Do I really need to explain to you the difference between "perceived" and "real"
<snip>
No. You need to explain what
you mean by a "perceived"
cost/benefit analysis and a "real" one. The adjectives bear no commonly accepted useful relationship with the term you applied them to. What difference were you trying to suggest between the two?
If you can succeed in this then go on to the following questions in the same post. The ones you're dodging the hardest.
Cost/benefit analysis requires data to analyze. What data have you used for input for these analyses? What are the data sources? How did you verify them? What algorithms did you apply to generate your results? How did you define your criteria for data selection?
What were your results? You say that they differed. How, exactly, did they differ? Keep in mind, we're not talking about the results of your pontifications and opinions, we're talking about the results of your "cost/benefit analysis".
Numbers. Backed up by data. Data with sources. Accompanied by your methodology so that we can properly evaluate your results. Put up or admit you're just tossing out big, important sounding words without any substance behind them.
If you don't have any such analysis let me help you. We've provided the links to the first steps you need in research about the actual, "real"
cost of misused pornography laws. "Real" people with "real" damage done to them by zealots and political opportunists. Dollars and cents damage, as well as social, career, and family damage. There is lots more data where that came from.
You have not provided
any proof of
any of the alleged "benefits" of such laws, only vague supposition, appeals to emotion, and shotgun style
ad hominem attacks in the general direction of anyone who challenges your assertions.
Pony up. Lets see these "cost/benefit analyses" you've done.
"Real" or "perceived".