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About the Eclips On Sept. 26. 2017
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Suffer The Little Children
CHEATED OUT OF CHILDHOOD
Child on Child Sex Abuse



Boy, 4, 'sexually abused up to 15 children' at his kindergarten - but staff did nothing because it was 'developmentally normal behaviour'


A mother of a young boy who was sexually abused by a four-year-old boy at his South Australian kindergarten claims the education department 'ignored' complaints.
The mother claims her son was one of at least 15 children to be abused by the boy in regional South Australia in May last year.
'My child was repeatedly abused and it was ignored,' the woman, who cannot be named, they said
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Boy, 4, sexually abused 'up to 15 students' at South Australian school
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Mother of a victim claims the Education Department ignored complaints
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She claims school staff failed to recognise boy's behaviour as abusive
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Boy now requires a full-time minder to stop him assaulting other students
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Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3490597/Boy-4-sexually-abused-15-children-South-Australian-kindergarten.html#ixzz42ugRyB2g
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A mother of a young boy who was sexually abused by a four-year-old boy at his South Australian kindergarten claims the education department 'ignored' complaints.
The mother says she spoke to staff at the school after being made aware of the situation but was told it was under control and the boy was being monitored.
'I went to work and received a call about 2.30pm saying my child was hysterical and the teacher was unable to calm him down and there had been another incident,' she said.
'What my child disclosed has haunted our family ever since.'
The mother claims the 'perpetrator' or his family isn't the issue. Instead, they blame the education department for not handling the situation properly.
It comes after 200 people attended a meeting in the regional town last month to discuss 'child-on-child abuse', which experts say is inspired by the increased availability of online pornography.
Freda Briggs, emeritus professor in Child Development, recently made a submission to the Senate on the impact online pornography is having on school aged children.
She cited the chilling case involving the four-year-old boy who now requires constant adult supervision at school..
The boy allegedly sexually assaulted a number of other children in his kindergarten class last year both at school and in after-school care, which Professor Briggs claims was dismissed by staff despite being re-enacted by other students.
'The staff allegedly ignored anal and oral sex accompanied by threats and secrecy, dismissing it as 'normal developmentally appropriate behaviour',' Professor Briggs wrote.

Professor Briggs said the young victims involved were removed from the kindergarten while the school was forced to hire a full-time minder for the student involved at 'considerable cost to the tax payer' Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3490597/Boy-4-sexually-abused-15-children-South-Australian-kindergarten.html#ixzz42vGQB5vr Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
Children at the age of 4 usely does and says things they pick up from others. Surley this little guy didn't think up the things he did to those 15 children on his own. He had to hear something or see something that made him to deside what to do.
There is something else that cost tax payers a considerable amount of money besides a body guard, it cost the tax payers a considerable amount of money to teach children at that age about gay sex. And there is something more that will cost the tax payers a lot of money. It will cost to de-program these little guys and if that doesn't work, no doube, one day they will be paying for their room and board in prison for sexually abusing others.
Child-on-Child Sexual Abuse
Child-on-child sexual abuse is a form of child sexual abuse in which a prepubescent child is sexually abused by one or more other children or adolescent youths, and in which no adult is directly involved. The term has been defined as sexual activity between children that occurs "without consent, without equality, or as a result of coercion". This includes when one of the children uses physical force, threats, trickery or emotional manipulation to elicit cooperation. Child-on-child sexual abuse is further differentiated fromnormative sexual play or anatomical curiosity and exploration (e.g. "playing doctor") because child-on-child sexual abuse is an overt and deliberate action directed at sexual stimulation, including orgasm. In many instances, the initiator exploits the other child's naïveté, and the victim is unaware of the nature of what is happening to them. When sexual abuse is perpetrated by one sibling upon another, it is known as "intersibling abuse".
Etiology and causes
In the etiology of child-on-child sexual abuse, young children who have not matured sexually are incapable of knowing about specific sex acts without an external source. Consequently, children who initiate or solicit overtly sexual acts with other children most often have been sexually victimized by an adult beforehand, or by another child who was in turn abused by an adult. More than half have been victimized by two or more perpetrators. In some instances, the perpetrating child was exposed to pornography or repeatedly witnessed sexual activity of adults at a very young age, and this can also be considered a form of child sexual abuse. In other cases, a child or adolescent may have no intent to cause any harm to another child, and he or she acts merely on a passing impulse. However, this act may still result in harm to the other child and is a form of child-on-child sexual abuse.
It could also be that some children at a young age sitting in a sex education class was so interested in what was being taught that he or she decided to check into it more after school by looking in books and magazines or on the internet to see what gay really meant.

