T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
58.1 | exi | TNSG::TNSG_P | | Fri Apr 16 1993 15:17 | 2 |
|
In a second, my wife agreed.
|
58.2 | | SCHOOL::BOBBITT | an insurmountable opportunity? | Fri Apr 16 1993 15:17 | 2 |
| yes
|
58.4 | ABSOLUTELY NOT! | STOWOA::RONDINA | | Fri Apr 16 1993 15:28 | 4 |
| No, I, too, hold my marriage vows of fidelity sacred, beyond purchase
power.
|
58.5 | maybe | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | don't look back | Fri Apr 16 1993 15:39 | 6 |
| It would depend on who the person to be slept with was, and I would
want it in writing that I would have half the money deposited in my
account.
Lorna
|
58.6 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Apr 16 1993 15:44 | 18 |
| I saw a cartoon the other day - had a couple coming out of the theatre just
having seen "Indecent Proposal" (in which, for those who haven't heard of
this, Robert Redford pays $1,000,000 to spend a night with Demi Moore, who
is married to Woody Harrelson.) The man asks his wife "Would you sleep with
Robert Redford for a million bucks?" She replies "Sure, but I don't think
I could come up with that much money."
I find it interesting that replies .3 and .4 suggest that marriage vows
impart ownership of their partner. They may certainly feel that their partner
broke their marriage vows if such a thing happened, but I find rather
offensive the notion that a spouse should be treated as a child. The real
question is what do the vows mean to the spouse who took up the offer?
Incidentally, the movie is reported to be pretty awful, though it stimulates
anew a discussion of the concept of "women as objects to be bought and sold
(or rented, as the case may be)".
Steve
|
58.7 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | don't look back | Fri Apr 16 1993 15:48 | 7 |
| re .6, the movie is not really that awful. I'd call it a fairly
pleasant love story. The plot held my attention and the acting was
competent. On the other hand, I doubt it will be up for any oscars
next year.
Lorna
|
58.8 | I sense things are being read into replies | VMSMKT::KENAH | There are no mistakes in Love... | Fri Apr 16 1993 16:01 | 5 |
| I read the comments regarding marriage vows to say "No amount of
money would be enough to persuade me to consent." Where's the
"ownership of the spouse" idea come from?
andrew
|
58.9 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Fri Apr 16 1993 16:03 | 11 |
| There is a pretty well known old "joke" that goes.
A rich old man asks the pretty young women, "would you have sex with
me for $1,000,000?" The woman answers in the affirmative. The man then
asks "would you have sex with me for $10?" The reply, "of course not!
What sort of a women do you think I am?"
Rich old man replies, "We've already established that. Now we're
negotiating over the price."
Alfred
|
58.11 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | don't look back | Fri Apr 16 1993 16:21 | 6 |
| re .9, and my answer would be, "Oh, yeah. Well, now we're going to
establish what kind of man you are. Ugly! The price is a million
dollars." :-)
Lorna
|
58.13 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Apr 16 1993 16:53 | 1 |
| Isn't .9 George Bernard Shaw?
|
58.14 | (Cross-posted from similar topic in =wn=) | DSSDEV::RUST | | Fri Apr 16 1993 16:55 | 52 |
| I'd have to establish some criteria before I could answer this:
A. Define "consent to" to mean "accept my husband's decision in the
matter without threatening to leave him, or hold it against him in
future, if he went through with it".
B. All sorts of caveats about health and contraceptive issues, spelling
out who was and wasn't responsible for what in case of accidents.
C. Take the money out of the equation entirely - to me, making such a
decision re my spouse, this wouldn't make a difference. If "it would be
just casual sex" for a million, why couldn't it just be casual sex for
nothing at all? [Exception: If my mythical spouse and I were
desperately in need of money, I would expect all other considerations
to fly out the window; but, to me, that level of desperation makes the
use of the word "consent" questionable.]
So. Would I ever consent to my husband having sex with someone else?
Well... this is where it gets insidious. If he indicated that he really
wanted to, be it for money or for jollies or for heaven-knows-what, and
if he still indicated that my feelings in the matter made a difference
to him, I _think_ I'd "consent" - but I have a feeling that I would not
be as comfortable with the relationship after that. [If I found out
after the fact that he'd had sex with someone else, it would put a
slightly different spin on it, but I don't think I'd up and leave
someone I loved for one instance of infidelity or falsehood, so that
might seem to be tacit consent, too...]
Another spin on the question: Would _I_ consent to have sex with a
stranger for one night for <x amount of money>?
No.
Even if I weren't in a committed relationship and the stranger
attracted me, somehow the very offer of the money would be such a
turn-off to me that I think I'd just up and leave. If I were in a
committed relationship, or if the stranger did not attract me, I
wouldn't be interested. [If I _had_ a one-night fling with an
attractive stranger and he left a million dollars on the nightstand, I
have no _idea_ what I'd do or how I'd feel. Hmmm. Maybe this could be
the start of "Indecent Proposal: the TV Series," sort of an updated
version of "The Millionaire"... ;-)]
I have no idea why I feel this way about the money angle. I don't look
down on people who would choose otherwise, or on people who _do_ take
money for sex (though if it's by necessity and not by choice I feel for
them); I just don't think it's something I would do short of grim
necessity, and in that case, as I said, it sure wouldn't feel like
"consenting".
-b
|
58.15 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Apr 16 1993 18:00 | 10 |
| Re: .13
Originally, with details changed, yes.
Re: .8, .10
I suppose it comes down to the interpretation of "consent", and perhaps
I put a different spin on it than intended.
Steve
|
58.16 | Perhaps. | DKAS::RIVERS | may this vale be my silver lining. | Fri Apr 16 1993 18:01 | 19 |
| Off hand, I'd say sure. But that really depends.
Looking away from all the legal points (who, what, when, where, how,
etc.), there's the matter of how this would affect my relationship with
my spouse. If sleeping with this other person meant that I would lose
my spouse, right away or in time, then it would depend on (here's where
I don the Cruel hat) how in love I am with them. How much would it
mean to me if I lose them?
That would have a bearing. If I was head over heels and could not bear
life without them, then probably not. If the understanding was that it
was 'just sex' ("it's just my body, not my mind," as Demi Moore says in
the movie) and that it wouldn't matter in our relationship later on or
that it would play a *small* part, then perhaps yes. If it had no
bearing on our relationship at all, then certainly yes. I could always
use $1,000,000.00.
kim
|
58.17 | Not a chance. | VICKI::PAHIGIAN | No such thing as too many cats | Mon Apr 19 1993 12:45 | 4 |
| Would I allow my woman to sleep with another man for that sum? Not a chance.
You could add as many zeroes onto that figure as you wish, because I would have
to find some way of repairing my heart, and as far as I know, such repairs are
not purchasable commodities.
|
58.18 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Apr 19 1993 16:35 | 15 |
| I think that I would vote that I would be upset with the origian
preposal if asked 12 years ago. Today, best said by a joke of:
"Would you do it for $1,000,000.00?"
"Yes!"
"Would you do it for $10.00?"
"No, what kinda woman do you think I am?"
"We know what kinda woman you are, we are now haggling over a
price..":)
|
58.19 | in a heartbeat, well maybe not ... | BRASS::KRIEGER | Think positive, make a difference every day | Mon Apr 19 1993 16:38 | 16 |
|
actually my wife and I had a conversation about this topic last
weekend. Understand now, she is not happy with her current job and
rather be a full time mom.
I said sure - in a hearbeat for either of us. With one night's "work"
she would not have to work for the rest of her life. A very crude trade
off but one we would at least think more than twice about.
Also keep in mind, my wife and I are very happily married and plan on
staying that way ... In a theoretical conversation we both say yes, but
when it probably came down to the "real thing" - one or both of us
would probably get cold feet or hurt feelings ...
tough call ... jgk
|
58.20 | Real Decent Proposal | MYOSPY::CLARK | | Tue Apr 20 1993 01:01 | 15 |
| Sure with someone would put a million on the table and test me. Just
think of it as how many years salary that represents to you personally.
If you make $30,000 per yr that represents 33 years + at your present
job. Or, it could free up 33 years of your life to do other things.
Since we all LOVE our jobs, fighting traffic to an from work each day,
driving in snow/sleet/etc. who could possibly even think of such a
thing? Be interesting to know how many who so quickly and righteously
say "No way" have already played around while married and didn't get
a dime out of it, while risking everything financially. We all sell
a piece of ourselves each day for that weekly paycheck and many of us
take a regular non-sexual screwing on a frequent basis. A million for
one night looks extremely tempting. Since it isn't about to happen
I will not lose any sleep over it. Not when Ed McMahon keeps telling
me I have a good chance of winning $10 million.
|
58.21 | | SMURF::BINDER | Deus tuus tibi sed deus meus mihi | Tue Apr 20 1993 09:46 | 7 |
| Re .20
Maybe some of the "no way" answers are coming from people who *have*
played around while married and have come to realize just how much they
could lose. Think about it, okay?
-dick
|
58.22 | As long as he doesn't actually love them, its fine. | ASDG::FOSTER | Black Feminist | Tue Apr 20 1993 09:53 | 14 |
|
Heck, could I have him do it 10 times?
All I ask is that he use condoms. I'm sure we could think of a LOT of
things to do with $10 million dollars.
My parents and his parents would be set for life. Our children's
education would be secure. We'd own our own home. We could have a
cottage in the islands for vacationing. I could open up a small store
or start a community center which actually had serious funding. He
could enact many of his dreams, and we'd still have MAJOR amounts of
money left over for our favorite charities.
