I Ratant
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Apr 8, 2008
- Messages
- 19,258
.Unless Charlie Laine is in it, then it's art regardless. [qimg]http://www.lethalwrestling.com/upload/swoon.gif[/qimg]
Googled....
Boggled!
.Unless Charlie Laine is in it, then it's art regardless. [qimg]http://www.lethalwrestling.com/upload/swoon.gif[/qimg]
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I couldn't find any screen credit for that actor, to see what kind of a life of crime he pursued later.
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And some ( such as me) called it pandering filth and crap.
Basically, Trane, what you're saying is that photographing nude children is WRONG ALWAYS. Except for family pictures. Oh, and historical documents, too. Oh, and probably for medical purposes.
Are there any other exceptions to your initial absolutist comment, now ?
Not even close.
I'm saying I have no way of reliably judging when it's wrong and when its right, so nude children should not be used in the production of art because their safety trumps the limited benefit of having naked kids in artwork.
It's only art if skill is involved.
By inquiry and consideration of the evidence.
Evidently not. Is it likely to sexually arouse?
Not even close.
I'm saying I have no way of reliably judging when it's wrong and when its right, so nude children should not be used in the production of art because their safety trumps the limited benefit of having naked kids in artwork.
I've already posted it on this thread:
http://www.supermansupersite.com/aaron.html
Yeah, being nude in a movie at three years old really set him on the life of crime.......
If those are your arguments, then you need to provide some evidence to back them up.
For the second argument... It's logically non-falsifiable, and not anything that anyone can reasonably address with any degree of accuracy or seriousness. It also suffers from some of the most basic logical fallacies. Insufficient sample size, for one. And then there's the lack of qualification. The way you've worded your "argument", anything that has even the slightest degree of risk to a child is automatically bad. Walking down the sidewalk has the potential for damage -- tripping and falling, getting hit by an out of control car, kidnapper grabbing them -- should we ban children from walking down the sidewalk? Eating has the potential for damage -- the child could choke, or maybe they might eat something that they're allergic to -- should we ban children from eating? Sleeping even poses a potential danger. Ever heard of SIDS? So we should ban children from sleeping too, right? This is the kind of logic you've put forth. Frankly, it's laughable.
That makes no sense. When do you ban something on the mere possibility that it can do harm ?
Again, do you ban chainsaws because someone may hurt themselves by shaving with it ?
At some point you're going to have to give other people the benefit of the doubt.
That makes no sense.
So, we have no way of knowing if anyone is going to become an alcoholic in order to protect all people from the possibility of becoming alcoholics, we should ban all alcohol.
There are a massive number of things that children are outright banned from doing (contractually obligating themselves, consenting to sex, driving, responsibly consume alcohol...etc.). I am simply arguing that consenting to appear naked in the production of artwork should be one of those.
It's one thing to argue that nude participation in art shouldn't be on the list, it's another to pretend like this some astonishing, new legal concept.
TraneWreck said:When don't we? Everything we ban is banned on the grounds of potential harm. In fact, there's no other way to do it.
You are condriciting yourself:
Do you know how many children can be potentially harmed by alcohol? It should be banned.
By inquiry and consideration of the evidence.
Evidently not. Is it likely to sexually arouse? I'd say so. Perhaps we need different categories of child porn, resultant laws and punishments, like we have for homicide.
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An adult chooses to pick up a chainsaw and take on the risk. If they negligently leave a chainsaw near a child and that child harms themself, that parent would be guilty of abuse.
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When don't we? Everything we ban is banned on the grounds of potential harm. In fact, there's no other way to do it.
An adult chooses to pick up a chainsaw and take on the risk. If they negligently leave a chainsaw near a child and that child harms themself, that parent would be guilty of abuse.
Deciding on behalf of a child to allow them to participate in the creation of art in the nude is a mental state of intent, beyond mere negligence.
I'm not sure why you think those things are contradictory. What is permissible for an adult need not be what is permissible for a child.
And if an adult drinks to the point that the child is harmed, then they've commited a crime.
We presume alcohol can be used responsibly. If it isn't, liability is incurred.
If someone can give me a clear process or a reliable method of distinguishing between the sort of nude modelling that creates the psychological damage described in the US Embassy report and they type of nude modeling that doesn't, fine, I would have no problem.
Once again, my argument is that no one can distinguish between those situations and thusly should not be making unnecessary decisions for children that place them in potentially damaging situations.
If an adult chooses to place themself in a potentially damaging situation, that's their choice. No issue there.
I'm not sure why you think those things are contradictory. What is permissible for an adult need not be what is permissible for a child.
And if an adult drinks to the point that the child is harmed, then they've commited a crime.
We presume alcohol can be used responsibly. If it isn't, liability is incurred.
If someone can give me a clear process or a reliable method of distinguishing between the sort of nude modelling that creates the psychological damage described in the US Embassy report and they type of nude modeling that doesn't, fine, I would have no problem.
Once again, my argument is that no one can distinguish between those situations and thusly should not be making unnecessary decisions for children that place them in potentially damaging situations.
If an adult chooses to place themself in a potentially damaging situation, that's their choice. No issue there.