Um, Lon, this thread is not about child development....
Remember that in a second...
...itself and was never intended to be. Yes, it's child rape no matter what, no argument there. Even if the child were to say they were a willing participant it's still child rape as they're not legally old enough to give informed consent which is at it should be.
...see, this is child development. Or are you placing a greater value on human life at 5 than 22? If a child, 5 years old, hated his brother, got dad's gun out and shot his brother, meant to do it, was he capable of a fully conscious meditated murder? I'd say yes. He knew the basics: gun, bang, brother out of the picture forever....
Was he developmentally able to know what 'forever' was? :nono: What death means? :nono:
I don't believe there is an inherent value between a 5 year old, over and above a 22 year old (perhaps potentially, but that is a child development ('potentiality') discussion).
If you are stating that children inherently have more value, I can walk that mile with you, but need it demonstrated (else, again, a development discussion as to 'why' we do not execute 5 year olds).
Now, if someone advocates that a child as young as five should be tried and executed for murder in just the same way as an adult then they must surely by association believe that a ten year old is fully aware of their actions if they agree to sex.
Problem: In the murder scenario, just one. The trigger puller, no matter if the other is a willing participant (not part of this conversation and rare/bizarre). In the rape, two, because it advocates on paper that the child was 'willing.' The perp is an adult, and the child is the victim, so really, I have to assess again, there are way way too many differences for this to be comparable AND whatever the point, it is lost, gone, and perhaps meaningless behind all the mismatched data.
It's a complete double standard if they were to try and argue otherwise.
If the two synched well by comparison but there are all kinds of problems with the two.
In both instances they are children and in the latter a victim and the law rightfully recognizes that children can't be judged as adults and need protecting from those who would seek to prey on them too.
:think: This is back to developmental stages again, unless there is an inherent value in children verses 22 year olds...
I'm really not sure what is tripping you up on this.
The thread didn't start out clear and the metaphors are spiraling away from clarity. That's the part that 'trips me up on this.'