Sounds like a serious win-win situation.
|
58.25 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | don't look back | Tue Apr 20 1993 10:44 | 6 |
| re .24, maybe some people just don't think sex has much to do with a
life long commitment. As someone already mentioned, in the movie, Demi
Moore says something like, "It's just my body, it's not my soul..."
Lorna
|
58.26 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Tue Apr 20 1993 11:10 | 8 |
|
My wife asked men if I'd let her make love to another man for $1M.
I told her heck yes!
Then I'd make him pay me another $1M to take her back :^).
fred();
|
58.27 | | SMURF::BINDER | Deus tuus tibi sed deus meus mihi | Tue Apr 20 1993 11:34 | 18 |
| Re .25
> "It's just my body, it's not my soul..."
Wedding vows in most Christian churches (and as administered by most
notaries public and JPs), if I recall, run something along these lines:
Repeat after me: "I, <your name here>, take you, <partner's name
here>, as my lawfully wedded <husband/wife/spouse>, to have and to
hold, in sickness and in health, for richer or poorer, to love and to
cherish, forsaking all others, till death do us part."
"Forsaking all others," Lorna. For some people, this means something;
these people believe that their body and soul are inseparable in this
life; that what happens to one affects the other. No matter whether
you (the generic you) believe this or not, you still have to look out
through the eyes of the body that is having sex for pay. You still
have to know that you are a prostitute, albeit a very high-priced one.
|
58.29 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | don't look back | Tue Apr 20 1993 12:25 | 11 |
| re .27, .28, well I consider this to be a matter of opinion. I, also,
think that it's a matter of opinion whether there is anything
inherently wrong with a person taking money for sex. If a person
doesn't think there is anything morally wrong with taking money for
sex, then that person is not going to feel that they are looking out at
the world through the eyes of a prostitute, whatever that is supposed
to mean. This is all just your subjective opinion, as well as the
opinion of certain religions.
Lorna
|
58.30 | | SMURF::BINDER | Deus tuus tibi sed deus meus mihi | Tue Apr 20 1993 13:14 | 20 |
| Re .29
As it is your subjective opinion. This is why I carefully qualified my
subjective remarks with "if I recall" and "some people believe."
But the part about looking out through a prostitute's eyes I did not
qualify. A prostitute, according to the dictionaries I have here in my
office, is:
OAD; a person who engages in promiscuous sexual intercourse for
payment.
AHD: a whore. (A whore is defined as one who engages in sexual
intercourse for money.)
W9NCD: a woman who engages in promiscuous sexual intercourse esp. for
money; a male who engages in sexual practices for money.
Whether you (the generic you) see anything wrong with sex for money is
immaterial. If you do it, you're a prostitute.
|
58.31 | | ISLNDS::YANNEKIS | | Tue Apr 20 1993 14:10 | 22 |
|
I'm with Lorna 100% of this one ... if a couple goes for it .. it's
their choice. I'm not going to sit in judgement of their values
regarding sex and marriage .. because I am outraged when someone sits
in judgement of mine.
> Maybe some of the "no way" answers are coming from people who *have*
> played around while married and have come to realize just how much they
> could lose. Think about it, okay?
Feels like apples and oranges to me. How many of these folks
discussed (with their spouse) their playing around outside of marriage
ahead of time? The proposal implied both folks knowing exactly what
was going on ... no sneaking around.
Greg
PS - If I had less bucks I would consider it (given a different spouse)
I know Emmy would shoot me and would never consider it herself
|
58.32 | | VMSMKT::KENAH | blah blah blah GINGER | Tue Apr 20 1993 14:36 | 6 |
| >As someone already mentioned, in the movie, Demi Moore says something
>like, "It's just my body, it's not my soul..."
Turns out she was wrong -- it was her soul.
andrew
|
58.33 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Tue Apr 20 1993 15:14 | 40 |
| Well, the problem's really not all that much of a problem if both
members of the married/strongly-committed couple agree on what to do,
or if both parties can accept the other's freedom to make choices, take
responsibility, and deal with the consequences openly and without
rancor (this last is, in so far as my limited observations of the human
condition indicate, extremely rare).
But what if one wants to accept and the other doesn't? Seems like one
might get into some interesting (though not very pretty) territory
here. If A thinks that one night of "it's only sex" is worth enough
money to make the couple fairly comfortable for life, and B thinks the
very idea is anathema, what happens?
If A is the one being asked to have sex, and A opts to go for it,
thinking it's perfectly reasonable, will B walk [and will B request
half of the proceeds as part of the settlement? In our next episode of
'Hard Copy'...]? Or will B claim to forgive A after all, and settle
down to a life of martyrdom? If A doesn't go for it, will A resent B
for (real or imagined) pressure to pass up the bucks?
If B is the one being asked to have sex, and refuses to do it, will A
(especially if money is tight) feel resentful? And if B does do it,
due to (real or imagined) pressure from A, will B feel resentful?
Martyred? Degraded? Angry?
There are plenty of other permutations, including "whatever A and B
decide at the time, one or both might change their minds afterwards,"
or - possibly more likely - "whatever they decide at the time, they
may be very much surprised to have gut reactions that are at odds with
their logical choices".
'course, it doesn't take as sensational an offer as the movie's
proposal to put that kind of stress on a relationship. And one might
speculate that a couple who couldn't cope with disagreements in this
area wouldn't be likely to hold up against more mundane disagreements.
But somehow I doubt the film would be drawing the same box office if it
were about a couple deciding whether he should quit his job and move to
Alaska with her to take up caribou-ranching.
-b
|
58.34 | didn't seem that way to me | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | don't look back | Tue Apr 20 1993 15:59 | 8 |
| re .32, well, I've seen the movie twice, and that was not my
interpretation.
I would say it turns out she had a jealous husband. Her soul seemed
intact to me.
Lorna
|
58.35 | Marital fidelity is a value | STOWOA::RONDINA | | Tue Apr 20 1993 17:50 | 12 |
| I am one of those persons who said "no way". Why? Because in my
marriage, between my wife and me, fidelity is a value we both cherish.
We would not inflict the pain of infidelity on each other.
When I think of faithfulness in marriage, I think of my father who held
strictly to this value. The result- a solid marriage and family life
that was spared from the consequences of infidelity. And that is how I
want to have my marriage. With so much now pulling marriages and
families apart, a casual attitude towards marital fidelity is not my
idea of a good building block for a secure marriage.
The above is not an opinion, but rather a value I hold.
|
58.36 | | RUSURE::ZAHAREE | Michael W. Zaharee, ULTRIX Engineering | Tue Apr 20 1993 18:19 | 5 |
| $100/night clearly sounds like prostitution. $1,000,000 for a single
night doesn't. Can someone articulate at what dollar amount
prostitution becomes not prostitution and why?
- M
|
58.37 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Tue Apr 20 1993 18:25 | 30 |
| Gee, $1,000,000 still sounds like prostitution to me. Perhaps it's the
idea of doing it once vs. doing it many, many times? Some of the
definitions of prostitution explicitly said "having promiscuous sex for
money," as if to exempt someone who just has sex with _one_ person for
money. [As in, perhaps, marrying rich? It's certainly been done...]
It's easy to see how someone might be willing to do something once, for
a large amount of money, that they might not be willing to do often for
lesser amounts. For example, would you permit someone to cut a pound of
flesh off of you for $1,000,000? Sounds like a fair deal to me - but I
sure wouldn't want to be in the business of getting chopped at
regularly. [Even if one could allow enough time to elapse between
episodes to, er, regenerate the missing bits!]
The million-dollar figure has a certain ring to it; even in today's
economy, it could, well-invested, provide a moderately comfortable
living for a couple of people, and if it were added to a regular income
(or two) it could provide many luxuries. Would a smaller amount induce
the same degree of interest? Would people be as willing to trade one
night of sex-with-a-not-necessarily-very-attractive-stranger for, say,
half a million? A quarter of a million? It's still a great deal of
money, but no longer enough to provide lifetime security, without some
additional income and/or a lot of luck with investments. How about
$100,000? It'd send a kid to a pretty decent college; would that be
worth one night?
For those who think they would take the $1,000,000 if offered: what
would be your cut-off point?
-b
|
58.38 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Tue Apr 20 1993 18:31 | 23 |
| > Gee, $1,000,000 still sounds like prostitution to me. Perhaps it's the
> idea of doing it once vs. doing it many, many times?
I would consider it to be prostitution. Would a first time seller-of-sex
on the streets be considered a prostitute? I suspect the police would pick
them up and charge them as such.
> The million-dollar figure has a certain ring to it; even in today's
> economy, it could, well-invested, provide a moderately comfortable
> living for a couple of people, and if it were added to a regular income
> (or two) it could provide many luxuries.
Of course, there may be numerous cans-of-worms to contend with. Is it
reportable income? If not reported, then tax evasion. If reported,
then you pay taxes on it and get much less than the million (assuming
nothing is done about how it was obtained - and I am sure someone in the
US goverment these days would inquire about the source of the new found income).
Winners of lotteries do not always seem to come out ahead, despite good
intentions. Perhaps getting such a large sum would create more problems
for the receiver than expected...
|
58.39 | .29 Superb! Excellent!! | MYOSPY::CLARK | | Wed Apr 21 1993 03:05 | 12 |
| >.29 Good answer to .27 and .28 whether they like it or not.
A new day has dawned. Lorna and I finally agree on a subject. Thanks
for the support. As to my price - prior to being married it was pretty
low. Yes, I have to admit it. I was a sexual pushover. Sometimes even
let some lucky woman abuse me for as little as a good meal and a few
drinks. Sure wish one of them had offered me a million dollars instead.
