Message from @Xychotic

Discord ID: 599733216382943248


2019-07-13 22:42:30 UTC  

You're proposing a false premise and then telling me I have to stick with it

2019-07-13 22:42:35 UTC  

I disagreed with the premise

2019-07-13 22:42:40 UTC  

No, it's hypothetical.

2019-07-13 22:42:42 UTC  

so no I don't have to stick to the assumptions

2019-07-13 22:42:48 UTC  

I understand that

2019-07-13 22:42:54 UTC  

But I don't see the point

2019-07-13 22:42:58 UTC  

Its flawed

2019-07-13 22:43:01 UTC  

We're having a conversation.

2019-07-13 22:43:05 UTC  

That's the point.

2019-07-13 22:43:13 UTC  

Well whatever

2019-07-13 22:43:23 UTC  

Children don't understand the consequences of their decisions because they dont process things holistically and rigorously

2019-07-13 22:43:32 UTC  

But neither do most adults.

2019-07-13 22:43:47 UTC  

again adults are given many years to correct that

2019-07-13 22:44:05 UTC  

you cant compare a kid to an adult with many years of life experience

2019-07-13 22:44:17 UTC  

even high IQ autistic kids lack tons of skills

2019-07-13 22:44:18 UTC  

So children having a vastly higher obesity rate if their parents are obese is just because the children chose to?

2019-07-13 22:44:23 UTC  

Difference is, Children ***CANNOT*** where as adults ***Should've learned by then***

2019-07-13 22:44:32 UTC  

If we run with the existing premise that "a child below x years cannot be expected to give informed consent," then the laws as they exist now are representative of that premise.

2019-07-13 22:45:00 UTC  

I'm arguing that the laws are operating on the correct premise

2019-07-13 22:45:17 UTC  

even if the adults did not learn to act like adults, they have the mental fortitude to at least deal with the consequences of their actions

2019-07-13 22:45:41 UTC  

I'm not arguing that the premise is wrong or right, so much as it is satisfactory for governance.

2019-07-13 22:46:03 UTC  

children lack the experience and thus the mental fortitude required to deal with personal responsibility

2019-07-13 22:46:04 UTC  

ronin's argument was that the boy was consenting

2019-07-13 22:46:15 UTC  

I disagree

2019-07-13 22:46:22 UTC  

with that point

2019-07-13 22:46:29 UTC  

He literally participated and had his friend stand guard.

2019-07-13 22:46:38 UTC  

In the most literal sense, that is clear evidence of consent.

2019-07-13 22:46:54 UTC  

Consent relies on correct information. If were talking legal consent here then no I do not believe that is the case

2019-07-13 22:47:09 UTC  

It doesn't meet legal requirements and it's appropriate that the chick is punished because it's not like she can't be expected to know the rules.

2019-07-13 22:47:10 UTC  

By definition maybe, but that doesn't mean much

2019-07-13 22:47:32 UTC  

Consent without knowledge is just ignorance

2019-07-13 22:47:36 UTC  

Yes.

2019-07-13 22:47:39 UTC  

Consent coming from a 12 year old means nothing. It would be like assisting suicide with a depressed person

2019-07-13 22:48:15 UTC  

And accepting uninformed consent is considered predatory and that's why she's going to prison and being put on two life term probations and felt compelled to claim that she wasn't a threat to society.

2019-07-13 22:48:21 UTC  

Yeah

2019-07-13 22:48:34 UTC  

See, I'm not arguing the reality. I'm working through the hypothetical.

2019-07-13 22:48:42 UTC  

Because conversation and logical rigor are quite fun.

2019-07-13 22:49:15 UTC  

I don't really like debates for the sake of it

2019-07-13 22:49:29 UTC  

I've already had way too many and it doesn't normally achieve much

2019-07-13 22:49:33 UTC  

kids can never give informed consent because they cannot accumulate years of experience on a whim

2019-07-13 22:49:37 UTC  

I noticed. You just sat there and stonewalled and dug your heels in.