DVS
A ghost from your dreams
- Joined
- Apr 17, 2002
- Posts
- 11,416
I've just started this thread for some conversation. I'm not trying to say anything has been done correctly or incorrectly by a judge. But, when you think about it, don't most crimes start with a thought? And while we in BDSM have our share of devious thoughts, we do our best to explain to those who don't understand that the whole thing is between consenting adults.
Jump to thoughts about murder, and other disgusting things that the guy in the article I've linked was thinking. If you see it the way I do, he was having thoughts about this act he seemed to day dream about, but what he was thinking about wasn't just kidnapping. He was thinking about taking it the next step and killing people, in a rather disgusting way, and eating their flesh.
His lawyer had argued he was only engaged in online role-playing fantasy on fetish websites. But, he also used the internet to research the best rope for tying up people and to learn which chemicals render a person unconscious. And he supposedly visited a street that was home to a woman he had agreed to kidnap.
Going to the extent of searching for and then visiting someone's address, Googling what rope works best and how to drug someone seems to me more than just role play on a fetish site. Maybe I'm wrong?
Getting back to the way we are in BDSM, kidnapping someone isn't out of the question. But, it doesn't seem to me that any of this was being consented to by the other person involved. Now, that could be OK, as long as he doesn't take it any further. But, what he was said to be thinking about next was to kill and eat women he had kidnapped. That's going a bit beyond just tying them up for some BDSM style sexual torment. Killing is pretty final. Should we allow people who have such vivid thoughts about this free out on the street?
There was no crime committed, the judge said. It was all in his mind. But, there is a similar issue going on in the U.S. about guns and mentally disturbed people killing people, sometimes, just because it was in their thoughts to do it. Do we allow someone who is mentally ill with violent tendencies to just walk free among us, just because they haven't committed any crimes?
There is a scale in crime. Stealing a car, burglarizing a home, these are crimes against property, and other than the property being taken, nobody is really harmed any more than that. But, when you go into the crimes against people...assault and battery, sexual abuse and rape and on to murder, those are more harmful than property being stolen. A life is forever changed, and in some cases, lost.
I'm no doctor, but to me, this guy seems at least mentally misguided. If I were the judge, I'd at least have the guy see a doctor about his unusual thoughts. I know it's a fine line to cross, but heavily researched and non-consequential stalking is bad enough. But, if he were to act on his other thoughts, someone would have been killed...and eaten.
Do we wait until someone commits such a crime, before we act? How would you like to be the victim that finally put the guy away, because he acted on his thoughts? If that's what it takes before we can act, there is something wrong with society.
OK, I don't know what would be the thing to do, here. I'm just thinking out loud. But, just like the doctor who has to keep his connection with his patient private, there still should be a point when he has to know the person's thoughts could become more than thoughts. And when that happens, people die. That's the argument with many of the recent mass killings in this country. It's always been someone who had misguided thoughts of some kind and decided to act upon them.
Is this guy going to be the same? Are we going to eventually catch this guy after he's cooked some woman and eaten her? And do we have no choice but to wait until this happens? If we decide to stop it before it can happen, maybe we've saved a life. But we've also infringed on the guy's right to think such thoughts up until the moment he acts them out.
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-28113850
Jump to thoughts about murder, and other disgusting things that the guy in the article I've linked was thinking. If you see it the way I do, he was having thoughts about this act he seemed to day dream about, but what he was thinking about wasn't just kidnapping. He was thinking about taking it the next step and killing people, in a rather disgusting way, and eating their flesh.
His lawyer had argued he was only engaged in online role-playing fantasy on fetish websites. But, he also used the internet to research the best rope for tying up people and to learn which chemicals render a person unconscious. And he supposedly visited a street that was home to a woman he had agreed to kidnap.
Going to the extent of searching for and then visiting someone's address, Googling what rope works best and how to drug someone seems to me more than just role play on a fetish site. Maybe I'm wrong?
Getting back to the way we are in BDSM, kidnapping someone isn't out of the question. But, it doesn't seem to me that any of this was being consented to by the other person involved. Now, that could be OK, as long as he doesn't take it any further. But, what he was said to be thinking about next was to kill and eat women he had kidnapped. That's going a bit beyond just tying them up for some BDSM style sexual torment. Killing is pretty final. Should we allow people who have such vivid thoughts about this free out on the street?
There was no crime committed, the judge said. It was all in his mind. But, there is a similar issue going on in the U.S. about guns and mentally disturbed people killing people, sometimes, just because it was in their thoughts to do it. Do we allow someone who is mentally ill with violent tendencies to just walk free among us, just because they haven't committed any crimes?
There is a scale in crime. Stealing a car, burglarizing a home, these are crimes against property, and other than the property being taken, nobody is really harmed any more than that. But, when you go into the crimes against people...assault and battery, sexual abuse and rape and on to murder, those are more harmful than property being stolen. A life is forever changed, and in some cases, lost.
I'm no doctor, but to me, this guy seems at least mentally misguided. If I were the judge, I'd at least have the guy see a doctor about his unusual thoughts. I know it's a fine line to cross, but heavily researched and non-consequential stalking is bad enough. But, if he were to act on his other thoughts, someone would have been killed...and eaten.
Do we wait until someone commits such a crime, before we act? How would you like to be the victim that finally put the guy away, because he acted on his thoughts? If that's what it takes before we can act, there is something wrong with society.
OK, I don't know what would be the thing to do, here. I'm just thinking out loud. But, just like the doctor who has to keep his connection with his patient private, there still should be a point when he has to know the person's thoughts could become more than thoughts. And when that happens, people die. That's the argument with many of the recent mass killings in this country. It's always been someone who had misguided thoughts of some kind and decided to act upon them.
Is this guy going to be the same? Are we going to eventually catch this guy after he's cooked some woman and eaten her? And do we have no choice but to wait until this happens? If we decide to stop it before it can happen, maybe we've saved a life. But we've also infringed on the guy's right to think such thoughts up until the moment he acts them out.
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-28113850