Brain O'Conner wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2024 11:12 am
If a young girl is with an adult friend, and she has sexual feelings and desires she wants to express to the person, and the adult reciprocates that back, then that does not make the adult the monster, that's society
I disagree. We can phrase it this way to see the issue:
"If a young girl is with an adult friend and she wants to skip school to be with her adult friend, and her adult friend lets her skip school for 2 weeks, and she comes back to school and fails her classes and gets suspended, then that does not make the adult the monster, that's society"
Of course, in that example I dont think the adult is a monster, but the blame still falls on him for the outcome. Adults have the responsibility of weighing the consequences that children otherwise can't. Adults can see the bigger picture. Just because something is consensual and feels good in the moment does not make it moral or ethical.
It's not the best analogy...
It really isn't. And no, I won't take the focus away from the adult because he's the one the kid looks toward for guidance and he's the one who knows right from wrong better than the kid. Discussions about the problems with society and its laws and morals can happen separately.
Also, I don't really like you how you made the remark of how the adult is risking lifelong trauma for "10 seconds of pleasure", implying some kind of cum and dump where the older person just wants to get his rocks off and not a mutual thing where they want to take their time to make each other feel good emotionally and physically like they are in a relationship.
I don't care. It makes no difference to my point. I don't care if you have romantic feelings about the kid or not. You can have romantic feelings about a person and still make morally awful choices. Watch the movie Passengers.
I know that most people will then say the reason for that is because sexual activity can carry long term consequences like pregnancy or potential stds, in which you would be correct, but those are easily avoidable, and children are more the capable of understanding the consequences of sex.
Terrible argument. I'll explain later.
A good example of that is kids as young as six years old riding and participating in dirt bike tournaments that carry long term consequences like breaking your harm or suffering from a head injury that can last for a lifetime. By those kids engaging in those kinds of activities, they understand that they need to wear protective gear, so they want bust their head open and understand when to speed up or slow down to not crash and get hurt. That is more complex than sex.
When children enter those dirt bike tournaments, they are doing it under the guidance, care, training, and consent of an adult. They aren't even able to sign up without an adult. So clearly the adults are the ones who are considering the potential negative consequences and the mitigations to those consequences (like teaching their kid how to ride properly, saftey gear, skill level, age, etc). The child's not responsible for doing
any of that. If the parent/guardian determines that their child is properly prepared for riding a dirt bike in a tournament then they sign them up, otherwise they don't. In addition, if anything bad
does happen, it remains the adult's responsibility. You're making it sound like the ethics of bike tournaments all hedge on a 6 year old's understanding of the consequences. That is laughable.
It has nothing to do with complexity, it has to do with a sober and rational consideration of the risks and consequences and a cultivation of an environment that mitigates those consequences as much as possible - which is what we entrust adults to do on behalf of their children.
On the contrary, when you say "the negative consequences of sex are not much of a concern because the child is capable of understanding those consequences and can easily avoid them" you are taking away the responsibility from the adult and putting it on the child. Now the onus is suddenly on
them to weigh the pros and cons of their behavior instead of an adult. No where else in society do we weigh the ethics of a decision based solely on the knowledge of a child. So these are not the same arguments.
If you want a consistent argument then either admit you want adults to control and be responsible for the sex lives of children, or admit you want children to be treated like adults in all aspects of society, including blaming 8 year old's for their irresponsible decison-making when they ultimately get pregnant or an STD.