CZ:Start Article: Difference between revisions
imported>Hayford Peirce (Undo revision 100258198 by Jorge D. Velásquez Nava (Talk) that's twice this new member has added nonsense) |
imported>Dale L. Hileman (Life imprisonment for PC file?) |
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In defense of the moral relativist and to reassure my liberal friends that I am still on their side, and with the acquiescence of Opinion Editor Williams, I feel compelled to add the following footnote to his occasional provocative and thoughtful editorial reviling the evident upsurge in sex crimes. No doubt perpetrator Hansen needs some sort of counseling, but a life sentence for possessing a computer file? ('''Child pornography case goes to jury''' Feb. 8) | |||
Concerning ethical relativity no adult with an IQ of 70 or better should contradict Williams’ editorial stance on matters of obvious turpitude such as terrorism, rape, torture, and murder. But in quarrels more controversial (so-called “victimless crimes” by the community of the far Left) I have recently noted astounding diversity of opinion, especially in matters of consensual relations involving minors. In Utah until just a few years ago, for example, polygamy entailing such conduct was considered quite ok, even when the (female) “victim” was only 13. And there have been not a small number of teacher-student liaisons throughout the country, which on the basis of differences regional or even purely of judicial interpretation, have been denounced as heinous on one hand, entailing lengthy prison terms, or on the other, as a trifling lapse of judgment with a mere slap-on-the-wrist. | |||
Especially notable is a comparison of two cases from several years ago: In an AP story reporting '''Teacher receives six months’ jail time'''.... for a tryst with her 15-year-old male student, “...a tearful Hadden [the perp] apologized...,” while the Las Vegas District Judge [yelled] ‘How dare you? How dare you? [pointing his finger] at the wretched teacher and condemning her to [carry the conviction] like a scarlet letter,’” while “...the boy’s mother said Hadden had ruined his life.” | |||
At the other extreme, Pamela Diehl-Moore, a 43-year-old former public-middle-school teacher, was let off on five years' probation in a New Jersey Superior Court for the "lapse in judgment" (her words) that led her to carry on with a 13-year-old male student. However, the contrast is more vividly underscored by the Judge’s statement in handing down the sentence: | |||
"I really don't see the harm that was done here and certainly society doesn't need to be worried," he said. "I do not believe she is a sexual predator. It's just something between two people that clicked beyond the teacher-student relationship." | |||
Note that I am only reporting facts. The reader who is shocked by the evident disparity may be further upset to learn that in 20 states, no crime is even charged where the “victim” is 16. (The literate reader is invited to read at least the closing scene in '''Tea and Sympathy'''). | |||
In the first case cited above, might the reader not wonder whether the mother’s reaction to the matter of her 15-year-old boy might have been slightly exaggerated? The age of consent in Delaware and Mississippi, by the way, was until just recently, 12. In the notorious case of Mary Kay Letourneau, a married, 35-year-old elementary school teacher shocked the people of Seattle in 1997 when she admitted in court that she had had a liaison with 13-year-old student Vili Fualaau and was sentenced to a 7-year prison term. They later married. Her consequent serial pregnancies notwithstanding, an independent psyche study nevertheless concluded that the effect of this relationship on the boy not only was not only harmless but probably would have a positive effect on his sense of esteem throughout the rest of his life. | |||
Again, remember, I've only recapped various media reports. Of course even the most liberal reader will admit that Mary Kay's part in the affair certainly constituted unprofessional conduct. But would it be entirely unreasonable of me to question which party in this incident was the perpetrator and which the victim? Thus The conservatively-inclined reader should draw back a step or two and consider whether the tenets of moral absolutism ought not be altogether abandoned, especially in cases where no significant trauma is apparent and where individual reaction is colored by upbringing, tradition, ideology, regional custom, or religion. | |||
Dale Hileman | |||
Apple Valley, CA | |||
== A longer way == | == A longer way == |
Revision as of 15:48, 8 February 2008
In defense of the moral relativist and to reassure my liberal friends that I am still on their side, and with the acquiescence of Opinion Editor Williams, I feel compelled to add the following footnote to his occasional provocative and thoughtful editorial reviling the evident upsurge in sex crimes. No doubt perpetrator Hansen needs some sort of counseling, but a life sentence for possessing a computer file? (Child pornography case goes to jury Feb. 8)
Concerning ethical relativity no adult with an IQ of 70 or better should contradict Williams’ editorial stance on matters of obvious turpitude such as terrorism, rape, torture, and murder. But in quarrels more controversial (so-called “victimless crimes” by the community of the far Left) I have recently noted astounding diversity of opinion, especially in matters of consensual relations involving minors. In Utah until just a few years ago, for example, polygamy entailing such conduct was considered quite ok, even when the (female) “victim” was only 13. And there have been not a small number of teacher-student liaisons throughout the country, which on the basis of differences regional or even purely of judicial interpretation, have been denounced as heinous on one hand, entailing lengthy prison terms, or on the other, as a trifling lapse of judgment with a mere slap-on-the-wrist.
Especially notable is a comparison of two cases from several years ago: In an AP story reporting Teacher receives six months’ jail time.... for a tryst with her 15-year-old male student, “...a tearful Hadden [the perp] apologized...,” while the Las Vegas District Judge [yelled] ‘How dare you? How dare you? [pointing his finger] at the wretched teacher and condemning her to [carry the conviction] like a scarlet letter,’” while “...the boy’s mother said Hadden had ruined his life.”
At the other extreme, Pamela Diehl-Moore, a 43-year-old former public-middle-school teacher, was let off on five years' probation in a New Jersey Superior Court for the "lapse in judgment" (her words) that led her to carry on with a 13-year-old male student. However, the contrast is more vividly underscored by the Judge’s statement in handing down the sentence: "I really don't see the harm that was done here and certainly society doesn't need to be worried," he said. "I do not believe she is a sexual predator. It's just something between two people that clicked beyond the teacher-student relationship."
Note that I am only reporting facts. The reader who is shocked by the evident disparity may be further upset to learn that in 20 states, no crime is even charged where the “victim” is 16. (The literate reader is invited to read at least the closing scene in Tea and Sympathy).
In the first case cited above, might the reader not wonder whether the mother’s reaction to the matter of her 15-year-old boy might have been slightly exaggerated? The age of consent in Delaware and Mississippi, by the way, was until just recently, 12. In the notorious case of Mary Kay Letourneau, a married, 35-year-old elementary school teacher shocked the people of Seattle in 1997 when she admitted in court that she had had a liaison with 13-year-old student Vili Fualaau and was sentenced to a 7-year prison term. They later married. Her consequent serial pregnancies notwithstanding, an independent psyche study nevertheless concluded that the effect of this relationship on the boy not only was not only harmless but probably would have a positive effect on his sense of esteem throughout the rest of his life.
Again, remember, I've only recapped various media reports. Of course even the most liberal reader will admit that Mary Kay's part in the affair certainly constituted unprofessional conduct. But would it be entirely unreasonable of me to question which party in this incident was the perpetrator and which the victim? Thus The conservatively-inclined reader should draw back a step or two and consider whether the tenets of moral absolutism ought not be altogether abandoned, especially in cases where no significant trauma is apparent and where individual reaction is colored by upbringing, tradition, ideology, regional custom, or religion.
Dale Hileman Apple Valley, CA
A longer way
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