But if that happened on merely rare occasions rather than very rare, it would be. After all, most things don't happen to most people. But they matter to the people they do happen to.
Damn, how do you split hairs so finely? Do you give classes?
It's deceptively easily done when all hinges on say-so.
In which jurisdictions is smiling a crime? I'll wait.
Again, it's not about you or your shortcomings. It's about things like date rape and whether X was it or not.
Well, I'm pretty sure "smiling" isn't date rape.
What I am trying to make clear is that it can be described as such. And not in "abstract terms" or meaningless online wind-blowing, but in court.
You must be working from a very strange definition of "flirting."
What's particularly relevant about it is the fact that it takes no effort. Just flip those few words and say "I didn't like it" (or "He/she did like it") and all hell breaks loose.
No. Someone not liking something doesn't mean a crime has been committed, and it's disingenuous to suggest otherwise.
And I want to make clear that this is the exact problem I have here - that views on dating can so easily be warped.
Problem is, you are helping to warp them in this instance, acting as if dating is an impossible-to-navigate minefield where the "aggressor" (usually male) must watch out lest his life be ruined by some evil bitch who didn't like the pick-up line he used. Try joining us back here in reality.
Sure. But the law explicitly declares itself erring on the side of caution to protect those "irrelevant" people. When it factually does not, there's a crime being committed.
If you are saying that the law too easily lets sexual predators get away with it, then I agree.
The real systemic problem here would seem to be that you think solving one requires throwing the others to the wolves. That's not how law absolutely has to work - indeed, that's explicitly how law is not supposed to work. Yet it often does, because it can't get too casuistic and as the result sometimes has to ignore the rights or plights of minorities.
That's not what she is saying at all. Currently, the law overly favors sexual predators--the burden for bringing charges and obtaining convictions is very high, at least in the US, which is why the vast majority of sexual assaults never see a perpetrator jailed. Going too far in the other direction would, of course, be bad, but I've never seen
Emilia promote anything other than a
just system in which the guilty are punished and the falsely accused are exonerated.