Economic reality leads us to compromise many values/beliefs so don't
get too righteous in your attitudes unless you have never compromised
your other values/beliefs out of economic necessity and common-sense.
|
58.40 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Que Syrah, Syrah | Wed Apr 21 1993 08:21 | 10 |
| > $100/night clearly sounds like prostitution. $1,000,000 for a single
> night doesn't. Can someone articulate at what dollar amount
> prostitution becomes not prostitution and why?
Perhaps there is no accurate term in the english language to describe a
one night stand for $1M. It is clearly different than the garden variety
of prostitution, where a series of couplings or sex acts occurs with an
assortment of strangers. Indeed, it is as close to marrying someone for
their ability to provide materially (as opposed to romantically/emotionally)
as it is to prostitution...
|
58.41 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Apr 21 1993 10:47 | 11 |
| re .38:
>Of course, there may be numerous cans-of-worms to contend with. Is it
>reportable income? If not reported, then tax evasion. If reported,
>then you pay taxes on it and get much less than the million (assuming
>nothing is done about how it was obtained - and I am sure someone in the
>US goverment these days would inquire about the source of the new found income).
There is legal prostitution in at least one state. The Feds have no reason
to complain. Of course, if there's a state income tax, they may share
information with the state authorities. The movie wasn't set in NH, was it?
|
58.42 | | SMURF::BINDER | That's Petite Sirah, sirrah! | Wed Apr 21 1993 10:52 | 8 |
| Re .40
Actually, there is a term in English to describe a one-night stand for
a million dollars. It's "greed." If you wouldn't do it for $100, or
for $1,000, then doing it for $1,000,000 is a response based solely on
the amount of money involved, and that, IMHO, is greed. YMMV.
1/2 :-)
|
58.43 | I disagree | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | don't look back | Wed Apr 21 1993 11:19 | 19 |
| re .42, I don't think participating in a 1 night stand is "greed." I
would simply consider it completion of a contract. Why is it greed?
To me "greed" pertains to trying to get more than what you have coming
to you. For example, if my husband (pretend I have one) and I were
offered 1 million dollars for me to spend the night with Robert
Redford, and we agreed to this, my husband would be expecting me to
share the million dollars with him. But, if I took off the next day,
and told my husband that he was out of luck, I was keeping the money
for myself, and wasn't going to share it with him, then *that* would be
greed, because I would, out of greed, have decided not to share with
him as we had first agreed to. But, if I went back the next day and
shared the money with my husband, as agreed, it wouldn't be a case of
greed. It would have been accepting payment for services rendered.
Since when is that greed? There are people who earn over a million
dollars a year on their jobs. Is that greed? Bob Palmer makes a lot
more money than you or I do. Is that greed?
Lorna
|
58.44 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Wed Apr 21 1993 11:38 | 10 |
| Oh, I think .42 rates a full smiley, not a half-smiley. Heck, how many
of us would be doing our jobs if we weren't being paid at a certain
level? Some of us like our work enough that we might do it for _less_,
but if the money dropped below a certain point (such as "enough to buy
food") we might opt for more lucrative positions picking cabbages or
something. Is that greed? Is anything above subsistence level greed?
[Note: I believe there are some philosophies in which the answer is
'yes', but, as Dick said, YMMV.]
-b
|
58.45 | | SMURF::BINDER | Deus tuus tibi sed deus meus mihi | Wed Apr 21 1993 11:57 | 8 |
| Re .44
Yes, Beth, and then there are those who would quit a job - and have
done so - to take a lesser-paying position with conditions more to
their liking. I did it once, don't know if I could afford to again,
though. :-) (Full smiley, okay?)
-dick
|
58.46 | | BLUMON::QUAYLE | fries *my* clams | Wed Apr 21 1993 12:39 | 1 |
| No, nor would I do so.
|
58.47 | exit | 11SRUS::BROWN | On time or else... | Wed Apr 21 1993 13:05 | 19 |
|
.37
I liked the juxtaposition of:
"would you permit someone to cut a pound of flesh off"
and, later on,
"cut-off point"
=8^o
As to the question, no (not that it's *my* choice anyway).
Not necessarily because I'm on a moral high horse, but
there are too many risks concerning love, commitment, health,
and safety.
Ron
|
58.48 | No (IGHW) | QETOO::SCARDIGNO | God is my refuge | Wed Apr 21 1993 14:06 | 20 |
| > Men: Would you consent to your wife sleeping with (that means "sex
> with") another man, one night, for a sum of $1,000,000.
No.
re: .47
> As to the question, no (not that it's *my* choice anyway).
> Not necessarily because I'm on a moral high horse, but
> there are too many risks concerning love, commitment, health,
> and safety.
Ron,
Good reasons! But, why would you feel you're "on a moral high
horse"? There is great freedom in doing what's right in God's
eyes. If you live by God's word, you and your spouse don't
own your bodies (sexually)... your spouse does.
Steve
|
58.49 | "Company, dismount!" | 11SRUS::BROWN | On time or else... | Wed Apr 21 1993 15:41 | 13 |
|
re: .48
I was just trying to convey that this was simply my choice
and that I was not trying to invalidate anyone else's choice
in the string. I tend to use disclaimers liberally, being a
"see both sides" type of person on most issues. As for the
basis of my ethics, I'm somewhere between atheista and
agnostic with enough Taoist thrown in to make things interesting.
Glad you liked the reasons -- they've stood us in good stead for
the last 17 years.
Ron
|
58.50 | We'd go for it ... | GRANPA::TTAYLOR | undercover angel | Thu Apr 22 1993 17:05 | 6 |
| My husband and I both agreed I'd take the 1 mil. NOw the question is,
who would offer it to me ....
just kidding, but serious at the same time!
Tammi
|
58.51 | Light suddenly dawns! | SMURF::BINDER | Deus tuus tibi sed deus meus mihi | Thu Apr 22 1993 17:14 | 9 |
| It just occurred to me that anyone who has enough money that *he could
easily offer a million bucks for a one-nighter is rich enough that a
million doesn't make any difference, and it might just as well be $10.
Which means, if you think it through, that all you are to the buyer is
a cheap whore. I don't think I'd like thinking about myself that way,
not even for a million bucks, so it does (for me) definitely become a
question of my soul *and* my body.
-dick
|
58.52 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Que Syrah, Syrah | Fri Apr 23 1993 08:14 | 5 |
| > Which means, if you think it through, that all you are to the buyer is
> a cheap whore.
And the buyer is nothing more than a dumb bastard with more money than brains.
So what?
|
58.53 | $1 million !!!! - take me, I'm all yours | GYMAC::PNEAL | | Fri Apr 23 1993 08:32 | 9 |
| Re.51
Not strictly true. It's a question of utility.
We all compromise our moral values at some point in our lives - the only
questions are 'what's the price ?' and 'what do I gain ?'.
- Paul.
|
58.55 | | NITTY::DIERCKS | We will have Peace! We must!!!! | Fri Apr 23 1993 10:06 | 6 |
|
Gee whiz, I don't know 'bout the rest of you, but when reply 54 is on
my screen, it kind glows with a holy radiance.
8-) (kind of)
|
58.57 | i heard heavenly music coming from my screen | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | blue windows behind the stars | Fri Apr 23 1993 10:57 | 8 |
| re .56, in .54, you don't state simply that you wouldn't compromise
your marriage vows. You state that you never compromise your moral
values. There are very few people who manage to live their entire
lives without ever compromising their moral values, so when someone
makes such a statement it's possible to raise a few eyebrows.
Lorna
|
58.59 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Fri Apr 23 1993 11:12 | 6 |
|
re ::sthilarid ::binder
So?
fred();
|
58.61 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Fri Apr 23 1993 11:18 | 13 |
| For survival of myself or one of my close family I would consider
an offer of that sort. Otherwise it would be uninteresting. Ten dollars
would provide for another day and another chance; a million would
provide for a few more days. An infinite amount of money doesn't
guarantee you will live forever.
Of course, if it got to the point where my wife or myself needed
money to survive we would probably be too emaciated to be of sexual
interest to anyone, however perverted ;-)
Both my parents took early retirement (my mother had to fight for
it for 3 years) because they thought they had enough money for the rest
of their lives.
|
58.62 | Different people have different moral standards. | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Fri Apr 23 1993 11:29 | 4 |
| The Marquis de Sade spent most of his life in prison because he
refused to compromise his moral standards. You should try reading one
of his books. He would not only have accepted the million dollars, he
would have volunteered to assist or participate.
|
58.64 | | CALS::DESELMS | Opera r�lz | Fri Apr 23 1993 11:54 | 10 |
| OK, how about a twist for folks that say they would not do it:
Would you allow your spouse to sleep with someone else for a million
dollars if you and your spouse would magically forget about the whole
thing as soon as the deed is done, and both of you would be suprised the
next morning to find a bag of money sitting on your doorstep?
No guilt, no jealousy, no feeling like a prostitute, just a pile of money.
- Jim
|
58.66 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Apr 23 1993 12:10 | 21 |
| Re: .64
Your question reminds me of an episode of the newer "Twilight Zone" series
from the mid 80's. A couple was approached by a man who gave them a box
with a push-button (under a cover) and a proposition. If in the next 24
hours, they pushed the button, someone "they didn't even know" would die,
but they would receive a million dollars. At the end, they went ahead
and pushed the button. Instantly the man appeared, said the money would
be deposited in their account, and started to take the box away. The wife
then asked what he was going to do with the box, to which he replied "I'm
going to give it to someone you don't even know..."
Regarding the base note question - my wife and I discussed this a few days
ago and we agreed that no amount of money offered would cause us to accept
the proposal. We were very deliberate about what promises we made to each
other when we married, having written our own vows, and accepting the
proposal would be an abrogation of them. Other couples certainly might
feel different about it.
