09-24-2009, 11:52 AM
The age of consent for sex for hetrosexual and homosexual people in the UK is set at 16 but there is now a call to drop this to 14 or 13 by certain experts and human rights groups.
what age do you think is right for consenting sex???
here is an Email I received from peterTatchell (Gay and Human rights activist)
It should be legal for children to have sex
BBC Radio 4:
Tonight, Wednesday, 23 Sep 2009 at 8pm
Repeated on Saturday 26 Sep 2009 at 10.15pm
Or, if you miss the prograame, you can listen online on demand via this link:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00mrd9g
Edward Stourton chairs a live discussion on whether we should reduce the age of sexual consent – which is currently 16.
Professor John Spencer, a Cambridge lawyer, is an outspoken critic of the law that prohibits a young person of 13, 14 or 15 from engaging in any sexual activity with a person of similar age. He says it makes criminals of nearly half the population.
He is supported by Peter Tatchell, gay activist and human rights campaigner, and opposed by Sarah Nelson, researcher in child sexual abuse at Edinburgh University. The third panel-member is Dr Trevor Stammers, GP and lecturer in Medical Ethics.
Peter Tatchell will argue in favour of a reduction of the age of consent. He explains his reasons as follows:
I think it is usually best for young people under 16 to delay their first sexual experience but those who ignore this advice should not be liable to prosecution and imprisonment.
Many parents may not want their children to have sex at an early age, but if their children do have under-age sex most parents would equally not want their child to be dragged to court, given a criminal conviction and put on the sex offender’s register, alongside child sex abusers - which is what happens under the present law.
Whether we like it or not, more than half of all teenagers have their first sexual
experience by the age of 14. They should not be branded criminals and
paedophiles.
Sexual rights are human rights, and they are not the exclusive perogative of adults.
This debate is not about child sex abuse or about encouraging young people to have sex. It concerns consenting sex between young people under 16 of similar ages, and how to respond to it. I believe the appropriate response is to remove criminalisation and instead focus on earlier, better quality sex educationt, to encourage wise, responsible and safe sexual behaviour.
If we want to protect young people, and I do, the way to do it is not by threatenbing them with arrest, but by giving them frank, good quality sex and relationship education – including empowering them with the skills, knowledge and confidence to say no to unwanted sexual advances and to
report sex abusers. This is a more effective way to protect young people from peer pressure and paedophiles.
Criminalisation inhibits young people from seeking safer sex advice and condoms. It makes some afraid to report abusive relationships. They fear getting into trouble because they have broken the law.
Sex can be dangerous and harmful to young people, but it is not always. At puberty, as hormones kick in, youngsters develop sexual feelings. It’s perfectly natural and healthy. Some of them quite innocently and spontaneously explore and experiment at an early age. It most cases this causes them no harm at all.
Early sex is mostly consenting, safe and fun. It does not result in any damage. If there is harm caused, it is usually not as a result of the sex per se, but because of emotional abuse within relationships, and unsafe sex that causes sexual infections and gets young girls pregnant when they are not ready for motherhood.
Providing it is safe and with consent, sex is good - not dirty or shameful. It is a natural joy, immensely pleasurable and a profound human bond. Sex involves intense shared fulfilment and human happiness. It should not be stigmatised, not for young people, not for adults, not for anyone.
Finally, if we want to review the age of consent law, we might consider the following modification:
Is there a case for having a stepped age of consent? This could involve having an age of consent of 14 or 16, but a policy that consensual sex involving people under this age would not be prosecuted if there is no more than two or three years difference in the partner’s ages. It is an idea worth considering.
Here is a link to the age of consent around the world http://www.avert.org/age-of-consent.htm
what age do you think is right for consenting sex???
here is an Email I received from peterTatchell (Gay and Human rights activist)
It should be legal for children to have sex
BBC Radio 4:
Tonight, Wednesday, 23 Sep 2009 at 8pm
Repeated on Saturday 26 Sep 2009 at 10.15pm
Or, if you miss the prograame, you can listen online on demand via this link:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00mrd9g
Edward Stourton chairs a live discussion on whether we should reduce the age of sexual consent – which is currently 16.
Professor John Spencer, a Cambridge lawyer, is an outspoken critic of the law that prohibits a young person of 13, 14 or 15 from engaging in any sexual activity with a person of similar age. He says it makes criminals of nearly half the population.
He is supported by Peter Tatchell, gay activist and human rights campaigner, and opposed by Sarah Nelson, researcher in child sexual abuse at Edinburgh University. The third panel-member is Dr Trevor Stammers, GP and lecturer in Medical Ethics.
Peter Tatchell will argue in favour of a reduction of the age of consent. He explains his reasons as follows:
I think it is usually best for young people under 16 to delay their first sexual experience but those who ignore this advice should not be liable to prosecution and imprisonment.
Many parents may not want their children to have sex at an early age, but if their children do have under-age sex most parents would equally not want their child to be dragged to court, given a criminal conviction and put on the sex offender’s register, alongside child sex abusers - which is what happens under the present law.
Whether we like it or not, more than half of all teenagers have their first sexual
experience by the age of 14. They should not be branded criminals and
paedophiles.
Sexual rights are human rights, and they are not the exclusive perogative of adults.
This debate is not about child sex abuse or about encouraging young people to have sex. It concerns consenting sex between young people under 16 of similar ages, and how to respond to it. I believe the appropriate response is to remove criminalisation and instead focus on earlier, better quality sex educationt, to encourage wise, responsible and safe sexual behaviour.
If we want to protect young people, and I do, the way to do it is not by threatenbing them with arrest, but by giving them frank, good quality sex and relationship education – including empowering them with the skills, knowledge and confidence to say no to unwanted sexual advances and to
report sex abusers. This is a more effective way to protect young people from peer pressure and paedophiles.
Criminalisation inhibits young people from seeking safer sex advice and condoms. It makes some afraid to report abusive relationships. They fear getting into trouble because they have broken the law.
Sex can be dangerous and harmful to young people, but it is not always. At puberty, as hormones kick in, youngsters develop sexual feelings. It’s perfectly natural and healthy. Some of them quite innocently and spontaneously explore and experiment at an early age. It most cases this causes them no harm at all.
Early sex is mostly consenting, safe and fun. It does not result in any damage. If there is harm caused, it is usually not as a result of the sex per se, but because of emotional abuse within relationships, and unsafe sex that causes sexual infections and gets young girls pregnant when they are not ready for motherhood.
Providing it is safe and with consent, sex is good - not dirty or shameful. It is a natural joy, immensely pleasurable and a profound human bond. Sex involves intense shared fulfilment and human happiness. It should not be stigmatised, not for young people, not for adults, not for anyone.
Finally, if we want to review the age of consent law, we might consider the following modification:
Is there a case for having a stepped age of consent? This could involve having an age of consent of 14 or 16, but a policy that consensual sex involving people under this age would not be prosecuted if there is no more than two or three years difference in the partner’s ages. It is an idea worth considering.
Here is a link to the age of consent around the world http://www.avert.org/age-of-consent.htm