We have been forced to confront the unpleasant fact of incest on TV this week (why?,one might ask.)
It got a good run for its money. Two stories on
60 Minutes, one of a Scottish brother and sister who were not brought up together, and only latterly discoverred they were sister and brother.
The other, alarmingly closer to home in Mount Gambier; a father and a daughter!
Why, one might ask, would people who live in a smallish town go on national TV. I suppose money changed hands.
Nasty stuff. Interestingly, Stefanovic et al on morning TV gave results of a survey which (I think) said of 1100 people interviewed, 1000 thought incest should be illegal but (and they were surprised by this) 100 didn't.
9 or 10 % is surprisingly high.
I don't suppose that this 10% were necessarily saying that incest is right, just that it shouldn't be illegal; which is different.
There is an appalling interview (
here) with the man's former wife. What it shows is, without going into detail, that these crimes are not victimless ( as is so often claimed)[children, wives, grandchildren, society, community etc. etct. etc.]...and does indeed suggest that we are being allowed into this tragedy because of money.
It also seems to suggest that (surprise, surprise) the man has been more than happy with this ...indeed one wonders who was the prime mover...the woman was in the midst of a marital breakdown when her father'comforted her' by having sex with her!
This is the problem with incest, it seems to me....you may want to stand back and say it is "private" or it may be morally OK because no one gets hurt. But the levels of hurt are complex, dark and even more than a little grubby.
I think we should visit age old taboos to see if times have changed, and maybe we can change them. But I think this case rather shows that we shouldn't have any automatic presupposition that old taboos are necessarily wrong and should be jettisoned. We may not fully understand the depth of why a taboo exists, but sociologically they are so powerful that it seems to me the burden of proof is on those who want to change them to make their case, and not just (as so often happens) give in to the modern trend that anything goes.