If you want people to treat you like an adult JFrankA you're gonna have to start behaving like one.
Seriously? A snide remark because you've finally admitted that this definition is based on your opinion and nothing legal or official?
That's why I say that my definition would be also based on my opinion. Both of our definitions might be close to the real law of a real country, but essentially without useing the exact wording, it's just opinion.
Look - laws are invariably a compromise. Generally speaking, they are necessary to protect the majority from the minority, such as murderers and rapists. Societal living requires that one acknowledges and accepts such compromises in the interest of what such laws derive in the greater good. If the application of a law can be defined in terms that are absolutely categorical such that a clear line can be drawn between right and wrong, then great. Otherwise, the line has to be drawn in the best possible place under the circumstances. If that means that a small minority are prejudiced in the interests of the vast majority then so be it. That's just one of countless compromises that democratic, societal existence necessarily requires. What would you prefer - absolute freedom (anarchy) or a reasonable compromise?
I'm sorry, Southwind. You've got that all wrong.
There is a middle ground, you know. There is a freedom side to laws that is not anarchy, and I believe this is the crux of what is this disagreement between us is all about.
By what you wrote, I am guessing that you don't quite understand what the US Consititution's philosophy is all about. Yes, part of what the laws in America are supposed to do is protect the innocent, but the most important thing that the laws in America are supposed to do is protect the rights of all individuals.
I'm going to state this as fact: In America, it is more important for our laws to protect the individual rights of people than it is to protect "majority from the minority, such as murderers and rapists".
Individual rights include the right to speak freely, create freely, write freely without any government cencering, and something I'm a big believer in, "Innocent until proven guilty". The stipulation of these individual rights is that one individual's right do not interfere with another person's individual rights.
As an example, and I have posted this before: If Person A kills Person B, then Person A has committed murder, which is taking the life of someone else, but what is more important American law-wise, Person A has taken quite a few individual rights away from Person B.
Another example: If Group A wants to march promoting hate speech about a race down Person B's street, Person B cannot stop them. It is Group A's right to march and speak, but, it's Person B's right to protest and speak against Group A's ideas, even when Group A is marching.
There is a line, but it's not drawn where you think is should be. The line is where one individual's right ends and another begins. Sometimes, this can't be done clearly, but that's what America's laws are supposed to shoot for. It's not to protect people from "majority from the minority, such as murderers and rapists", because then the government isn't a government. It is a big babysitter.
The US laws are to give people the freedom to express themselves and do what they want, and yes, be able to make bad decisions
as long as people do not interfere with other people's rights.
Now, in the US, any media is protected by this right to free speech except for media that a real crime takes place. In other words, if someone creates a piece of media that
is an actual crime that may or may not include actual people being harmed then creating that media is not protected because in creating that media, the creator has taken rights away from that someone in that piece of media. Child pornography is a crime because it is proof that a real crime took place. Just like, for example, doing a real murder, a real bank robbery, a real rape, etc to create a piece of media would constitute a crime and such creation is not protected because it is proof that a real crime took place.
However, a piece of media of a virtual person commiting a crime on another virtual person, even if the victim of the crime is a virtual child or a piece of media where real life people fake a crime without really doing it, would NOT constitute a crime. Why? No one got harmed, no victim, no rights taken away from anyone, no crime.
Now there are people who might worry that such a piece of media (which I will now call "virtual-type" media for clarity), would make a person who is willing to commit a crime would trigger that person to do so. But that doesn't matter because the right to create, distribute and own a piece of "virtual-type" media overrides the "what a person
could do after viewing "virtual-type" media."
This is true of the US laws with any piece of "virtual-type" media that fits that criteria: the "virtual-type" media does not contain real crime which does not interfere with rights of other people. I must also point out that it is also the opinion of the US that simply viewing such a piece of "virtual-type" media is not harmful in any way. Why? Because the US laws also uphold "Innocent until proven guilty". In other words, just because one owns a "virtual-type" media that includes a crime, doesn't mean that that person is guilty of that crime.
The only exception is with VCP. The only one.
In other words, one can make a movie where a virutal adult kills a virtual child in a very bloody, graphic scene, and as long as there is not one hint of sexual contact or nudity, and it's legal. One can even create that same scene with real adult and child actor (the child actor protraying the victim), and since the crime is not really done, and there isn't a hint of sexual contact or nudity, it's still legal. Why? No one got harmed, no victim, no rights taken away from anyone, no crime.