Steve
|
58.70 | Ribbons | SALEM::GILMAN | | Fri Apr 23 1993 12:51 | 10 |
| Re.....a few back. Wouldn't compromise moral standards etc.
Geez. Can't the guy state his position without you people tearing him
to ribbons for taking a stand? I don't believe anybody can go an
entire lifetime without committing some moral goofs, (I thought it
was Christ who was the only one who managed to do that). But I do
respect people for TRYING.
Jeff
|
58.71 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Fri Apr 23 1993 12:57 | 3 |
| re:.61
Good point. I would sleep with Demi Moore, too, if I had to. ;')
|
58.72 | | NITTY::DIERCKS | We will have Peace! We must!!!! | Fri Apr 23 1993 13:30 | 5 |
|
Hell, Mike, for a million bucks even I would! (sleep with Demi Moore).
GJD
|
58.73 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Fri Apr 23 1993 13:38 | 5 |
| re .72
It'd probably take about that much to repair the damage that Bruce
would do :^).
f();
|
58.74 | | PCCAD::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Purfekchun | Fri Apr 23 1993 15:42 | 8 |
|
This question has leaned heavily on the wives sleeping with Robert
Redford for a million. How about the men sleeping with Demi Moore for
a million ? How many of you think your wives could be convinced to let
you ? I bet many of you would do it for a lot less than a million too.
Jim
|
58.75 | | SOLVIT::SOULE | Pursuing Synergy... | Fri Apr 23 1993 16:04 | 7 |
| For some of us, even if our wives said "yes, go ahead...", we still
would NOT do it... If you can't understand this, it's too bad. In
a sense it would be like asking Jerry Beeler what his price would be to
sell out his country. Picking yourself up off the deck would most
likely be required...
|
58.76 | | PCCAD::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Purfekchun | Fri Apr 23 1993 16:24 | 8 |
| RE:75
Well neither would I, but I'd still break out in a sweat and have a lump
in my throat as I turned her offer down.
I didn't turn to stone as soon as I took my vows.
Jim
|
58.77 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Que Syrah, Syrah | Fri Apr 23 1993 16:35 | 3 |
| > I didn't turn to stone as soon as I took my vows.
Well, not all of you. ;-)
|
58.78 | YA Sure you wouldn't | WMOIS::MALLETTE_P | | Fri Apr 23 1993 16:37 | 11 |
| I have been reading this string with amazement, laughter and
unbelivability... I really don't think ANYONE that claims they would
answer "NO" to this proposal, really knows what they would do, IF they
were presented with this offer and they KNEW it was legit. $1,000,000,
even today, is a LOT of dinero!!!
Make all the claims you'ld like, but you'll never really know WHAT YOU
would do until someone makes the offer, THE REAL OFFER not this
HYPOTHETICAL "WHAT WOULD YOU DO" we have here.
pm
|
58.79 | | SOLVIT::SOULE | Pursuing Synergy... | Fri Apr 23 1993 16:45 | 4 |
| .76> I didn't turn to stone as soon as I took my vows.
Nor me but I try to make my commitment "rock-solid" and in doing so
my wife and I have achieved something that money can't buy...
|
58.80 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Apr 23 1993 16:56 | 15 |
| Re: .78
Snicker all you like, but this is something that means more to me than
money. After all, I'd have to live with what I'd done for the rest of
my life.
I suspect that many who answer "No way" have had to face the issue of
infidelity before, either their own or their spouse's. It's sort of like
divorce - you have no clue what it's like until you've been through it.
If I were single and uncommitted, my answer might be different. (And I might
not even charge, though I'm not really excited by the thought of what
is essentially a passionless coupling.)
Steve
|
58.81 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Fri Apr 23 1993 17:06 | 33 |
| RE: .66 Steve Lionel
>Your question reminds me of an episode of the newer "Twilight Zone" series
>from the mid 80's. A couple was approached by a man who gave them a box
>with a push-button (under a cover) and a proposition. If in the next 24
>hours, they pushed the button, someone "they didn't even know" would die,
>but they would receive a million dollars. At the end, they went ahead
>and pushed the button. Instantly the man appeared, said the money would
>be deposited in their account, and started to take the box away. The wife
>then asked what he was going to do with the box, to which he replied "I'm
>going to give it to someone you don't even know..."
This reminds *me* of a 30-minute movie (I think it was) on cable - it
was called "The Heart of the Deal." A man was approached and offered
tens of millions of dollars (or some very large sum of money) for his
WIFE'S heart. Her blood type, etc. made her the only one who matched
a special heart transplant recipient who was the child of a very rich
and powerful person.
At first, he flatly refused. Then he was shown the amount of money
and reminded of all the good he could do with it, etc. They also
knew that his marriage wasn't that great and reminded him of some
not-wonderful things his wife had done. He still wasn't going for
it. Then his wife came home and went into the kitchen. While she
was on the phone, the people told the husband "Ok, never mind.
We'll get someone else" (or some such) and he stopped them from
leaving. He finally agreed to do it (and signed the paper.)
They called the wife into the room - and told her he had signed.
She said - "Ok, take him." (I guess they just needed to show her
that HE would be willing to sign away HER heart if he were the one
being offered the money, so she went for the deal to give HIS heart
to the child.) :-]
|
58.82 | Where is your treasure? | QETOO::SCARDIGNO | God is my refuge | Fri Apr 23 1993 17:06 | 14 |
| RE: .78 (I think)
> Make all the claims you'ld like, but you'll never really know WHAT YOU
> would do until someone makes the offer, THE REAL OFFER not this
> HYPOTHETICAL "WHAT WOULD YOU DO" we have here.
I boils down to where your treasure is... if it's here on
earth, it's $, etc. If it's in heaven, $ and everything else
don't matter... it'll all burn in the end anyway.
Steve
PS- Yeah, if you don't know how you'd answer in your mind now,
you could "fall" for anything when it really happens.
|
58.83 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Fri Apr 23 1993 17:24 | 12 |
| Re .78: Uh, so what's your point? That we shouldn't speculate? Heck, we
talk about LOTS of things as hypothetical cases...
'sides, isn't it also possible that some of the folks who say they
_would_ accept might think otherwise if/when such an offer was made?
[I find it an interesting observation that some people honestly believe
that anybody would do anything for enough money - and equally
interesting that some folks find this attitude surprising. Gee, you'd
think we were all _different_ or something.]
-b
|
58.84 | | ISLNDS::YANNEKIS | | Fri Apr 23 1993 17:30 | 6 |
|
re. 81 "Heart of a Deal"
That's great .. sounds like a modern "Hitcock Presnts" ... his
half-hour TV show.
|
58.85 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Fri Apr 23 1993 17:39 | 16 |
|
"Heart of the Deal" (if I'm not mistaken) was a one-time 30-minute
movie (as opposed to a series.) I've only seen it aired once (several
months ago.)
One of the premium cable movie channels (I don't remember which one)
has "The 30-minute movie" as a deal where fledgling directors can
cut their teeth on a smaller movie that will still be shown to a
big audience. I guess it's kind of an apprentice program.
Some of these movies are pretty good. "12:01" was another one (and
its story was the same exact idea as "Ground Hogs Day," where a man
was stuck in the same time frame that looped over and over - except
that he was stuck in an HOUR, not a day. Every time he went back
to the beginning of the hour, the clock showed as 12:01. This little
movie was NOT a comedy, though, even tho it's similar to G-Hogs Day.)
|
58.86 | Yep | MORO::BEELER_JE | We'll always have Paris | Sat Apr 24 1993 02:26 | 29 |
| .75> In a sense it would be like asking Jerry Beeler what his price would
.75> be to sell out his country.
The amount of money necessary for that .... does not exist. However, as
history has shown the requisite dollars for one to sell one's country
can be surprisingly small.
.75> Picking yourself up off the deck would most likely be required...
This is entirely possible and most likely if someone who really knew me
asked me (to sell out my country).
I understand and respect those such as Mr. Soule who would resolutely
dismiss any offers of (what amounts to) sex-for-money - for *any* amount
of money. As for myself - quite frankly - I'm at odds as to what I would
do.
I don't put sex on a pedestal. I put my family on a pedestal and would do
damned near anything to secure their future .. and .. yes .. I would have
slept with another woman for the $1M - assuming my wife agreed. Would I
have agreed to let my wife do it with another man? Yes, if she wanted to.
She is very much a realist and would probably see it the same as I did -
an opportunity to go a long way toward securing a future for the kids.
My kids mean more to me than anything in the world. It's really quite
simple. A night of sex with another woman to secure my kids future?
In a heartbeat.
Bubba
|
58.87 | to widen the scope | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Sat Apr 24 1993 13:03 | 6 |
| RE: .86 Would it be different (from asking for your wife for a night)
if someone offered you $1m for a night with one of your daughters? I
suspect that even though our children are even more "free agents" once
they reach adulthood most parents still are more protective of them.
Alfred
|
58.88 | Yep. | MORO::BEELER_JE | We'll always have Paris | Sat Apr 24 1993 17:35 | 9 |
| Thud.
Yep - you've widened the scope, Sir Alfred.
My first impression is that if someone offered something like that with
respect to one of my daughters ... I'd resolutely and forthwith with
malice a forethought ... flatten the Hell out of 'em.
Bubba
|
58.90 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Sun Apr 25 1993 17:24 | 1 |
| Anyone notice how this movie is a lot like Honeymoon in Vegas?
|
58.91 | | PCCAD::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Purfekchun | Mon Apr 26 1993 09:40 | 12 |
| RE:79
>.76> I didn't turn to stone as soon as I took my vows.
