In an article I read a few weeks ago, the writer said that it was important to tell our children about rape/sexual offenses to make them aware. You don't need to be gruesomely explicit to explain to a child that an invasion of your personal space is wrong, not for you but the person doing the invasion, and they need to (no matter what they say) be told on to a responsible adult.
Now I personally would have thought that this would be seen as a good thing, but person after person thought that this discussion would traumatise the child, was unnecessary, trivialised the subect of rape, that talking about non abusive sex wasn't necessary, that there was no such thing as a rape culture and rape doesn't happen that often - it's all hyped up in the media at the moment.
That does not sound like it's affected the public in a positive manner to understanding abuse. It sounds like they think the real existence of rape and child abuse happens rarely or only in certain circles, it's not their problem and children shouldn't understand enough to report their abusers, they should just instinctively know to tell someone that something is wrong. The real problem is for all this shock and horror, people seem to see this as skin deep, blown out of proportion by cases in the media and not something that happens on a local, personal level.
The media coverage is about as helpful as the idea t that most people who are raped, are raped in a dark park, neighbourhood or alley by a stranger, it's not to say it doesn't happen that way, but that's not the only way it happens. It's stirring an over hype about the act, making it both more realistic and less so at the same time. Maybe it did happen a lot, or does happen a lot, but the media spins it out of control (read that one countless times) and blows it out of proportion. People shouldn't be worried and pander to the media.
Well maybe not. But it does happen. It doesn't have to be a celebrity, stranger or dodgy school worker, it could be a neighbour, teacher, family friend, parent or sibling. I don't think that most people suspect their friends or relatives to be capable of such acts (or they probably/hopefully wouldn't be in contact with them). Most abusers don't advocate their victims to talk freely about the abuse. I'm not saying every child is at risk of being abused, I'm saying it's not possible to know and precautions should be taken to make it more aware of being able to report the abuse.
The problem with the current media is adults receive it and most protect and shelter their children from it and whilst it draws attention to the problem it doesn't deal with it in a helpful manner. There is because of the way that it has been handled many people who entirely disbelieve the victims and that they are sick, on article after article, day on day, week on week. By making people scared of it, it creates an irrational hysteria of juxtaposed ideas. It does trivialise it to many and make it seem so unbelievably extreme to others they don't know how to deal with it.
I agree sex offenders need to be caught and that they deserve a whole plethora of negative treatments and emotions thrown at them. I personally disagree that all the media coverage at the moment is helpful (there are however, some that are).