Andrew Vachss

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Andrew Vachss is a juvenile lawyer, prominent crime author and child protection advocate, who has sought to benefit from misconceptions of Minor Attracted People - who he refers to as pedophiles or predators - the latter of which, he was central in popularizing in the 1990s. Vachss coined the emotive phrase "Children of the Secret", which refers to abused children, of whatever age, who were victimized without ever experiencing justice, much less love and protection.[1] In his Burke novels, some of these Children of the Secret have banded together as adults into what Vachss calls a "family of choice".[2] A common theme in Vachss writings has been an emphasis on the threat from within the family circle, particularly those immediately adjacent to it - effectively countering the stranger danger myth of the 1990s and 00s. Whilst personally profiting from these conceptions, Vachss has been clear to distance himself from the vigilante mindset, making clear distinctions between "pedophiles" and "predatory pedophiles".[3]

Quotes

About his investigator character, Burke[4], who appears in many of his novels:

"If you look at Burke closely, you'll see the prototypical abused child: hypervigilant, distrustful. He's so committed to his family of choice—not his DNA-biological family, which tortured him, or the state which raised him, but the family that he chose—that homicide is a natural consequence of injuring any of that family. He's not a hit man. But he shares the same religion I do, which is revenge [...] I want to show people the truth, have it frighten them enough (or make them angry enough, depending on individual personalities) for them to do something about it."[5]

About "sexual predators":

"Chronic sexual predators have crossed an osmotic membrane. They can’t step back to the other side - our side. And they don't want to. If we don't kill them or release them, we have but one choice. Call them monsters and isolate them.... I’ve spoken to many predators over the years. They always exhibit amazement that we do not hunt them. And that when we capture them, we eventually let them go. Our attitude is a deliberate interference with Darwinism - an endangerment of our species."[6]

External links

References