molestation studies, yet Cameron has
distorted those studies to get the results he wants. For example, he defines
all adult male molestation of male children as molestations committed by homosexuals,
a definition rejected by the very experts Cameron cites. Groth, among other
experts, has explicitly said that most molesters of boys are in fact men who
are heterosexual in their adult relationships. These men are attracted to boys,
he says, largely because of the feminine characteristics of prepubescents, such
as a lack of body hair.
Cameron also has provided anti-gay organizations with research indicating absurdly
high rates of extreme sex practices and venereal diseases among gays and lesbians.
In his pamphlets on these subjects, Cameron has claimed, for instance, that
29 percent of gay men practice "urine sex" and that 37 percent of gay men have
sadomasochistic sex. Gay men, he says, are fourteen times more apt to have syphilis
than heterosexual men and are three times more apt to have had lice. Lesbians
are said to be nineteen times more apt to have syphilis than straight women
and are four times more apt to have had scabies. Cameron's findings, however,
are based on two sources: his discredited 1983 ISIS survey and other studies
that ignore random sampling techniques. Several studies Cameron cites to support
his conclusions rely on the responses of gay men who were recruited entirely
from V.D. clinics.
A Cameron study that has received perhaps the most attention is "The Lifespan
of Homosexuals." It concludes that less than 2 percent of gay men survive to
old age; that lesbians have a median age of death of 45; that gays are 116 times
more apt to be murdered than straight men and twenty-four times more apt to
commit suicide, etc. The source of this material? A comparison of obituaries
front gay newspapers with a sample from regular newspapers -a method that would
be laughed at by any reputable scholar. Obituaries in gay papers do not accurately
portray deaths in the gay population as a whole. They are not meant to provide
a public record of deaths of all gays but to allow members of the urban gay
community to express mourning for their peers, particularly those whose lives
have been cut short by illness or accident. Gays who die outside these communities
or who die of natural causes are much less likely to be written tip in a gay
paper.
In the coming months, public debate over gay issues is going to get even more
intense; the military gay ban question is far from settled, and at least two
states may see anti-gay referenda on their ballots this fall. Cameron will help
out with these campaigns as he pushes his new book, The Gay Nineties. His research
will again be cited by anti-gay activists everywhere. It's time to set the record
straight.
MARK E. PIETRZYK is a research analyst for Log Cabin Republicans.
OCTOBER 3,1994 THE NEW REPUBLIC