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        Fatal Addiction

 

Ted Bundy made quite a "name" during his brief lifetime. He did so because he killed nice girls—instead of prostitutes. He did so because the night before his execution he spoke with Dr. James Dobson about how pornography had affected his life for the worse. He didn't claim that pornography "made him do it." Since Bundy didn't ask Dr. Dobson to intervene on his behalf with the Florida governor, why then did the lovers of pornography work so hard to discredit the Bundy statement. He confessed to 23 murders. Some believe he was responsible for as many as 50 more. Follow Ted Bundy's dizzying descent from all-American boy to mass murderer in "Fatal Addiction." Sharing a final, on-camera statement with Dr. James Dobson the day before his execution, the serial killer spoke a chilling warning of the dangers of pornography and the ways it can infiltrate even good, stable homes. When either internal restraints of harming others are inadequately developed, diminished or the urges become too strong, we find sex addicts like Ted Bundy without boundaries for behavior controls. Bundy's addiction for pornography stripped or diminished any possible restraints which may be at best inadequately developed. In most all respects, Bundy came from a good family. Serial killer Ted Bundy described his experience in an interview with Dr. James Dobson (a psychologist who served on the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography and founder of Focus on the Family) on January 23, 1989, the day before Bundy was executed: Dr. Dobson: "For the record, you are guilty of killing many women and girls." Bundy: "Yes. Yes. That's true ... Okay, but before I go any further, I think it's important to me that people believe what I'm saying. I'm not blaming pornography. Read On

 
   
   
 

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