PorcelainLark wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2026 2:02 am
OnionPetal wrote: Mon Mar 16, 2026 10:55 pm
Kids should be protected from harm/exploitation, but not at the cost of their total autonomy. If 'inability to consent' is the primary legal framework 'protecting' children from exploitation, then I would ask what other frameworks have been considered and weigh their effectiveness. [...] But a more comprehensive system could adequately address harm and safety concerns while respecting dignity and legal autonomy better than a blanket ban.
Unfortunately, I feel this is where things fall apart [...]
I will start with a defense/clarification, and then will ask a question.
My main criticism is around the 'convenient' blanket legal mechanism of a hard-line binary 'Age of Consent', under and over which consent is legally precluded or permitted, and which does not actually reflect the concepts of 'consent,' but rather reflects the 'protective instincts' of society.
PorcelainLark wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2026 2:02 am
[...] giving children autonomy regarding sex doesn't fit with most people's concept of dignity. Sex, to many people, is an indignity. [...]
In defense, while this could be culturally subjective, many people would find it denigrating, for example, if women were not legally allowed to give consent, as a 'protective measure' against possible exploitation. But if 'dignity' might evoke adverse connotations regarding sexual rights, maybe there is another term that better describes someone's bodily autonomy being excessively constrained.
PorcelainLark wrote: Tue Mar 17, 2026 2:02 am
[...] I don't know if this is the right climate for sexual liberation [...] I think we're in the autumn of sexual liberation, and people will get more hostile and restrictive to it before we can start to have serious conversations about it again.
Yes, there may be different seasons for different types of freedoms. But there seems to be a lot of push-and-pull, and heightened controversy around such sexuality topics lately. That controversy can be an opportunity for drawing more attention to issues and for increased discourse, albeit at the risk of increased backlash. Still, activists can strategically leverage controversy to push for change. Personally, I share a lot of concerns about youth safety that a lot of 'normies' have. I just think there are better approaches to protection than to deny bodily autonomy to everyone below line X.
And to clarify, if there are reforms, I think those reforms need to be focused on what young people get out of it, rather than what MAPs will get out of it. If I believed that reforms solely benefited adults, but not children, then I would not support said reforms. I think it's important to put children's interests first in these issues, and I think children stand to gain a lot by having at least
some acknowledgment of agency over bodily and interpersonal autonomy.
I would ask if there any approaches that you (or others) would suggest exploring beyond a hard-line binary age of legal consent that could balance protection with autonomy, but I don't want to stray too off-topic. Yet if the topic is on 'consent,' but the law categorically disregards consent of minors as a means of 'protecting' them, but only with some risky activities like 'heavy petting,' but not other risky activities like dangerous sport, then oh what a tangled web. It seems that communicating these ideas with 'normies' is a big hurdle to overcome, since they've been so well-trained in the mental gymnastics of justifying the aforementioned contradictions.