Prevalence
The incidence of child-on-child sexual abuse is not known with any certainty, similar to abuse by adults. It frequently goes unreported because it is not widely known of in the public, and often occurs outside of adults' direct supervision. Even if known by adults, it is sometimes dismissed as harmless by those who do not understand the implications. In particular, intersibling abuse is under-reported relative to the reporting rates for parent-child sexual abuse, and disclosure of the incest by the victim during childhood is rare.

Effects
Children who were sexually victimized by other minors, including inter-sibling abuse, show largely the same problems as children victimized by adults, including anxiety disorders, depression, substance abuse, suicide, eating disorders, post traumatic stress disorder, sleep disorders and difficulty trusting peers in the context of relationships. The victim often thinks that the act was normal, including thinking they were the initiator or that they went through the act voluntarily. Major factors that affect the severity of symptoms include the use of force or coercion, the frequency of the abuse, and the invasiveness of the act. An increased risk of victimization later in life has also been reported.
What are the Long Term Effects of Childhood Sexual Abuse?
Childhood sexual abuse includes direct sexual contact such as intercourse and groping, and non-physical activities such as indecent exposure and the display of pornography in the presence of a child. The parents of abuse victims often wonder about the long term effects of such conduct.
Much has been written about the long term effects of childhood sexual abuse. The most obvious effect is psychological harm which includes, but is not limited to, depression, post traumatic stress disorder, behavioral problems, including sexualized behavior, poor self-esteem, academic problems and suicide. Victims of childhood sexual abuse can expect to incur higher future health care costs due to these effects, and it is not uncommon for victims to "victimize" others or become sexually promiscuous at an early age. Prostitutes and pedophiles often explain that their first sexual experience was being molested as a child.
The long term effects of childhood sexual abuse can be serious and that is why victims need psychological evaluation, care and treatment. Victims need time to deal with what has happened to them. Long term psychiatric and psychological care is expensive and often is not covered by insurance. When it is covered, the treatment periods are usually limited. Provision has to be made for likely future treatment around foreseeable stressful periods in a person's adult life, including dating, marriage and having a family. Prior episodes of childhood sexual abuse can be replayed in a victim's mind at these stressful times.

Counseling and therapy are the best ways to mitigate the long term effects of sexual abuse. Unfortunately, health insurance generally limits the amount of therapy it will cover and the victims must bear the costs of extensive treatment. Because many victims cannot afford to pay the high costs of the necessary therapy and simply do not receive all the treatment they need, the long term effects of sexual abuse are more pronounced.
Serious long term consequences of child abuse also include the following:
-One third of abused children will eventually victimize their own children
-80% of abused children meet the diagnostic criteria for at least one psychiatric disorder at age 21
(including but not limited to anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder and eating disorders).
-Abused children are 25% more likely to experience teen pregnancy.
-Abused teens are three times less likely to practice safe sex.
-14.4% of all men imprisoned in the United States were abused as children.
-36.7% of all women in prison were abused as children.
-Children who have been sexually abused are 2.5 times more likely to develop alcohol abuse.
-Children who have been sexually abused are 3.8 times more likely to develop drug addictions.
[See, Administration for Children & Families of the US Department of Health and Human Services, "Child
Maltreatment Report, 2003; National Institute on Drug Abuse 2000 Report.]
-One third of abused children will eventually victimize their own children -80% of abused children meet the diagnostic criteria for at least one psychiatric disorder at age 21 (including but not limited to anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder and eating disorders). -Abused children are 25% more likely to experience teen pregnancy. -Abused teens are three times less likely to practice safe sex. -14.4% of all men imprisoned in the United States were abused as children. -36.7% of all women in prison were abused as children. -Children who have been sexually abused are 2.5 times more likely to develop alcohol abuse. -Children who have been sexually abused are 3.8 times more likely to develop drug addictions. [See, Administration for Children & Families of the US Department of Health and Human Services, "Child Maltreatment Report, 2003; National Institute on Drug Abuse 2000 Report.]

