Call to Congress: Investigate promotions of child sex advocate Alfred Kinsey

 October 20, 2025

This story was originally published by the WND News Center.

Alfred Kinsey, who used sex convicts and pedophiles to make up studies with wild claims that children are sexual from birth, largely is credit with triggering the dive into the massive promotions of deviant and damaging sex ideologies across America.

He was described by officials at Liberty Counsel, who have fought his agenda for years, as "a sexual pervert whose unscientific propaganda exploited women and harmed children."

He inflicted torture on children as they sobbed in pain and then claimed they were enjoying his sex experiments on them.

The results have included rampant pornography in schools, story book hours with drag queens, the claims that abuse of children is normal and more.

It was commentator Linda Harvey who said, "Let's be frank about school sex education. Many classes have become unapologetically pornographic, yet many parents are unaware their kids learn dangerous messages laced with obscenity in the guise of 'health education.'"

Liberty Counsel pointed out at the time 43 states have exemptions from obscenity laws that let sexually explicit materials be used in schools.

"Educational obscenity exemptions are but one example of the toxic legacy of Dr. Alfred Kinsey and his claim that children are sexual from birth and unharmed by sexual activity," explained Mary E. McAlister, senior litigation counsel for Liberty Counsel, who has been researching the exemptions and bringing their toxic history to light.

"That claim, borne out of records of systematic child sexual abuse, was used as a basis for wholesale revision of our criminal laws through the Model Penal Code, of which the educational obscenity exemptions are a part," McAlister said.

But there has been work to respond. Just two years ago, lawmakers in Indiana killed state tax funding for the Indiana University institute launched by Kinsey.

Liberty Counsel chief Mat Staver charged that Kinsey's actions are "indefensible" and Indiana University "should disassociate itself from anything related to Alfred Kinsey."

In fact, Kinsey's "research" resulted from what actually included data from "serial child rapists, sex offenders, prisoners, prostitutes, pedophiles, and pederasts."

The late Dr. Judith Reisman was a visiting professor at Liberty University School of Law and documented the criminal abuse of more than 300 infants and children in the production of Kinsey's research. These children were ages two months to 15 years.

Now, it is time for the next step, a congressional investigation of Kinsey.

That's according to Rhonda Miller, the chief of Purple for Parents United, who explained in a column at the Federalist, "Kinsey's fraudulent research and criminal experiments in the 1940s and '50s ignited the sexual revolution with the lies that sexual perversion is normal and that children are sexual from birth. His reports, 'Sexual Behavior in the Human Male' and 'Sexual Behavior in the Human Female,' laid the groundwork for comprehensive sexuality education and the repeal of legal protections for women and children. Through the United Nations, Kinsey's perversion has spread worldwide, and grassroots leaders from around the world are calling on Congress to step in."

She reported that that the idea of an investigation into what may have involved serious crimes against children arose in 1995, when Rep. Steve Stockman of Texas proposed H.R. 2749 to require an investigation to determine whether Kinsey's research resulted from "fraud or criminal wrongdoing" — and defunded agencies and institutions teaching it as credible if that was the case.

She explained, "If Congress had investigated and eradicated Kinsey's influence in 1995, the world's children would not have been perverted by it. It is time for Congress to do what it should have done 30 years ago: investigate Kinsey's crimes and fraud and defund any agency or institution that promotes them."

She pointed out Kinsey's "science" was used to damage social sciences, culture, laws and education.

"Fifty-two state laws protecting women and children were weakened or repealed as states shifted from the common law to the Model Penal Code, which was based on Kinsey's research. Many states exempted schools, museums, and libraries from laws against distributing pornography to children. Penalties for sexual crimes were lessened, and plea bargains became the norm."

Now the internet ha normalized "abusive and violent sexual behavior and fueling the demand for sex trafficking."

She noted it was her organization that worked with Indiana lawmakers to defund Kinsey's agenda.

"It's time for the federal government to step in," she said.

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