- Joined
- Jun 28, 2021
Then don't worry if it's gone.Nobody mentioned "seeking it out." The way anime is these days you might run into it by complete accident.
They're smart enough to become Democrats' choice as president of the United States of America, so if anything you're making them out to be less intelligent than they are. You can be evil and intelligent.I feel like this is making MAPs out to be more intelligent than they actually are, but they still deserve bad things.
Sure, I'd be lying if I said there's no risk of something like that (not to that degree of course, but I get your point). There's lots of games and anime I like that have some objectionable content, it's almost impossible to avoid completely. My favorite show, Dragon Ball, which everybody likes even if they don't typically like anime, has Chichi wearing this shit as a kid:I certainly wouldn't mind a return to older values in a lot of ways.
Just as long as we don't go too far in the opposite direction. You probably noticed that's a theme in a lot of my posts--I don't wanna wake up one day and find I'm suddenly on a watch list because I happen to have seen an episode of Dennis the Menace and some lawmaker declared it counts as Shotacon now.

Half the world would be on a list if the standard was "something creepy is in that media" was the standard, but pornography is where the common sense line can be drawn. Not Dennis the Menace or Dragon Ball, but porn.
Well, the biggest porn company on Earth disagrees. They broaden their market by getting people to cross lines. Ah, the glory of capitalism!I'm generally speaking about adults, who are not nearly as malleable as children, are generally set in their ways regarding sexual tastes. Adults may be willing to experiment somewhat, but people really do have hard limits and lines they won't cross.
I never said it was the only aspect, but for men in particular they're wired visually, so it's a huge component, I'd argue it's primary for men. And I did read it, it's a good post but I ultimately disagree with his conclusion despite him making some good points.There is a visual aspect to pedophilia, because of course pedophiles are attracted to children physically, but that's not the only aspect of attraction for them. Pedophiles have this entire complex surrounding their attraction to kids that's completely alien to anyone that doesn't have that interest. Seriously, read Secret Asshole's post that I've linked. He goes over all of this.
Uh...it means stick figures doing anything isn't considered particularly obscene by the average person, but as you include more realistic details the objectionable content becomes more obscene to people because it's more accurately reflecting reality.What does that even MEAN
This is why fiction can be disturbing to people, a lot of people can't stomach gore in films like Saw, but they wouldn't bat an eye to stick figures committing any number of atrocities.
Well, tell them that. It's not new, this dates back to the 70's when homosexuality was removed from the list of mental illnesses.Their disagreement isn't based on science, its based on politics.
Correct, but we have only have one direction. The anarchists think a good society is one without laws, the antinatalists think a good society is one where we die off. We literally cannot appease every vision of a good society.If you ask most people whether or not they want to live in a "good society", they would tell you yes. If you ask them to define that, they will give you a million different answers.
This was a Christian nation from its inception, people can try to argue to the contrary with misrepresented separation of church and state arguments and such, but any honest reading of history is clear about it. If people don't like that then they're free to move.
He can claim to, but objective reality remains. Gaslighting people into doubting their own senses isn't a viable argument, don't poss down my back and tell me it's raining.Yes, words have definitions. What YOU don't get is that an artist has the power to mold, redefine, and ignore those definitions as he sees fit.
If you showed hentai to a minor and said "ackshually this chick getting every hole filled twice over is a ball of yarn" you'd still end up in jail because we can perceive things accurately and have faculties of reason. You cannot dispute this, but you're free to test it yourself if you have any doubt.
It depends on what legal standard we apply, if liberals had their way they'd define it as anything wholesome, because of their inverted worldview. This comes down to norms & standards again, and we should apply traditional American ones as the rationale.So what is obscene Ness? What is obscenity? How do you define it? Is it based on what someone happens to find obscene at the time? Because that's not a real workable standard.
Agreed. A cartoon which should be banned, but agreed.The reality is that its just a cartoon. Period. End of discussion.
Stop. You know I'm not. I've made it abundantly clear. They're not real, but it's still a bad thing sexualize fictional children--not even CLOSE to being AS bad, but still bad. There can be such a thing as bad fiction.When you want to treat the anime characters like they're real children
Let's not get back into that, but I agree laws don't always serve public good in practice, by our own shared definition of good at least.Laws exist to serve the state Ness. And even if they claim to be for the good of society (Fugitive slave laws, Nuremburg Laws, etc.) doesn't mean they are actually serving any public good.
If you're conceding there's limits then you need to articulate why loli porn shouldn't fall outside those limits. Artistic expression isn't unlimited either, a man was jailed for a meme recently.And this is a strawman argument fallacy. Nobody argued that free speech was absolute. It doesn't have to be to protect artistic expression.
We know what it was traditionally. Now we have a confused, disordered, jumbled up patchwork of inconsistent and contradictory morals & standards applied all at once at odds with each other in a cacophony of clashing ideals. Our society is schizophrenic, and our legal system reflects this, as does the state of our culture.Except we haven't even determined what those norms and standards are, nor on what basis they should be respected, nor have we even established what objective morality standard we are even applying.
Is this what you want? Because this is what you get abd what we have thanks to your views, but in real life:
We wouldn't need a separate thread for that, it falls under the question of "Should lolicon / shotacon be considered drawn child pornography?" nicely. You're trying to erect barriers in the debate at every turn to artificially limit my options to just showing you studies that don't exist so you can "win".Except neither of us have presented any first amendment argument regarding pornography. And we SHOULDN'T might I add, because that would be off-topic. You want to argue for banning pornography under the first amendment, create a separate thread for it.
To different degrees, depending on what it looks like.People will oppose it, attack it, defend it, support it, REGARDLESS of what it looks like.
Again, that's not how debate has ever worked, historically. Socrates didn't get shouted down by retards screeching for cited peer-reviewed studies"Arguments made without evidence can be dismissed without evidence." You've offered nothing to support your points.

