The Kinsey Virus Goes Global & We're Fighting It
Last year, Salvo issues 25 and 26 reported the attempt by the Croatian government to implement a controversial, Kinsey Institute-influenced sex education program for young schoolchildren. I visited Croatia to raise awareness of the influence of pedophiles and the Kinsey Institute in this curriculum. I met with Archbishop Marin Barisic in February 2013. After a long conversation, when I apprised him of the crimes against children represented in the Kinsey Report, he said: "You have awakened us from lethargy."1 But in the Opening Salvo of issue 25, "Croatian Resistance," we ended with uncertainty: "So far, the [sex education] curriculum remains in place. But resistance was not futile. Croatian parents have been alerted. It's a battle worth fighting, anywhere, anytime."
Since then, resistance has proven even more successful. In May 2013, Croatia's highest court suspended the sex education program, "just months after public schools began teaching it."2
Encouraged by the court's decision on the sex education program, many citizens took to the streets to support a new marriage referendum. Despite assaults on petition gatherers, the people supported the referendum, which passed with a 65-percent vote in favor of the legal definition of marriage as one man and one woman.
Kinsey's Global Advance
I was invited to Croatia this year because on April 23, 2014, the Kinsey Institute was given special consultative status to the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations (ECOSOC). In this capacity, the institute has a place at the global table and is likely to play a major role in determining policies that will affect families and children. The goal of the Croatian resistance movement was to kick off a global campaign, starting in Zagreb, to investigate the Kinsey Institute for crimes against children and ultimately ban it from the UN.
I was accompanied by Tim Tate, the producer of a British television documentary called Kinsey's Paedophiles, who came to Croatia in 2013 during my first trip, and by Tom Hampson, chief investigator for the Liberty Child Protection Center. Together, we met with religious and civic leaders and lectured in multiple cities, including the capital city of Zagreb. While there, we spoke at the University of Zagreb Medical School, a well-respected secular, scientific institution. My topic was the effect of pornography on childhood brain development, as well as the disastrous effects of Kinseyan views on sex. Hampson supported my lecture with insights from his professional investigations into pedophilia and statistics showing the growth of child abuse in the United States.
Professor Davor Milicic, Dean of the University of Zagreb Medical School, hosted the event and shared opening and closing words. Milicic said he realizes that global sex education based on the Kinsey Institute doctrine is "disastrous" and must be re-evaluated from a professional medical and scientific standpoint. He affirmed and supported my findings on Kinsey and pornography, and offered his help in raising public awareness in Croatia about the problems with sex education. As dean of the Medical School, his word is influential both in academic circles and among Croatians as a whole.
Global Resistance?
The main event of our campaign took place on May 27 at the Stone Gate Shrine, one of Zagreb's religious landmarks. Our global campaign, "Don't touch the children!" was launched. A resolution was publicly read in five languages and sent to the addresses of the presidents of the 193 UN member states. The letter contained the resolution, as well as evidence of the monstrous acts Kinsey and his co-workers performed on children as young as two months of age for the sake of his so-called "scientific data."
The resolution's aim is to raise world leaders' awareness of the relationship between the Kinsey Institute's dangerous view of childhood sexuality and the criminal act of pedophilia. Kinsey effectively encouraged the latter.
Opposition to the Kinsey Institute's global platform is not limited to Croatia. In the United States, the Stop the Kinsey Institute Coalition has been formed to call on ECOSOC and world leaders to withdraw recognition from the Kinsey Institute. The Stop the Kinsey Institute Coalition has organized a petition to UN and world leaders to this effect.
The coalition has also published an in-depth brief, warning parents and governments throughout the world of the harm that would come from allowing the Kinsey Institute to exercise such a position of influence. The petition, brief, and further information can be found online at www.stopthekinseyinstitute.org.
Please visit this website to take action against the Kinsey Institute's platform in the UN. First, sign the petition. Second, recruit others to do the same. Third, read the Kinsey Brief and arm yourself with knowledge about the atrocities of Kinsey's pseudo-science. The UN might have approved the Kinsey Institute's consultative status, but the world doesn't have to.
Judith Reisman Get Salvo in your inbox! This article originally appeared in Salvo, Issue #30, Fall 2014 Copyright © 2026 Salvo | www.salvomag.com https://salvomag.com/article/salvo30/the-sickly-institute
SIDEBAR
Comments of Timothy Tate, British documentary filmmaker, at press conference in Croatia to launch the "Don't touch the children!" campaign on May 26, 2014:
Last month, the United Nations, an organization founded on and dedicated to human rights, granted to the Kinsey Institute the status of official accreditation. Why does that matter?
It matters because it gives the Kinsey Institute official recognition and a seat at the table where policy, global policy, is made—policy about the law, policy about sex, policy above all about children.
And why is it wrong for the Kinsey Institute to be there?
Because this is an organization founded on crimes—founded on crimes against the most vulnerable in society—children. It's an organization which has refused to apologize for or to walk away from those crimes. And it's an organization which continues to make money from the reports of those crimes. . . . Today, here in Croatia, we're beginning a campaign to demand that the United Nations re-examine its decision to grant that accreditation.
Why Croatia?
Because this country, alone in the world, for the first time in 70 years, last year stood up to the power of the Kinsey Institute. No other country has ever taken a stand against Kinsey. You did it. That is why this resolution, this initiative, starts here.
I hope, over the next few days, Croatia's voice will ring out across the world. And it will be heard, I hope, by those at the United Nations who made that appalling decision to grant the Kinsey Institute accreditation. But, over the coming days, you may hear allegations that this campaign is not about the protection of children, or about the UN, or about the Kinsey Institute; you may hear allegations, claims, that it's a campaign of homophobia, it's a campaign by right-wing people or religious activists. Those allegations are lies. I have no religion. I have been and remain a lifelong left-wing socialist, and for almost forty years I have campaigned for equal rights for gay and straight people. This campaign in this brave country is about demanding change. It's about demanding that the world's most vital, most important human rights organization hold an inquiry into the Kinsey Institute and the crimes it committed and those it continues to profit from, and, above all, it's a campaign for the children abused by Kinsey's pedophiles and for the victims of child sexual abuse everywhere. It starts today and it starts here.