A Laughing Baby
A baby. Goo goo ga ga
- Joined
- Nov 11, 2010
- Messages
- 2,987
I have no idea what you're on about here. Who's talking about seduction, condoms or pregnancy? To me the issue is about whether it's right to criminalize a consensual act based solely on a calendar when, in fact, we have a judicial system that already examines sophistication and maturity of juveniles. Who seduced whom is irrelevant.
It's disturbing to me that so many people treat minors as if they have no rights whatsoever. Yeh, SC will remind us that they are not clamoring for their rights, but I don't recall seeing minors clamoring for the right to get treated for STDs without parental consent. Adults led the charge. We adults are the ones in charge of the laws, and we should acknowledge that the transition to adulthood is a process rather than a bright line.
When you use dog-whistle phrases like "opened her knees" and so on, you're inherently placing a part of the blame on the woman. There's no two ways about it. Is there even an equivalent phrase for a male that carries the same implication of promiscuity?
I agree the the process to adulthood is a transition that is different for each individual. To me, that is not the issue. The idea of setting an age for adulthood legally, at least as far as I can see, is that it's intended to capture this transition. It's not "when you're 18, you're now an adult and you can make decisions on your own," it's "when a person reaches 18, we would expect the vast majority of the population to have completed that transition and therefore we can capture the transition without the necessity for maturity tests on a case-by-case basis."
It's just...statistics. They're catching 99.9% of a distribution by setting a largely arbitrary cutoff point.
I see now from your response to me though that you are arguing against the premise of the law itself and not the concept that a 30-year-old should be able to have sex with a 13-year-old. While I'm glad you're not exactly taking Humbert Humbert's side, I still would put forth that the rationale for an adulthood line is quite sound if you look at it from the standpoint of trying to catch the vast majority of transitional periods to adulthood while still excluding as many romeo and juliet cases as possible. I think as well that the inclusion of some sort of Romeo and Juliet clause or bylaw is a good addition.
The real issue is how to exclude things like relationships between 18 and 17-year-olds from prosecution while still stopping predatory actors. I'm talking (but not limiting my argument to) 50 and 60-year-olds going after children 13 and under.
I get where you're going with this. I really do. Your point is that you think that statutory rape laws deny by their own merits the cognitive capabilities of the young. To an extent, they do. But there are many legal rights that are granted with age. They are not left open to maturity tests, either. I would posit that they follow the same sort of metric that statutory rape laws do--instead of inefficiently pursuing the maturity of the individual on a case-by-case basis, just catch all of the transitions with a cutoff age. Really, it comes down to how you would propose this maturity test be carried out. If there were some sort of statement or waiver the victim (as it were) could sign, that would be plausible. But I frankly don't find it acceptable for a sort of testimony to be delivered, because then it would be quite easy for a lawyer to get into a trial of character of the victim. I understand that you would not do such a thing, but it is quite feasible and even likely that this would occur in statutory rape cases.