> Nor me but I try to make my commitment "rock-solid" and in doing so
> my wife and I have achieved something that money can't buy...
I do that too ! My point is that temptation is real. If your not solid in
your belief that it would be wrong, you'll probably give in. The spirit is
willing(to resist), but the flesh is weak.
Jim
|
58.92 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | blue windows behind the stars | Mon Apr 26 1993 10:59 | 10 |
| re .86, amazingly enough, I feel exactly the way Jerry describes in his
last two paragraphs. (I don't think I usually agree with him on much.)
Except as far as my daughter, age 19 is concerned, I don't feel it's
any of my business who she decides to have sex with, or why (as long as
she doesn't get pregnant, or get AIDS). She's a woman and could make
her own decision. I could only hope she'd share the money with me!!!
Lorna
|
58.93 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Mon Apr 26 1993 11:14 | 3 |
| RE: .92 Why is it your business if she gets pregnant or AIDS?
Alfred
|
58.94 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | blue windows behind the stars | Mon Apr 26 1993 11:16 | 9 |
| re .92,
1) I love her
2) I might be called upon to pay bills resulting from either
Lorna
|
58.95 | | SMURF::BINDER | Deus tuus tibi sed deus meus mihi | Mon Apr 26 1993 12:46 | 11 |
| Re .94
> 2) I might be called upon to pay bills resulting from either
Devil's advocate response (not disagreement!):
This is a corollary of Reason 1, not a separate reason. She's an adult
and is responsible for herself. You might choose to demonstrate Reason
1's effect on you by voluntary assumption of bill-paying activities.
-dick
|
58.96 | True "Indecent Proposal" | WMOIS::MALLETTE_P | | Mon Apr 26 1993 14:29 | 17 |
| RE: 'sides isn't it possible those...might change their minds..
That IS my point, the discussion is great, but, you'll never really
know what YOU would do...
RE: .86 I agree...I also put my family on a pedestal, hence I would at
least consider the proposal. If my wife was willing, and I'm not sure
if she would be, I consider our relationship to be solid enough for her
(or me for that matter) to follow through and be able to continue the
releationship with the $1m.
RE:.87 Well you got me there, I'll assume you mean at her current age,
7 years young, There is no amount of money that could convince me to
even consider that. That truley would be an "Indecent Proposal"!
pm
|
58.97 | | SOLVIT::SOULE | Pursuing Synergy... | Mon Apr 26 1993 18:50 | 33 |
| .91> I do that too ! My point is that temptation is real. If your not solid in
.91> your belief that it would be wrong, you'll probably give in. The spirit is
.91> willing(to resist), but the flesh is weak.
"The spirit is willing but the flesh is weak" or "I'm only human" or
"In my heart I lust after other women", etc. Excuses for weak character?
You tell me...
The last quote has special significance for me. It was uttered by our
last Democratic Disaster in the White House, Jimmy "Bubba" Carter (Beeler
will now realize why I never address him by his nick-name...) in his
infamous Playboy interview. Well, as you can guess, I didn't think very
highly of Jimmy Carter but to give credit where credit is due he did help
me with my aspirations as to the type of Man I was going to be. I would
be a better Man than Jimmy Carter and that meant I would no longer lust
after other Women, in my heart or otherwise... So, what's it been like?
Without lust, I am free to love other people or at least find something to
love about them. You might say I have many more sisters and brothers then
ever before... The desire for materialistic acquisitions waned so the
need for greed kind of went away as well. What seems most apparent to me
is that happiness is a blessing you bestow upon yourself. If you feel
$1,000,000 is what it will take to make you happy, it ultimately would
never be enough. Same goes for $10,000,000 or whatever. I figure if
you don't have a lot of cash but your goal is Philanthropy, this is how
you do it... Now, I know I'm guilty of over-simplifying but I wanted to
take a stab at trying to explain why I or my wife couldn't be bought/sold.
Don
(I've said some negative things about Jimmy Carter but to tell you the
truth I think he's turned into the best Ex-President. As a rule, I think
Democrats make the best Ex-Presidents, anyway. If we could only let them
be Ex-President without having to put up with their Presidencies... :-)
|
58.98 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Nouvnote riche | Tue Apr 27 1993 08:23 | 20 |
| Jimmy Carter's comment about "lust in his heart" was perfectly
understandable in light of his Southern Baptist background. I always
took that comment as a reference to the passage in the Sermon on the
Mount: "You have heard that it was said, 'You shall not commit
adultery.' But I say to you that everyone who looks at a woman with
lust has already committed adultery with her in his heart." The furor
that Carter's comment caused always surprised me--as far as I could
tell, he was simply expressing an element of his Christian faith in
admitting that he, as a sexual being, sometimes felt temptation. I
never inferred that he was making this lust out to be a virtue, but
rather that he was simply admitting that he is human, and that as an
imperfect being he therefore is capable of having "impure" thoughts. I
am sure that, assuming that this is where he was coming from, he would
certainly admire and respect any man who can honestly say that he never
feels lust for other women. However, having never read the full
interview, I admit that I don't know the overall context of that
remark, so I am only inferring what I presume he meant, given that he
had identified himself during that campaign as a born-again Christian.
-- Mike
|
58.99 | | PCCAD::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Purfekchun | Tue Apr 27 1993 13:33 | 8 |
| RE:98
Mike,
I agree with your assessment of Jimmy Carter. Lust and being
attracted to another person are two different things. If I was
not attracted to women, I most likely would not have found my wife.
Jim
|
58.100 | THIS is indecent... | SISDA::MNMS::TREMELLING | Making tomorrow yesterday, today! | Tue Apr 27 1993 13:37 | 7 |
|
Snarf!
By the way, I'd like to think that in the real situation I would decline
the offer. I put a high value on my wife and family, and think of sex as
more than just a physical act.
|
58.101 | Infidelity occurs more than you'd think..... | GYMAC::PNEAL | | Wed Apr 28 1993 08:50 | 20 |
|
In the same Newsweek article the question 'How faithful are the women of
America ?' was raised.
Janus (1993) said 26% of married women have had extramarital affairs and
Cosmopolitan Readers Survey (1993) said 39% of married women have cheated on
their husbands. Statistically not insignificant. The report didn't say how
many men cheat on their wifes but it did say that according to Janus 10% of
men have had sex with more than 100 partners (!!!!) and the median number of
sexual partners was 7.3 per man during his lifetime.
That tends to suggest that not everybody (married or otherwise) in America
shares the same moral pedestal as some of the noters here.
The report also said that 1 !!! is the median number of times men said they
had sex per week - slightly more than once for married men - so the results
could also suggest...American men spend far too much time practising with the
wrong Gun (smile).
- Paul.
|
58.102 | Pedestals are built for different reasons. | SMURF::BINDER | Deus tuus tibi sed deus meus mihi | Wed Apr 28 1993 11:22 | 22 |
| Re .101
The only constant in this world is that things change.
One of the things that change is how people feel about their morals and
commitments. Two men of my acquaintance, both married, have told me at
one time or another that they have had affairs. In both cases the
answer to .0's question now, in April of 1993, is a resounding NO!
I spoke with one of these two guys just this week, and I actually asked
him about the contention that foreknowledge and openness might make a
difference. He said no, it wouldn't, because he feels after having
nearly blown his marriage away that that he isn't willing to tip the
scales even a little bit by introducing the chance for recrimination
later. He said that any kind of disturbance like that could open the
whole thing up all over again, and he won't take the risk. You don'tt
know how valuable your mate's trust is until you come a hairsbreadth
from losing it.
YMMV, of course.
-dick
|
58.103 | | ASDG::FOSTER | Black Feminist | Wed Apr 28 1993 11:58 | 12 |
|
I talked to a close friend about this recently. I sense that he was
highly dismayed that I could entertain the thought of sleeping with
someone else for a dollar figure. I guess he sleeps on a higher moral
plane than I do.
So: I add the following caveat. I would not do anything that
jeopardized my marriage unless there was something even more precious
at stake. And its unlikely that this would be any sum of money. I make
enough currently that it would be hard to tempt me with more. If I made
a lot less money, and had truly tasted poverty, I might be more
tempted. I don't know. And I hope not to find out.
|
58.104 | there's no moral high ground here... | GOLLY::SWALKER | | Wed Apr 28 1993 16:06 | 25 |
| I don't know about this "higher moral plane" argument. Sure, up front,
it looks easy: you compromise your values for a large sum of money if
you take the offer, and if you refuse it, you don't.
But what are the chances that over a 40-year period of time, you won't
be asked to compromise your values somehow to preserve your income
stream, the income stream that feeds you, sends your kids to college,
keeps a roof over your head, etc. It may be a little, it may be a lot,
but sooner or later, it will probably happen. And you don't really
know which values those will be. The fact is, though, that if you had
that large sum of money in your bank account, you wouldn't have to worry
about compromising your values to preserve your job; you would have the
choice of walking away or taking the risk of refusing.
So the question is, would you rather compromise your values on the
installment plan, or up-front lump-sum? For some people, that lump sum
is much higher than the installment plan could ever be, and that's fair
enough. But to pretend that the person who would refuse the offer is
on a higher moral plane solely by virtue of the refusal is a very
short-term view. On this one issue, maybe. But cumulatively, maybe
not. Would it be worth it, never to have to compromise your morals for
money again? Isn't that a different question?
Sharon
|
58.105 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Que Syrah, Syrah | Wed Apr 28 1993 16:40 | 19 |
| That's a pretty tenuous claim, Sharon, that not compromising your morals
on the "indecent proposal" isn't on a higher moral plane than compromising
your morals because of the possibility that over time there may be other issues
on which you may choose to compromise. Not only are we talking about a
situation in the present versus a possible, nebulous situation in the
fuzzy future, but also you seem to be assuming that the magnitude of
the hypothetical "other" compromises somehow adds up over time to be equivalent
(or even exceed) the magnitude of the moral compromise of the indecent proposal.