Now in my humble opinion, this doesn't fit with the rest of what the laws in America are supposed to do. The reasons VCP is illegal in this country is because a) it assumes future guilt of the owner/creator, (which contridicts "Innocent until proven guilty"), b) it is inconsistant, (protraying a killing of a virutal child is legal but portraying sex with a virtual child is not) c) there is no actual crime done (again, portraying murder of a virtural child is legal) d) the US banned VCP because they are worried that a virtual child created by computer would be indistiguishable from a real child (which has nothing to do with someone who HAND DRAWS a virutal child or WRITES a story) e) there is absolutely no evidence, no proof, no data that shows that someone who has the potential to be a child molestor will molest a child after seeing VCP. None. (anyone who is saying this is saying it out of emotion, fear, and their own prejudices. It is an appeal to emotion and conjecture and, at least in the US, the people who make the laws try not to give into that fallacy).
I want to add here that I don't mean to sound "patriotic". I am merely explaining what my thoughts are and where I am coming from. But as you said to me, Southwind, that my postings and links "does not alter [your] position one iota", in sixty pages plus, you have done nothing but strenghtened mine.
It's a proposal JFrankA. Nothing more; nothing less. If you don't like it then you're free to say why. That's all.
I have been saying why. I've posted why. But the most important thing is that it's not the real law. That's what I'm disputing, and yes, I am coming from the perspective of what I grew up as an American.
No. It falls outside the definition by any reasonable application of such definition. If you're suggesting that judges could act unreasonably to twist the application to suit their own purposes than that's no different from any other law. As I wrote earlier, that's a whole different generic problem, the debating of which is the subject of a whole separate thread.
This debate isn't only about "your definition". This discussion is about our opinion why all of us think VCP should be legal or not. Otherwise, you wouldn't have posted your definition in the first place, you wouldn't have explained what you think the law should/should not do above.
No, seriously, thank you. I appreciate it when I get honesty.
We've been through this over and over. Your definition is based on your opinion and what you think it should be. It may be close to how a law defines it, but it is not exactly how a law defines it. It is merely your opinion as to what the definition is.
You're free to leave.
Again, you're free to leave.
But I won't. And you are dismissing my point: I am saying that since you don't want to go back and re-read what I've said, since you want me to repost what I have said, and even what you have said, I don't think it's fair of you to tell people to go back and re-read or re-post either.
So what, exactly, are your objections to a law based on the definition and context per my proposed definition of VCP?
I have alreadsy stated that, so the spirit of my previous statement, here's the link to that posting:
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=5349161#post5349161
"... is clearly intended, or will or is likely to appeal, to the prurient nature of some people." Who decides? Whoever is presiding over the case, by reference to case precedence, if necessary. Why? Because that's the way the judicial system works.
Because we are talking more than just a court case. We are talking about the law and why we disagree with it.
I believe you were going to summarize your position. Please proceed to.
It's above. It's not a definition, but it's the best I can do.
If you want to posit an alternative definition and legal context please go ahead. I'd hardly like nothing more.
I will eventually, but really, why would my definition mean anything? My postings should tell you my opinions.
As I wrote above, whosoever is presiding over the case, by reference to case precedence, if necessary. This is normal legal process.
Sorry, SW, that's a cop out. That's an appeal to authority. I've already said that if you are going to argue "that's the law don't break it", I will agree with you without question.
But in America, laws are not made by judges period. In America the citizens start the ball rolling for laws. Again, I am going by what America does, because quite honestly, I don't know how it's done in other countries.
Yes, that's what I wrote, and I stand by it. What's your point?
*sigh* My point was that when I explained to you how VCP could be included in a story not intended to invoke sexual arousal, but to invoke anger and justice, your reply was "Well, it would be better without it".
...how do you even KNOW that?
It comes down to whosoever is presiding over the case. But let's seek to test the definition, JFrankA - what would you say, and why?
You know, again, I will come up with a definition eventually, but a) that is my opinion, (just like your definition is your opinion) of what the definition is, b) it does not mean that it is what any law actually says, c) we have both given our opinions without the need of a definition, so a definition by me or you is pretty much useless, to be honest.
Again, whosoever is presiding over the case. "... is clearly intended, or will or is likely to appeal, to the prurient nature of some people.", by reference to case precedence, as necessary.
Again, a judge by himself does not a law make. May be part of the process, but not "judge decision = law". In America, which is what I know, so admittingly, my opinions come from the US Consititution's philosophy and procedure, people propose the law, debate about it and vote on it's existance and changes. Judges are part of the process, yes, but that is not the end all and be all of law making.