Counseling and therapy are the best ways to mitigate the long term effects of sexual abuse. Unfortunately, health insurance generally limits the amount of therapy it will cover and the victims must bear the costs of extensive treatment. Because many victims cannot afford to pay the high costs of the necessary therapy and simply do not receive all the treatment they need, the long term effects of sexual abuse are more pronounced.
Serious long term consequences of child abuse also include the following:
It is important to recover the costs of the necessary treatment from the perpetrator or the organization that enabled the perpetrator to have access to the vulnerable victims to ensure that the resources are available to the victim to cope over time with the devastating effects of sexual abuse. To recover these costs, it is important to act quickly to preserve the evidence needed to prove a sexual abuse case. Witnesses, documents and scientific evidence (e.g., DNA) tend to disappear relatively fast in these cases.
Certainly, it is stressful for a child to go through a civil lawsuit to attempt to recover monetary damages for current and future psychological and psychiatric treatment. A parent must balance this against the likely long term effects of future stress if the family does not have the resources to provide appropriate treatment. It is often wise to discuss these issues with a family physician or counselor, and a lawyer who specializes in this type of work.
The privacy of the victim is paramount, and in civil cases seeking monetary damages the victim's identity is protected because the case is brought by a parent or guardian using a fictitious name (e.g., John or Jane Doe) for the victim. Most of these cases do not proceed to trial and when they are settled, the privacy of the victim also is maintained. The goal is maximizing the monetary recovery for the victim while minimizing the impact of having to bring a civil lawsuit.
For More Information:
1. Sexual Abuse Effects
2. Childhood Trauma and Current Psychological Functioning ...
3. Kendall-Tackey, K. A., Williams, L. M. & Finkelhor, D., Impact of Sexual Abuse on Children:
4. Dozier, M., Stovall, K. C. & Albus, K., Attachment and Psychopathology in Adulthood
5. The Science of Child Sexual Abuse, Science 308 (2005).
6. Relationships Between Childhood Maltreatment, Adult health and Psychiatric Outcomes and Medical Utilization
7. A Prospective Investigation of Major Depressive Disorder and Co-Morbidity in Abused and Neglected Children Grown Up
8. The Relation of Child Sexual Abuse and Depression in Young Women:
9. Post Traumatic Stress Disorder in Abused and Neglected Children Grown Up.
10 Childhood Adversities Associated with Major Depression and/or anxiety Disorders in a Community Sample of Ontario:
11 Early Sexual Abuse and Lifetime Psychopathology:
12 Childhood Sexual Abuse. National Center for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, U.S. Department of Veterans' Affairs,
This Is My True Story
Child Sexual Abuse
And The B.S.A.

Nex page talks about a program that is trying to make it's way into the lives of our young boys as the gays did in taking over the Boy Scout Program.
The difference is, these guys isn't leaving anything out. The gays worked their way in without anouncing their desire to get at our children, the NAMBLA (North American Man Boy Love Assiciotion), will come out and admit that they want to have sex with young boys. A lot of people have never heard of it, but President Obama can tell you all about it.
Cheaded Out Of Childhood