There's an awful lot of handwaving going on there. I am reminded of the defense
for Stacy Koon telling me that despite the video evidence to the contrary
there was no excessive beating of Rodney King.
I am willing to concede the point that one cannot make an assessment of
one's moral character simply on the basis of their reaction to an indecent
proposal, but I really think that saying that a refusal to consider such an
arrangement is ethically and morally equivalent to compromising your morals
is doublespeak.
The Doctah
|
58.106 | do you want to need the money for the rest of your life? | GOLLY::SWALKER | | Wed Apr 28 1993 17:02 | 20 |
| Hmm, I think you were reading too much into what I said. My point was
simply that I don't think that considering the "indecent proposal" is
the only form of moral compromise in the equation, and that most people
really don't weigh the alternative in terms of moral compromise (which
IMHO they should). The indecent proposal is simply the less socially
acceptable form of moral compromise, so it gets more attention as such.
I was making no statements as to the relative magnitude of the 2 forms
of compromise; obviously, that will vary widely from individual to
individual, and is impossible to estimate. My point is only that it
is nonzero, and that therefore you can't necessarily say that someone
who would not consider the indecent proposal is, in the long-term sense,
operating on a higher moral plane.
Moral compromise for money is by no means excluded to "indecent
proposals" -- any time you're in a situation where you need the money,
you'll be vulnerable to moral compromise.
Sharon
|
58.107 | LETS UP THE ANTEE | ESSB::PHAYDEN | VINCINI | Thu Apr 29 1993 06:31 | 13 |
|
What if you Husband/Wife/SO were offered $25,000,000 to have Homosexual sex with
another person ?
Oh yea. And your Husband/Wife/SO were agreeable !
After all it's only for one night and yours and your childrens futures could
really be secured with such a large sum of money.
Do your morals strech that far ?
|
58.108 | | UTROP1::SIMPSON_D | I *hate* not breathing! | Thu Apr 29 1993 07:22 | 4 |
| re .107
Your question presumes that homosexual sex is somehow less moral than
heterosexual sex.
|
58.109 | | ESSB::PHAYDEN | It's not how long it takes but how well you do it ... | Thu Apr 29 1993 08:20 | 22 |
| re. 108
Yes it does, and I apologise.
My intention was not to imply that one is less moralistic than the other
but to discover whether the other noters out there who indicated that
it would be acceptable for their partners to have hetrosexual sex for
$1,000,000 would view their partner having Homosexual sex in a different
light.
After all if one is Hetrosexual the thought having of Homosexual sex
is not appealing and (vice versa I'm sure).
For the record. I wouldn't want the person I love sleeping with anyone
else at all.
You'd never know they might get to like it...
Peter.
|
58.110 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Go�t de M�doc | Thu Apr 29 1993 08:41 | 5 |
| >therefore you can't necessarily say that someone
> who would not consider the indecent proposal is, in the long-term sense,
> operating on a higher moral plane.
Well, yeah, but I guess I didn't see anyone making that claim.
|
58.111 | | UTROP1::SIMPSON_D | I *hate* not breathing! | Thu Apr 29 1993 11:30 | 13 |
| re .109
The problem is that you are not, in fact asking the same question.
Assume the couple are heterosexual. If the proposer is male, and
offers to pay for the use of the woman for the night, then the question
is one of fidelity, since the form of the sex is by definition
acceptable to the woman.
If, on the other hand, the proposer is female, then you are no longer
just talking about fidelity, because the (married) woman has to ask
whether the form of the sex is worth the money. If it isn't then
questions of fidelity are moot.
|
58.112 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Thu Apr 29 1993 11:52 | 5 |
| re: .109
There is also the possibility that it might be more acceptable. If you
know the form of sex is against your partner's natural inclinations
then you have less worries that it might develop into something more
than "just one night".
|
58.113 | Willing and able ! | ESSB::PHAYDEN | It's not how long it takes but how well you do it ... | Thu Apr 29 1993 12:16 | 10 |
| RE:111
I do make the condition that the partner has accepted that the act is
worth the money !
The decision now belongs to the non paticipent i.e you.
Along with your qualifications and conditions can we get some straight answers here ?
P.
|
58.114 | on what makes a difference | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Thu Apr 29 1993 13:18 | 20 |
| I would probably walk away from any such proposal, just because a sex for
money deal strikes me as so ugly.
re .107
Changing it to homo sex would make little difference, and that little would
be positive. Like a lot of het guys, I have this silly prejudice that
lesbianism is more 'natural' than gay sex. If I find women attractive, why
shouldn't other women? Conversely, I'd expect my wife to be *more* upset
if I got the offer, and it was from a guy, except that het women don't seem
to have the opposite of my silly prejudice.
.111> Assume the couple are heterosexual. If the proposer is male, and
> offers to pay for the use of the woman for the night, then the question
> is one of fidelity, since the form of the sex is by definition
> acceptable to the woman.
Did we specify somewhere that the form is just simple sex? I'd expect that
anybody passing out the millions is looking for something pretty fancy, and
that is not "by definition acceptable to the woman."
|
58.115 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Thu Apr 29 1993 13:33 | 2 |
| Did anyone see the lady from NOW complain on CNN the other day that
this was a movie about female slavery?
|
58.116 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Apr 29 1993 14:04 | 3 |
| Isn't it?
Steve
|
58.117 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Thu Apr 29 1993 14:11 | 8 |
| Nah. It's (or so I gather from all the talk) a movie about prostitution
(of one's values, if not necessarily of one's body). If it were about
slavery, there'd have been no need for her consent, now would there?
An argument that it's about some peoples' slavery to money might hold a
little more water...
-b
|
58.118 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Go�t de M�doc | Thu Apr 29 1993 14:27 | 5 |
| >Isn't it?
Viewed by someone with a predisposition for seeing affronts to women in all
things, undoubtedly so. A more objective view would find such a conclusion
unsupportable.
|
58.119 | | CALS::DESELMS | Opera r�lz | Thu Apr 29 1993 15:06 | 10 |
|
RE: .109
.112 raises a very good point. If I had a wife, then if I let her sleep
with someone else for money, the biggest problem I would have would be
jealousy. If I knew that my wife could not be attracted to the person
she slept with, then I would be far less jealous. I wouldn't be worried that
she would become a lesbian. People just don't work that way.
- Jim
|
58.120 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Apr 29 1993 15:16 | 10 |
| Not having seen the movie, it's not clear to me to whom the money is paid.
If Demi's character gets the money, it's prostiution. If Woody's character
gets it, one could make a case for it being slavery though upon second
thought, that would really only apply if Demi had no choice in the matter,
so perhaps it's just pimping.
I haven't seen the quote you refer to nor know the identity or claimed
affiliation of the person, so I can't comment further.
Steve
|
58.121 | Why the up in the ante? | MORO::BEELER_JE | IMPEACH CLINTON!!! | Thu Apr 29 1993 15:33 | 12 |
| .107> What if you Husband/Wife/SO were offered $25,000,000 to have Homosexual
.107> sex with another person ?
Why did you up the ante in addition to changing the scenario? Keep it at
a $1,000,000 and change the scenario. For those men who said they'd sleep
with another woman for $1,000,000 .. would they sleep with another man
for the same $1,000,000? For the women who said they'd sleep with another
man for $1,000,000 ... would they sleep with another woman for $1,000,000?
(This is directed at heterosexual legally married or previously married
couples consisting of one male and one female.)
Bubba
|
58.122 | ya never know | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | i kiss my cat on the lips | Thu Apr 29 1993 16:23 | 10 |
| re .119, you never know! People don't usually wear signs saying, "I'm
a closet bi-sexual!" :-)
Also, just because you never felt like doing something
before, that doesn't mean you might not like it if you actually did try
it!
Lorna
|
58.123 | always a first time | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | i kiss my cat on the lips | Thu Apr 29 1993 16:30 | 12 |
| re .120, in the movie, the couple shares the money, and the wife makes
the choice. Hope that doesn't spoil it for anyone who hasn't seen the
movie. But, Demi Moore's character in no way comes across as being a
slave. Opportunist would be closer to the truth, IMO.
re .121, I don't think the sex of the person would make a difference to
my decision. However, if it was a woman I would be honest enough to
make it clear she'd be dealing with a novice! (but what am I supposed
to *do*???!!!) :-)
Lorna
|
58.124 | | SMURF::BINDER | Deus tuus tibi sed deus meus mihi | Thu Apr 29 1993 16:31 | 4 |
| Re .122
Excellent point! From my view, you have substantiated the "emotional
risk" argument that several here have brought up. Thank you.
|
58.125 | I can do that, give us a job ... | GYMAC::PNEAL | | Fri Apr 30 1993 07:45 | 26 |
| Re. 124
If you're sitting pretty, that is you have a job, the money's coming in
(just sufficient to get by with), you and your wife are happy with one another,
the kid's are at school and the dog enjoys lazy days knapping on the grassy
banks of your yard which fronts the 3 bed house you own, who's going to rock
the boat when somebody offers a million or two for the services of your wife
for a night. I doubt that there would be many takers.
However, the film - although I haven't seen it so I'm going on what I've read -
sets the scene as a young couple just getting started who, when the recession
hits, have no money the debts are piling up and things are looking pretty
desperate when along comes this great looking guy and offers a million for a few
hours work. In that situation who's going to say no ? Some might judge the
emotional risk factor as too high but then the relationship might fall apart
anyway due to the financial pressures and under the burden of debt. I'd say the
majority would see it as a way out.
