You're dangerously close to going full ******. Never go full ******.If I take my wife out to dinner and she has a couple glasses of wine, and we go home and have relations, did I just rape her?
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You're dangerously close to going full ******. Never go full ******.If I take my wife out to dinner and she has a couple glasses of wine, and we go home and have relations, did I just rape her?
You're dangerously close to going full ******. Never go full ******.
The idea that it's not rape until the girl is unconscious seems pretty scary too.
Is the bolded part from the article?I'm just pointing out what this kind of legislation can lead to.
I get that it was enacted with good intentions, but excuse me if I don't trust the government, generally, to be sensible in how they apply these laws. If you're so ****ed up that you can't consent to sex, I think that can be established in a trial scenario, and you don't need to build a clause into rape laws that says "if you're drunk, you can't consent, and therefore all drunk sex is rape".
Is the bolded part from the article?
I'm just pointing out what this kind of legislation can lead to.
I get that it was enacted with good intentions, but excuse me if I don't trust the government, generally, to be sensible in how they apply these laws. If you're so ****ed up that you can't consent to sex, I think that can be established in a trial scenario, and you don't need to build a clause into rape laws that says "if you're drunk, you can't consent, and therefore all drunk sex is rape".
I kind of get your point, but mostly I think you are barking up the wrong conspiracy tree. If the law worked as poorly like you think it would, you would still have to have someone accuse you of rape. In your example, it is not likely that your wife would accuse you of rape. If she is that vindictive that she would make it up, then maybe she shouldn't be your wife. And if you really did force yourself on her (i.e. some sort of abusive marriage situation) then maybe you did rape her.
There are a lot of people in this thread claiming that they or people they know have a lot of drunken sex. Most women aren't going to just go cry rape if they have sex with someone when they are a little drunk. If they did, apparently a large majority of you would have been charged with rape.
The larger argument in this case isn't all that complicated. Very few people would listen to the story that was told by the girls and think that there is not enough evidence to charge those boys with some sort of crime. And if the burden of proof for charging people with rape is high enough that those kids weren't charged, then they need to look at it again.
There are a lot of people in this thread claiming that they or people they know have a lot of drunken sex. Most women aren't going to just go cry rape if they have sex with someone when they are a little drunk. If they did, apparently a large majority of you would have been charged with rape.
I understand your point, but I still think it's important to mention alcohol in legislation because there is a distressingly large segment of our population who think that a clearly intoxicated person can give consent. If you take that language out of the law, you've given those people more reason to believe what they do and make it even more difficult for rape victims to come forward.I readily admit that I'm dealing with hypotheticals that are very unlikely. However, it's my opinion that legislation should be crafted to not allow these hypotheticals any breathing room in the first place. That is all. I'm not saying there was anything consensual about this situation in Maryville, only that the Missouri law could pretty easily be horribly misapplied.
I never said it was ''OK,'' I am just saying it seems like a freshman girl who had the star senior eyeing her and wanted to impress. The kid was also 17, not 18. They were both in high school, which means they shared hallways, classes, and every school activity together along with everyone else in the school. Apparently where you came from seniors didn't date freshman. Apparently kids didn't have sex either.
You are not going to think about it when you are a 17 year old kid. Put yourself in your teenage shoes. You sound like someone who never partied or had sex in high school or you have completely forgotten what it was like to be a teenager.
You must have forgot what it's like to be a teenager, a little rape is just kids being kids.Wow.
I'm not sure how this all plays out in this story. I would imagine the male was under the impression that the female was coming over "for a reason", and figured that reason didn't change due to her intoxication. Again, this is all speculation, but I imagine things were said or done that lead the male to think he had consent. I would imagine subjectively, in his intoxicated, adolescent mind, he thought she was consentting. Objectively, looking at all of the totality of what happened, I think it is clear that she was not consenting and that is actions were, in many ways, deplorable. Where that leaves everyone under the current rape statutes, I guess I don't know.
I understand your point, but I still think it's important to mention alcohol in legislation because there is a distressingly large segment of our population who think that a clearly intoxicated person can give consent. If you take that language out of the law, you've given those people more reason to believe what they do and make it even more difficult for rape victims to come forward.
I've seen both sides of this argument play out in my college days. I saw one girl who clearly knew what she was doing and clearly gave consent turn around a put a person through a few weeks of hell with a sexual assault charge that was later dropped. I've also seen guys sleep with women who in no way could have formed anything close to knowing consent. I really do see the debate on this issue as crafting a law that attempts to mitigate against either of these occurances leads to unfair results on the other side.
My biggest issue is that a person has to know where they stand under the law. If you are going 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, you are speeding. If you get put a bag of weed in your pocket and get caught, you have possessed marijuana. I understand the law is often more nuanced than that, but a law-based society is based on the premise that people know what conduct is legal/illegal and conform their activities around those laws. The problem with ambiguous "consent based" statutes are that people often don't know where they stand under the law. If a woman has had quite a bit to drink but verbalizes a consent is it ok? What if she never verbalizes her intent but her "actions" imply consent? What if she has verbalized some form of intent earlier in the night and has subsequently become more intoxicated? Not to mention, many of these "encounters" take place behind closed doors, so while people could testify as to the state of the victim at earlier points in the night, the only people with any direct knowledge on the issue of consent would be the alleged victim and the alleged perpetrator, who obviously will tell two different stories.
I'm not sure how this all plays out in this story. I would imagine the male was under the impression that the female was coming over "for a reason", and figured that reason didn't change due to her intoxication. Again, this is all speculation, but I imagine things were said or done that lead the male to think he had consent. I would imagine subjectively, in his intoxicated, adolescent mind, he thought she was consentting. Objectively, looking at all of the totality of what happened, I think it is clear that she was not consenting and that is actions were, in many ways, deplorable. Where that leaves everyone under the current rape statutes, I guess I don't know.
The other problem that arises in this, is that if alcohol can override clear verbal consent in sexual encounters, where else can it override clear verbal consent?
As Clonefan32 states, these alcohol/consent clauses don't let people know where they stand under the law and where the line between "legal" and "illegal" is. On top of this, what if both parties are drunk? That is often the case in these situations. Do you charge both parties with rape?
It seems that there is plenty of evidence in the case at hand to show a lack of consent, and we didn't need that alcohol clause to do so.