williatw wrote:Diogenes wrote:I often have problems communicating because I am often unaware of other peoples lack of knowledge. It occurred to me that this may be what is occurring now.
In Legal parlance there are two terms which people ought to be familiar. "Dicta" and "Holding."
"Dicta" more or less means comments or remarks. It is statements made as a "non binding" opinion, and is merely indicative of the thought process used to arrive at their decision.
You guys are quoting "Dicta".
A "Holding" is the decision of the court in accordance with the relevant established legal principles.
The "Holding" of the court is that the "purposeful viewing" is legal.
As Judge Graffeo explains:
GRAFFEO, J. (concurring in result only):
The majority holds that it is legal in New York to knowingly access and view child pornography on the internet. I do not support this view and write separately to explain what I believe is the reasonable application of the relevant Penal Law provisions and the important public policies underlying their enactment.
Sorry Diogenes but I am still stuck on the idea that "looking at it" is the crime. Or perhaps I should clarify that you obviously think it should be.
What I think is that up till now, it was understood to mean that. The action of the court did not produce a null result. It produced an incremental change in the manner in which the law has been understood and how it will be enforced in the future.
williatw wrote:
The court begged to differ, saying the existing statute does not specify merely looking at it is a crime. He didn't buy, sell, produce, distribute, or possess the contraband material...he merely "willfully" looked at it.
It is another case in which a Court sacrifices the spirit of the law to the letter of the law. The court basically said that because the statute covering this offense did not specifically and explicitly say that looking at it was a crime (which had long been the understanding of legal authorities for decades) then they would not hold that it was a crime.
williatw wrote:
So if a buxom 15yr old girl sends/posts pics of herself topless/nude (15 is underage so "kiddie porn") on the internet at a website or facebook or whatever, any person who willfully looks at it as far as you are concerned is a ticking time bomb of a raging pedophile who should be tried convicted and locked up for the good of society.
Why must people push the narrative that their opponent is advocating something extreme? You are trying to put words in my mouth, and I am not going to let you do it. You have intentionally cherry picked your hypothetical to create the most innocently plausible circumstance of which you can conceive, and then you have insinuated that I would be in favor of an obvious overreaction to your relatively innocuous hypothetical.
This is intellectually dishonest, and if you don't know it, you ought to.
As far as I know, it *HAS* been illegal for young underaged girls to post or send nude photographs of themselves to other people. I have read several articles where District Attorneys were discussing this relatively recent problem because the law clearly forbids it, but the DAs recognize that this sort of thing wasn't what the law was really created to deter.
To my knowledge, this sort of thing has been previously handled off the radar by the discretion of the District Attorneys who's job it is to prosecute such crimes. They have sensibly refrained from prosecuting such cases and generally just warn these kids to stop doing it.
Anyway, your entire response is missing the point, and I don't think it will be possible for me to get you to really ponder the salient point. I think that you will have to learn what i'm talking about by going the long way around, the same as many others before you.
There are reasons why history repeats itself.
‘What all the wise men promised has not happened, and what all the damned fools said would happen has come to pass.’
— Lord Melbourne —