Me ? I'd be flattered if somebody, male or female, offered a million for my
services - I mean can you imagine the morning after. I get quite a shock
just looking at myself in the mirror - urgh not pretty - can you imagine
somebody else's reaction if they'd paid for it ?
- Paul.
|
58.126 | Get Real | SALEM::GILMAN | | Fri Apr 30 1993 12:43 | 30 |
| I never have been about to figure out why having DESIRE for other women
(in the case of a straight man) is a sin? Desire is one thing, ACTION
is quite another. I wonder how many of us, straights, gays, bi's etc.
can honestly say that we NEVER 'look at, desire, lust' (take your
pick) at another person other than our mate? I wonder if/that those
in this string who say they would never take the money, or sell out
can honestly say that they have NEVER had the slightest sexual feelings
toward a person other than their mate? If that is the case then you
have a remarkable relationship. i.e. the ability to concentrate
SOLELY (sexually), in THOUGHTS as well as actions on that person.
I thought that a man who loved a woman 'loved all women', that a gay
who loves a man 'loved all men' etc. That is, it tends to be a generic
love which is concentrated and expressed primarily with one person.
Therefore, for someone to say 'I only love this one women, and never
have a single thought toward a different women' I find rather hard to
believe. I know I don't HAVE to believe it, your out there I am sure,
(someone will say well thats the way it is with ME, so believe it).
Let me say again. There is a BIG difference between admiring, and having
passing sexual thoughts toward another individual other than your mate
and ACTING on those thoughts and engaging in an active sexual
relationship with that person who is other than your mate.
For God/Christ to expect humans to be capable of ONLY having sexual
thoughts toward ones mate seems a bit unrealistic to me. Perhaps thats
why He maintains that we are all sinners?
Jeff
|
58.127 | | VMSMKT::KENAH | Another flashing chance at bliss... | Fri Apr 30 1993 13:03 | 12 |
| >I never have been about to figure out why having DESIRE for other women
>(in the case of a straight man) is a sin? Desire is one thing, ACTION
>is quite another.
And according to Mosiac Law, both are sinful:
Thou shalt not commit adultery.
Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's wife.
For those who use the Ten Commandments as a guide to their morality,
even the desire is a sin. YMMV.
|
58.128 | Buzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz | MORO::BEELER_JE | IMPEACH CLINTON!!! | Fri Apr 30 1993 13:23 | 14 |
| .127> Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's wife.
The Bible is politically incorrect. This should be:
"Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's wife or husband"
The Holy Bible has neglected our gay brothers who may in fact covet their
neighbors husband.
$20 fine. My terms are "net 30 days". Where do I send the citation? To
God?
Hauptmann Bubba
PCpolice
|
58.129 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Fri Apr 30 1993 13:34 | 25 |
| Re "why is it sinful to 'lust in one's heart'":
The idea is (or so it seems to me) that to _harbor_ "lustful thoughts"
about someone to whom one is not married is to invite trouble. Having
an impromptu lustful reaction or thought isn't sinful in itself, but
inviting such thoughts or lingering over them is <considered so in some
religions>, on the theory that it can be a first step to taking action
in that direction; one may as well nip things in the bud.
Same idea with "coveting" one's neighbor's goods; it may not be a bad
thing, or an unnatural one, to want something nifty that one's neighbor
has just acquired, but to dwell on it, whether in the form of
discontent with one's own life or as envy of the neighbor, can lead to
resentment or worse.
Basically, it's not to say that one should never think such thoughts,
but that such thoughts are more likely to lead to unhappy consequences
than to happy ones, so it makes sense not to brood over them.
Re .128: Good point, Bubba, but you neglected (or opted not to!)
mention that the commandment as written also leaves a loophole for
women who may in fact covet their neighbor's husbands. [I guess that
means it's OK then, eh?]
-b
|
58.130 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri Apr 30 1993 13:46 | 4 |
| Every time I here the word covert. I think of this thing-ie in the
ground that goes under a road where water pass's. :) And coverting is
an active thing vs where it is passively lying there letting water pass
thru it.:_)
|
58.131 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Apr 30 1993 13:53 | 8 |
| Re: .130
The water-thingie is a culvert. When I see "covert" I think of a bearded
software engineer who has a cellular phone grafted onto his body and who likes
to rollerskate in the nude (but hates receiving junk cellular phone calls while
he is doing so, or so he says).
Steve
|
58.132 | Hecky darn ... | MORO::BEELER_JE | IMPEACH CLINTON!!! | Fri Apr 30 1993 13:53 | 16 |
| .129> Re .128: Good point, Bubba, but you neglected (or opted not to!)
.129> mention that the commandment as written also leaves a loophole for
.129> women who may in fact covet their neighbor's husbands. [I guess that
.129> means it's OK then, eh?]
Correct. Come to think of it I forgot the bi-sexuals. They can covet
the neighbor's wife *or* husband.
This is getting too complicated. I think that a simple solution to this
would be for all the men to have their dillywackers surgically removed.
That would cure a lot of problems. Or, should the wimmins wear chastity
belts? Too complicated. I think I'll resign my commission in the PCpolice
and stick to selling 'puters.
Bubba
|
58.133 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri Apr 30 1993 14:28 | 6 |
| Steve,
covert is also someone who has been changed. Right? :) Been covert'ed
from a Baptist to a Protestant.:) Or vice versa.:)
|
58.134 | | SOLVIT::SOULE | Pursuing Synergy... | Fri Apr 30 1993 14:44 | 17 |
| .126> Therefore, for someone to say 'I only love this one women, and never
.126> have a single thought toward a different women' I find rather hard to
.126> believe.
I'll admit, it takes some getting used to, but it can be done and
Jeff, even _you_ can do it! The next time you find yourself "lusting"
after a woman other than your wife, stop and ask yourself why? After a
while you may find that you appreciate women for nonsexual reasons and
then the shields will really come down. You will then never have to
worry about ACTING upon any of the thoughts of which you spoke...
.126> For God/Christ to expect humans to be capable of ONLY having sexual
.126> thoughts toward ones mate seems a bit unrealistic to me. Perhaps thats
.126> why He maintains that we are all sinners?
I will defer to the experts on this one but it sounds like a major
COP-OUT to me. Why not try to rise above sin?
|
58.135 | | PCCAD::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Purfekchun | Fri Apr 30 1993 15:06 | 8 |
| I find it hard to believe when a heterosexual male, says that they
are not attracted to woman other than their wife. There is
a difference between being attracted and lust. Attracted means you find
her beautiful, lust means you want to possess her. You must control
your thoughts, but desire is a feeling, and feelings are neither right
nor wrong. Its what you do with feelings that make them right or wrong.
Jim
|
58.136 | | JURAN::VALENZA | My note runneth over. | Fri Apr 30 1993 15:22 | 3 |
| I am reminded of last night's Seinfeld episode for some reason. :-)
-- Mike
|
58.137 | | PCCAD::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Purfekchun | Fri Apr 30 1993 15:37 | 6 |
| RE:136
That was funny !
Jim
|
58.138 | my opinion | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | i kiss my cat on the lips | Fri Apr 30 1993 16:09 | 26 |
| re .131, he rollerskates in the nude? surely, not on the sidewalks of
Nashua? isn't it illegal? :-)
As far as lusting "in your heart" for someone being a sin, this is what
I think. I think that we have to live by so many rules in this world,
and there are so many times when we can't really do what we'd like to
do, that, well, when it comes to what I lust after, I'll lust after
whatever I want, and it's nobody else's business.
I just don't buy the concept that something that does not actually hurt
another person is a sin. Now, someone could argue that if I were to
lust after someone, that might lead to my seducing some married guy and
eventually somebody might get hurt. Yeah, maybe so, but maybe not. We
all get hurt sometimes for some reason or another. Meanwhile, nobody
can enforce thoughts. I could say that I think lusting after somebody
is a sin, and that I would never do it, and all the while I could be
lusting after some married guy, and nobody would ever know. the whole
idea of what goes on in somebody *mind* being a sin is a joke to me.
We live in a world where people are brutally murdered, sometimes for
nothing, on a daily basis, where people starve to death, and live on
the streets, and people in here are trying to tell me that lusting
after someone is a sin. Give me a break, and wake up to the real
world.
Lorna
|
58.139 | | PCCAD::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Purfekchun | Fri Apr 30 1993 16:17 | 12 |
| re:138
Lorna,
lust reduces a person to an "object" to be used for one's own
wants. When people think of others as objects rather than persons,
what may seem harmless, carries over into how we treat one another.
The tailhook incident is an example of this.
Lust is an extension of one person's ego onto anther, I've heard it
said.
Jim
|
58.140 | the 2 are not necessarily one | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | i kiss my cat on the lips | Fri Apr 30 1993 16:27 | 10 |
| re .139, I don't think lust always has to reduce a person to an object.
Didn't you ever lust over your wife? If you are married? I know that
once upon a time I spent quite a bit of time lusting over my
ex-husband, and I loved him very much for a long time. I've also
lusted over people that I genuinely like and respect as people and
friends. I think it's possible to lust over people without physically
assaulting them.
Lorna
|
58.141 | | PCCAD::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Purfekchun | Fri Apr 30 1993 16:40 | 8 |
| RE:140
Perhaps you and I have different definitions of what lust is ?
My definition of lust is when you desire to use a person for your
own sexual pleasure, with no regard for that person, other than what
they can give to you sexually.
Jim
|
58.142 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | i kiss my cat on the lips | Fri Apr 30 1993 16:51 | 13 |
| re .141, yes, we have different definitions of what lust is.
