Archive for the ‘Georgia’ Category

Sexting craziness in Atlanta

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

A sexting incident at The Lovett School in Atlanta is being investigated by police.

From vsbtv.com:

Police told Channel 2 Action News reporter Richard Elliot that a female eighth-grade student sent an inappropriate photo of herself to a male eighth-grade student, who in turn forwarded the picture to his friends. Investigators said those friends then sent the photo to other students at Lovett during the week of Feb. 22.

Sexting is when a kid sends a naughty picture of himself or herself to someone else.  Basically, the kid is victimizing herself by producing child porn.  The fact that the victim and the perpetrator are the same person is immaterial to a government bureaucracy.   They only know that the perpetrator must be punished.

Of course, the recipient of the picture is immediately in possession of child porn and, when he sends it to someone else, he is then distributing child porn.

Atlanta police are investigating whether any laws were broken.

Actually, what they’re probably investigating is whether prosecuting someone in this case is so stupid that it might embarrass the city.

When Elliot spoke to Atlanta police about the incident, authorities said that “every student who passed the inappropriate photo to another could be charged with misdemeanor child pornography.”

[...]

Sexting can result in charges of criminal solicitation and corruption of a minor, in addition to possession of child pornography. People convicted of sexting could be sentenced to prison.

Georgia complies with the 2006 Adam Walsh Act which requires juvenile convicted of sex crimes to register as sex offenders.  Misdemeanor crimes are Tier 1 which puts them in the registry for 15 years.    In fact, in Georgia, you don’t even have to be a sex offender to get on the list.

All “for the children“, of course.

Credit for the link goes to theagitator.com.

Women having wilder sex, watching more porn

Saturday, February 20th, 2010

According to a survey of 4200 women, they are having sex less often, but getting crazier when they do have it.

But, even more interesting is this:

For instance, around 76 per cent of women now admit to using porn – a ten per cent rise on the two-thirds of girls who admitted to watching porn with their partners in a survey last year.

I’ll bet the anti-porn crusaders would be disappointed to hear that.  And given their contention that increased use of porn results in relationship problems, they might be even more disappointed to hear that just the opposite is happening:

Last year’s survey, by website Netmums, showed more than half weren’t happy in the bedroom, but this year more than 60 per cent claimed to enjoy fulfilling sex.

And finally:

More than half of the women surveyed used sex toys in the bedroom to add a buzz of excitement.

I wonder how many of those surveyed live in states stuck in the Dark Ages where sex toys are illegal (Alabama, Colorado, Georgia, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas and Virginia).

Georgia apparently prosecutes child prostitutes

Sunday, February 7th, 2010

According to this opinion piece by Johnathan McGinty in the Athens Banner-Herald, Georgia State Sen. Renee Unterman, (R-Buford) wants to introduce a bill that would prevent Georgia from treating children picked up for prostitution like criminals and instead provide some kind of treatment.

Imagine your 12-year-old daughter has been kidnapped and, when she’s finally found, she’s been forced into a child prostitution ring. Imagine that she’s kept in a drug-induced haze and raped repeatedly. Imagine the horror, grief and shock that would overwhelm you and your family as you dealt with that situation, and the work you’d be eager to do to heal your daughter.

And now, in the middle of that trying and sensitive situation, imagine that the state of Georgia is labeling her a criminal.

So, the implication is that kids are being kidnapped, forced into prostitution, and when they are discovered, the state further victimizes them by prosecuting them.  Presumably this happens quite regularly since, according to McGinty, there are more than 400 child prostitutes in Atlanta alone, although the only case mentioned is from 2002.

McGinty describes why some oppose the legislation:

The current system, and the logic employed by those who so strenuously defend it, is seriously flawed. Rather than pursue justice against those who actually exploit young boys and girls, detractors of the proposed legislation would rather throw the victims in jail.

Yeah, I can see it now.  A child prostitution ring is uncovered and an angry mob storms the courthouse demanding the prosecution of the children and the immediate release of the pimps.

Mr McGinty needs to re-evaluate his strategy for conveying credibility.  This story doesn’t pass the smell test.

You have to love how both sides invoke the mantra “for the children”, though.  Of course, it’s not “exploitation” when politicians leverage off of children to advance their own personal careers.

Looks like a solution in search of a problem.  At the very least, Mr McGinty is probably leaving out some rather key facts.  I seriously doubt Georgia is prosecuting children who have been kidnapped and forced into prostitution.

And if Senator Unterman really wants to help children, she should consider legalizing prostitution, removing it from the shadowy criminal underground out into the light of day, giving those in the business an incentive to stay on the right side of the law.   When government outlaws consensual human behavior, they surrender all control over and visibility into that behavior.   It amounts to nothing more than a worthless  jobs program for cops while creating a fertile environment for corruption.  And because it makes one group of people miserable at the behest of another group of people,  it’s the definition of persecution.

Atlanta CBS affiliate goes undercover for ratings

Saturday, February 6th, 2010

In another example of how sex sells, a CBS affiliated TV station in Atlanta went along with cops under cover as they went out on a mission to entice guys into offering money for sex and snare women willing to have sex for money.

As is the case for all “crimes” when there are no actual victims to complain, entrapment is one of the very few effective strategies.  Of course, it’s not really “entrapment” according to the courts.   Entrapment isn’t legal.  No, this is simply deceiving their mark into thinking they are something they aren’t and then tricking them into committing an act that, while hurting no one, is nevertheless, illegal.

Yes, I used the word “mark”, which according to Mirriam-Webster is: an object of attack, ridicule, or abuse; specifically : a victim or prospective victim of a swindle.

Yes, conning someone like that is sleazy, but one must remember that law enforcement is one of the only professions on the planet where lying to people (ie: the folks they supposedly “serve and protect”) is not only practiced, but actually required. It’s all part of the grand scheme to elevate the moral environment of the community.

“We can arrest all the prostitutes in one night and that’s not going to solve our problem. That’s why our focus is on the customers of prostitution and not the prostitution themselves.If we can stop the Johns from coming to Fulton Industrial seeking prostitution, the prostitution here will stop,” said [Captain Wade] Yates.

I guess that’s why the story mentions that they arrested three prostitutes, but only one customer.  And he thinks he is going to put a stop to prostitution?  Either Captain Yates is a fucking moron or he’s perfectly content to spew forth bullshit in order to get some good airtime for his galactic sized ego (which, of course, makes him a fucking moron).