Fragment wrote: Mon Aug 12, 2024 4:09 pm
Yes, I reject the idea that drunk sex is automatically rape. Obviously if someone is drunk to the point of unconsciousness then it's rape. But merely drinking, having impaired judgement and doing something you later regret is no reason to be held less accountable for your actions. DUIs prove that point.
I didn't really use a good example for that issue. I think what it's more like is if a drunk person is feeling neutral or negative about having sex, and someone pushes them to have sex they are more likely to acquiesce to it, regardless of whether they would actually want it.
I think the analogy is comparable, for example, in the sense that children are often willing to do things for the approval/attention of adults regardless of whether they enjoy it.
Under either of those circumstances, would you view rape as having taken place?
I partly reject the premise that we develop stronger boundaries as we get older, that hasn't been my experience at all.
Can you clarify what you mean by this?
But as for preventing regret, my idealistic answer is that we don't need to prevent regret. We just need to prevent direct harm. If we're trying to prevent regret then surely marriage should result in prison time as well?
I'd say getting someone who is drunk to marry you probably isn't a good idea either, but marriage can be annulled, whereas "having had sex" isn't a state you can undo.
Maybe a pro-contact perspective requires a less casual view of sex? i.e. you'd need to know a child feels enthusiastic about sex independently of how his or her family and peers feel about sex, to ensure invitations to sexual acts are occurring for the right reasons (as I think all adults have some moral responsibility for the well being of children). Unless you argue that decisions made under peer pressure are reflective of a person's true desires.
The issue is that part of raising children is distinguishing between acceptable and unacceptable desires. Like candy, for example, if you eat too much of it you get diabetes, or aggression, hitting another child for losing a game is maladaptive behavior. Obtaining consent, when you are simultaneously responsible for distinguishing between acceptable and unacceptable desire makes things a lot more complicated, because there is a conflict of interest. Perhaps you would need a third party to ensure the adult that wishes to engage in a sexual act isn't abusing their authority to get the minor to acquiesce to sex?