Blooming Personalities C/D 30Th November
Quizzes & Puzzles71 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by lou 26. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.jno - I believe that these people need severe psychiatric help. Not saying they shouldn't be punished but you've got to be mentally screwed up to do such a thing.
And - regardless of psychological damage - what about physical damage. Obviously that is not natural so I dread to think what harm they could have done the child physically - and it doesn't say whether it is a baby girl or boy (although I tended to assume a girl). I read about a baby girl in Africa who was raped and who was basically torn apart internally - in that country they believe having sex with a baby will cure them of AIDS!!!!
Totally sick. And a terrible decision for the Mother - not sure what I'd do in such an awful situation. Guess it depends on whether any physical damage will be lasting (the judge said the baby was 'reasonably well' which could mean anything).
Poor woman and poor child
I think don 1 has fired off an instant emotional response, and on reflection, I hope he will withdraw it.
It is impossible to try and rationalise such behaviour, but laws are what make us civilised, and the law must take its course in this case, as in all others. Thankfully, such incidents are rare, and we can only hug our children a little tighter, and thank whomever that it is not our child who has had to suffer in this way.
Why is the spokeswomen's [sic] comment 'breath-takingly stupid'?
Many people have little choice over child care other than leaving with a member of family, be they a 'close' member, part of the extended family, a step parent, partner or boyfriend. Knowing or being related to a person is not the same as trusting them. However for many, there is little real choice as to who they leave their kids with.
And of course, fathers, uncles, step-parents never abuse their children / charges, do they? It's always complete strangers.
I don't think any western society has developed a satisfactory way of dealing with paedophiles and it's time the matter was addressed properly.
Psychological treatments only work if the patient is willing to change, but how many paedophiles want to change their sexuality? Can our society over ride human rights legislation and enforce chemical castration?
Prison is a way of keeping people off the streets, but paedophile crimes are crimes everyone knows will be repeated on release, unlike murder for example, so does locking someone up for a few years truly deal with the problem.
We need a third way and a lot of serious thought needs to go into this. A civilization can be judged on its treatment of the vulnerable groups within it. Children are a vulnerable group and are not being best served by a system that would prefer to ignore, or underestimate the long term physical and psychological damage caused by paedophiles.
I don't know the answers yet and I don't think any of us will until this serious debate takes place and soon.
oneeyedvic - I obviously don't think everyone in 'that country' believes that kind of thing.
I put it like that because I can't remember which part of Africa it was - and didn't want to incorrectly quote. I was just trying to say that there was a kind of 'myth' circulating in certain societies that raping a baby is a cure for AIDS. Of course, most people are sensible enough to realise that this is not true but obviously some are not.
I was only trying to say that, as we have no such 'myths' in the UK then that is unlikely to be an excuse.