
I don’t suppose you noticed a certain lack of trust creeping into our world lately. As I scanned through Saturday’s paper, examples of why this might be the case leaped off every page.
When scandals break, I always wrestle with the question of, “Is this something new?” Our world is a goldfish bowl, particularly for anyone who is in a leadership role, and the cluster of news reporters and camera people permanently camped outside courts and police stations is evidence of that. Is it just that we are finding out more? Is the behavior nothing new, but is the scrutiny, with technology exposing more and more, bringing what was always there to our attention? Or, is it that at the same time, technology is allowing those who would betray our trust to expand their deceit to new areas?
In Nova Scotia, every news report lately is from the pack snarling at the heels of Bishop Raymond Lahey, disgraced prelate of the Antigonish Diocese, Chancellor of St. Francis Xavier University, caught two weeks ago entering Canada after what appears to have been a “sex-tourism” jaunt to southeast Asia, his laptop computer containing explicit photos of children engaged in sex acts. This betrayal of the trust of those he led was an extreme betrayal for many, since he had just recently brokered a settlement with young men abused by local priests in the past, acting as a person these victims could finally “trust”.
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Is this sickness something new? I think not. That’s both good and bad. If it were entirely new, we might expect it to be growing, which I certainly hope it isn’t. I suspect this kind of thing happened throughout history, but one reason it’s in our face every year or so is the media of today—we live in a much smaller world. While in 1960 we might not have been presented the story of a situation in Woodstock, Ontario, in 2009 it gets delivered to us daily until it’s over (and then some). There may be some argument that with the Internet and other such things, child pornography has grown and triggered this kind of crime. I don’t know. Often investigations of such relationships indicate that while it might seem more blatant today, it was unfortunately always there. 
