Re: Game of Thones: 1x01 - "Winter is Coming" - Premieres April 17 on
Honestly, I think you're the one who's applying your sense of morality and ethics here. Whether or not Dany is a minor in that scene *is* an issue of modern, legal, cultural perceptions, which is why I'm not addressing it. Whether or not Dany is frightened and upset in that scene has nothing to do with modern legality, it's about the human emotions she's feeling, which might lead the audience to respond differently to that scene than they might have responded to the original, which shows her experiencing a different set of human emotions. I'm completely down if you want to argue it's skeevy either way, because frankly it is, but it's not a modern ethical judgement to notice a difference between someone crying and saying no and someone relaxing and saying yes. They're different scenarios in anyone's culture.
You're still applying your sense of morality and ethics and law to the circumstances. What I'm saying is that both scenarios are immoral. Are you really advocating that it's okay to have consentual sex with a minor? If so, good luck with the authorities ... and with the "court of public opinion."Pretty certain if you were that girl in both situations you would notice a distinguishable difference. I'm not trying to argue any kind of legal issue here, the point is there is a considerable emotional difference between fear and violence on one hand and relaxed acquiescence on the other. You don't have to come from a particular cultural or legal background to be able to recognise that these are different emotional scenarios.
Honestly, I think you're the one who's applying your sense of morality and ethics here. Whether or not Dany is a minor in that scene *is* an issue of modern, legal, cultural perceptions, which is why I'm not addressing it. Whether or not Dany is frightened and upset in that scene has nothing to do with modern legality, it's about the human emotions she's feeling, which might lead the audience to respond differently to that scene than they might have responded to the original, which shows her experiencing a different set of human emotions. I'm completely down if you want to argue it's skeevy either way, because frankly it is, but it's not a modern ethical judgement to notice a difference between someone crying and saying no and someone relaxing and saying yes. They're different scenarios in anyone's culture.