And when you say "prove it", I'll say "argue it". Because you can't argue in defense of your position, you run back to wanting studies. Guess what, it doesn't matter what the studies say either way, what matters is what makes sense and what is true, what you can logically argue. I give zero fucks what some blue haired tranny pedophiles conclude, you're free to value their findings and I'm free to reject them.So from now on, when you make a subjective argument with no evidence, all I'm going to say is "Prove it".
If you can make an argument for why or why "lolicon / shotacon [should] be considered drawn child pornography" or not, then do so. "It's art" is insufficient.
Nobody's talking about these supposed non-child lolis, so it's irrelevant.Lolis DON'T HAVE TO BE CHILDREN. Its an art style and an aesthetic, not an age description.
And you can easily tell that the image I provided is a drawn image of a fucking cat which quite accurately looks like one and resembles NOTHING ELSE but a cat, which is DOES accurately resemble. I never said it was photorealistic.You can easily tell that the image you provided is a drawn image, more than likely created with A.I. Its not a real cat, obviously, so it isn't 1:1 comparable to simply masturbating to a photo of a cat.
They are masturbating to what can be described only as something which looks exactly like a cat, but is not actually a real cat. The person cannot say they're fapping to an elephant or ANYTHING but what's anatomically accurate art of a cat.
Indistinguishable visually, as in, it resembles nothing but a cat, and does so very accurately. Such a person can reasonably be concluded to be attracted to the anatomy of cats. There's not a jury in the fucking world that would come to a different conclusion if that was illegal.An anime cat is not "virtually indistinguishable" from a real one, and only an insane person would think that. You said earlier, multiple times, that you acknowledge that artwork and real life aren't equivalent, but at every turn, you act like their equivalent.
False, she looks virtually identical in Dragon Ball as she does in Z, I posted images illustrating this. The only time she looks older is the end of Z & in GT, where they aged her up:Most actual adult characters look far older than Bulma

Bulla is obviously not an adult, Bulma looks like other adults but Bulla doesn't. She does look older than her canon age, which is actually 9, but distinct from adults in any case.Her daughter looks like miniature version of her. But that doesn't stop her from being, like 12, in Dragonball GT, and a few years younger in Super.

The contrast with any iteration of Bulma is undeniable, they look nothing alike age-wise at any point.
Disturbing as that'd be conceptually, the imagery would depict adult anatomy, so it'd be the lesser of two evils, but how about just don't include kids in porn stories or imagery? Is that difficult? Apparently so.So basically, what you're saying is I can write a story of a bunch of little girls who drink a magic elixir that gives them adult bodies, and it would be okay to show somebody fucking them?
I want all porn banned, so none of it is good in my book.Unsurprisingly their are stories that already do this, including a rather infamous hentai. I guess they're fine in your book!
She's not a real kid as an individual, but kids are real, so it's a problem to encourage thinking of their age group sexually, which this does.You know what Ness? I would find something wrong with that guy because I think Pan is an adorable cutie who needs to be protected. That has no effect on my feelings on this subject though. And I still acknowledge that, feelings about wanting to protect her aside, Pan is still not real.
It's not that you don't have to, it is that you can't do so. Your position is indefensible and uncompelling, so a ban should be enforced. If at every turn you are incapable of saying more than "it's not real", "cite studies", and "I don't have to", then society should just walk past you and ban it because your justifications begin and end at "it's not real".I don't have to convince you of anything
Guess what? We know it's not real. We still want it banned anyway. Or regulated, as per the poll's question at the very least.