Enjoy the anecdotes. I love to just hear/read people telling stories. Seems to be an art that is being lost. We have story telling competitions in the local area several times throughout the summer, and they're very fun events.
Okay. MontagK505, no, we should not accept those laws. That is why I feel it should have been challenged, but we do not know the reason it was not beyond speculation. Eventually perhaps someone will finance that challenge and we can have better laws that better worded. I think, though, that we can understand the "spirit" of the laws, though.
Or can we?
I am beginning to wonder something. How many of you play(ed) RPGs in your early adulthood (or even still)? Now, pixies never interested me much, but elves? Yeah...I really enjoyed the LTR movies. I had two characters I preferred to use. One was an elf, male, and one was a human, female. As young adults, we really developed our characters, and in fact, the other night when I found the bath photographs, I found in another box of my little sisters things our dungeon modules and the notebooks in which we developed our characters for our little group. I had no idea she'd saved them. Was a good find, nice walk down memory lane.
Anyway...I think that people who play RPGs have a different view of "fantasy" and "imagination" than people who are never really exposed to or get to develop that amazing aspect of our human minds. For instance, elves can "appear to be" very young, but anyone who knows anything about elves knows when they are seeing a "child" elf as opposed to an "adult" elf. (I sometimes think in our quest for youth, we are desperately wanting to imitate the elven folk, lol).
So, to *me*, depicting elves or pixies will probably not be offensive. My mind separates the fantasy from reality. But guys? I think it is important to remember that the majority of our lawmakers, and the majority of people in general have no idea about those things. There have been times that I have wondered if parents screaming the loudest about pornography have ever taken a really close look at the video games they buy for thier children. Trust me, a lot of naked women with perfect bodies wouldn't look as...mmm...enticing, shall we say, as the women on video games. I swear my first husband was in love with some of them! Poked fun at him all the time over that.
Now, I've never viewed...manga? is it called?. But I can fully relate to other fantasy scenarios, like the pixies. And...I can even understand, when immersed in the fantasy, how it is possible to assign some very human feelings to our characters.
Still, though, I think that the intent and distribution of certain kinds of images truly are only to arouse, and we've said that child porn is harmful, so as I see it, something indistinguishable from it should be considered so, too. I'm not condemning the comic book guy for what he chose to collect. But...he *did* break the law. It is a law that is lacking severely, but it is still the law. It concerns me that someone would take such risks for such a trivial thing. Apparently, there are enough people willing to take those risks for child pornography and virtual child pornography that there is some sort of problem. And one should probably question, if it is that insignificant, why people take such risks to acquire it. Maybe?