> > Strict liability for possession in particular is nonsense.
> I entirely disagree. Offenders tend to increase their level of offense.
For an example of unintended consequences of strict liability for possession look at Germany where the legal advice for what to do if you come across CSAM is to delete it and say nothing because reporting it to the police would incriminate you for possession and if you deleted a prosecutor could charge you with evidence tampering on top of it.
Also, as I understand it, in the US there have also been cases of minors deliberately taking "nudes" or sexting with other minors leading to charges of production and distribution of CSAM for their own pictures they took of themselves.
The production and distribution of CSAM should 100% be criminalized and going after possession seems reasonable to me. But clearly the laws are lacking if they also criminalize horny teenagers being stupid or people trying to do the right thing and report CSAM they come across.
> The appropriate response to recognizing these feelings is [..] to get them into therapy immediately.
Also 100% agree with this. In Germany there was a widespread media campaign "Kein Täter werden" (roughly "not becoming a predator") targeting adults who find sexually attracted to children. They anonymized the actors for obvious reasons but I like that they portrayed the pedophiles with a wide range of characters from different walks of life and different age groups. The message was to seek therapy. They provided a hotline as well as ways of getting additional information anonymously.
Loudly yelling "kill all pedophiles" doesn't help prevent child abuse (in fact, there is a tendency for abusers to join in because it provides cover and they often don't see themselves as the problem) but feeding into pedophilia certainly isn't helpful either. The correct answer is therapy but also moving away from a culture (and it is cultural not innate) that fetishizes youth, especially in women (sorry, "girls"). This also means fighting all child abuse, not just sexual.
> It's effectively the same reason we harshly prosecute people who torture animals.
Alas harsh sentencing isn't therapy. Arguably incarceration merely acts as a pause button at best. You don't get rid of nazis by making them hang out on Stormfront or 8kun.
> I entirely disagree. Offenders tend to increase their level of offense.
For an example of unintended consequences of strict liability for possession look at Germany where the legal advice for what to do if you come across CSAM is to delete it and say nothing because reporting it to the police would incriminate you for possession and if you deleted a prosecutor could charge you with evidence tampering on top of it.
Also, as I understand it, in the US there have also been cases of minors deliberately taking "nudes" or sexting with other minors leading to charges of production and distribution of CSAM for their own pictures they took of themselves.
The production and distribution of CSAM should 100% be criminalized and going after possession seems reasonable to me. But clearly the laws are lacking if they also criminalize horny teenagers being stupid or people trying to do the right thing and report CSAM they come across.
> The appropriate response to recognizing these feelings is [..] to get them into therapy immediately.
Also 100% agree with this. In Germany there was a widespread media campaign "Kein Täter werden" (roughly "not becoming a predator") targeting adults who find sexually attracted to children. They anonymized the actors for obvious reasons but I like that they portrayed the pedophiles with a wide range of characters from different walks of life and different age groups. The message was to seek therapy. They provided a hotline as well as ways of getting additional information anonymously.
Loudly yelling "kill all pedophiles" doesn't help prevent child abuse (in fact, there is a tendency for abusers to join in because it provides cover and they often don't see themselves as the problem) but feeding into pedophilia certainly isn't helpful either. The correct answer is therapy but also moving away from a culture (and it is cultural not innate) that fetishizes youth, especially in women (sorry, "girls"). This also means fighting all child abuse, not just sexual.
> It's effectively the same reason we harshly prosecute people who torture animals.
Alas harsh sentencing isn't therapy. Arguably incarceration merely acts as a pause button at best. You don't get rid of nazis by making them hang out on Stormfront or 8kun.