My definition of lust is when you find someone sexually attractive, and
daydream about what it would be like to have sex with them.
And, my paperback dictionary says:
"sexual craving, esp. when excessive, any overwhelming craving"
with no mention of using the person with no regard for that person.
Lorna
|
58.143 | | CALS::DESELMS | Opera r�lz | Fri Apr 30 1993 16:52 | 16 |
| Amen, Lorna.
Also, let's define sin:
Sin is defined by your religion,
Your religion is defined by your beliefs.
Therefore, sin is whatever you believe it to be.
My own personal definition of sin is "anything that I know I'll feel
guilty about doing, but I do it anyway."
I don't allow thoughts to make me feel guilty, only actions, so I can think
anything I want and feel comfortable with myself, and live sin-free for
weeks or months at a time.
- Jim
|
58.144 | there's one in Newport now, in fact | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | i kiss my cat on the lips | Fri Apr 30 1993 16:53 | 5 |
| Also, I'm sure I've probably lusted over more antique rings than I ever
have men!! (i always take very good care of my jewelry, too!!)
Lorna
|
58.145 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | i kiss my cat on the lips | Fri Apr 30 1993 16:57 | 8 |
| re .143, I feel the same. I don't allow myself to feel guilty because
of my thoughts, only my actions.
Inside my head, I can be completely free. It may be the only place,
but nobody can enslave my thoughts.
Lorna
|
58.146 | | PCCAD::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Purfekchun | Fri Apr 30 1993 17:00 | 20 |
| re:142
> My definition of lust is when you find someone sexually attractive, and
> daydream about what it would be like to have sex with them.
>
> And, my paperback dictionary says:
>
> "sexual craving, esp. when excessive, any overwhelming craving"
>
> with no mention of using the person with no regard for that person.
If the only use that person your daydreaming about is sexual, then it
is lust. You've reduced the value of that person to a sexual object.
It is the opposite of love, which is giving yourself to the benefit
of that person. We are called by God, to love one another, when we
don't, it is sin.
Jim
|
58.147 | each to their own | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | i kiss my cat on the lips | Fri Apr 30 1993 17:28 | 8 |
| re .146, well, you're talking religion now, and I disagree with what
your religion seem to tell you to believe. When I form an opinion, it
is based on my own thoughts, not on what someone else, or some
religion, organized by other people, has told me to think, but we each
choose our own course in life.
Lorna
|
58.148 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Sat May 01 1993 04:53 | 21 |
| re: .146
> You've reduced the value of that person to a sexual object.
If the sin is regarding people as objects, then I must plead guilty
with regard to most television personalities and politicians. If all you
see of them is a carefuly tailored public persona it is difficult to
regard them as more than glove puppets or cartoon characters.
If all I know of the president of the U.S. is his formal speeches
dubbed into French, then he is "the president of the U.S.", and an
object. If I happen to know him to be a crook or a fool, then he
becomes a person.
Or does sex have to be involved before it becomes a sin?
I've had sexual fantasies about many women, but only ever had sex
with one. I don't think my wife regards me as particularly sinful in
that area, though she does have complaints about my gardening
efforts ;-)
Dave (married for almost 25 years now).
|
58.149 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Sun May 02 1993 16:56 | 3 |
| re:.141
You say it like it's a bad thing.
|
58.150 | | ISLNDS::YANNEKIS | | Mon May 03 1993 09:40 | 8 |
|
Lorna ... hang in there ... IMO you're doing a great job.
The rest ... consider this a "ditto" for all of Lorna's notes ... she's
basically saying evrything I want to about the subject.
Greg
|
58.151 | Each to their own don't always work | ESSB::PHAYDEN | It's not how long it takes but how well you do it ... | Mon May 03 1993 10:37 | 18 |
| re: 147
> But we each choose our own course in life
But surely you need some moral guidelines to follow ?
Don't get me wrong, I'm not advocating any specific religion
but not everybody out there is capable of making an informed decision
and one Man's perversion can be anothers normality.
We need some consencus on what is right and what is wrong
because once the moral fabric of society breaks down we are
f****d.
P.
|
58.152 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | a sense of wonder | Mon May 03 1993 11:59 | 8 |
| re .151, I think most people agree that murder (not self-defense),
stealing, rape, and physical assault are wrong. Beyond that, I've
noticed there seems to be quite a bit of room for interpretation, and
I've chosen to form my own opinons rather than blindly follow the creed
of any particular religion or bandwagon.
Lorna
|
58.153 | | PCCAD::RICHARDJ | Bluegrass,Music Aged to Purfekchun | Mon May 03 1993 12:15 | 10 |
| re:152
> I've chosen to form my own opinons rather than blindly follow the creed
> of any particular religion or bandwagon.
Do you think your unique in that you live by your own opinions ? Most
of society does this. Just look around and see how great things have
become.
Jim
|
58.154 | | CALS::DESELMS | Opera r�lz | Mon May 03 1993 12:43 | 15 |
| > Do you think your unique in that you live by your own opinions ? Most
> of society does this. Just look around and see how great things have
> become.
Wait, are you saying that we should NOT have our own opinions? Who is going
to be the opinion supplier?
We have to be at least a little critical of our religions or our
government. Otherwise, we all end up being mindless servants of politicians
or clergymen who do not necessarily have our best interests in mind.
Obvious example: followers of David Koresh.
- Jim
|
58.155 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | a sense of wonder | Mon May 03 1993 12:46 | 6 |
| re .153, on the other hand, you'll never find me drinking cool aid in
S. America, or burning up with a bunch of loonies in Waco, Texas
either!!
Lorna
|
58.156 | To the toilet and back ! | ESSB::PHAYDEN | It's not how long it takes but how well you do it ... | Mon May 03 1993 13:35 | 22 |
| re: 155
>...or burning up with a bunch of loonies in Waco...
I don't know if that's right. All it takes is a charsismatic leader and
people will follow. After all your daughter has slept for somthing like
three days at or outside the same hotel as U2 just to get a look at
Bono. Now if he were just a little less sane there's no telling how
many people would follow him to hell and back !
What I'm saying is that people are impressionable. Whether it's society
/religion/parents/peers etc.. we are all influenced to some extent by
others and it is better to be influenced by those who have morals than
those who don't.
No man is an Island ! and as the song says "If you don't respect
yourself ain't nobody goin' to give a (somthing somthing) respect yourself
da da da da da da respect yourself de de de de de de etc...
By the way Bono drinks at my local bar regularly, and I wouldn't follow
him to the toilet and back !
|
58.157 | it might be fun with Bono :-) | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | a sense of wonder | Mon May 03 1993 14:28 | 25 |
| re .156, wow, you never know what old notes somebody is going to dig
up!!! :-)
Also, I'll have you know my daughter never wasted any time *sleeping*
outside the hotel, when U2 were there. They stayed awake the entire
time. Otherwise, they might have missed a sighting! :-)
I don't know how Bono acts when he's drinking at your local pub, if
indeed that is true, but he was very nice to his fans in Boston. He
took the time to look at some drawings Melissa had done of him, asked
her name, shook hands with her and told her it was nice to meet her,
posed for a picture with her, drew a picture on the back of her denim
jacket, and signed several autographs for her. A lot of stars don't
even bother to sign autographs for fans after they get that famous.
(For example, Eric Clapton rudely refused to sign an autograph for a
friend of Melissa's, in Rhode Island.) Heck, The Edge even brought out
pastries to the fans who had stayed out there all night (about 10
kids)!! So, I think Bono would have to be a *lot* less sane in order
to be compared with the guy in Waco. However, I don't know how he acts
when he's at home. (If I had to follow somebody to the toilet, though,
Bono could be a top choice. Afterall, if I was going to follow somebody
to hell and back it would at least be nice if he was cute!)
Lorna
|
58.158 | Of the turd kind ! | ESSB::PHAYDEN | It's not how long it takes but how well you do it ... | Tue May 04 1993 05:43 | 17 |
|
Don't get me wrong Bono is a really nice guy, but it's just that I'm so
used to seeing him around that I take no notice of him. He's just like
anybody else !
But as you say he is good to his fans and I have yet to
see him refuse to sign an autograph etc...
If you are ever in Ireland and want to meet the guy, just go to the
Killiney Court Hotel (My Local) outside of Dublin and the gents are
"Go out of the Bar, turn left, left again, turn right and the stairway
to heaven is on you left !"
I can't promise a close encounter but if it's during the holidays and a
saturday night there's a good chance !
How about we get back to some Indecent Proposals ?
|
58.159 | Missed a chunk - so if you're still listening..... | GYMAC::PNEAL | | Tue May 04 1993 07:51 | 15 |
| Good job Lorna.
It doesn't surprise me that for those who strive to rise above the sins of the
flesh lust has negative connotations. But please, being married doesn't mean
being dead or that the relationship is static.
Not wishing to attack the church or those who hold a firm religious belief but
I'm of the opinion that there's more hypocrisy and immorality within the church
movement than you'll ever find outside - but then as Lorna rightly says 'each
to their own'.
Re.158 Any suggestions ....
- Paul.
|
58.160 | Hmmmmmmmmm | ESSB::PHAYDEN | It's not how long it takes but how well you do it ... | Tue May 04 1993 08:24 | 30 |
|
>I'm of the opinion that there's more hypocrisy and immorality within the church
>movement than you'll ever find outside.
I couldn't agree with you more Paul. I'm what you might call a lapsed
Cathloic i.e I don't go to mass or take part in any other religious
ceremonies (Other than to watch Ireland playing soccer), but even so I
do have a set of essentially christian morals which I try to live by.
I don't disagree that we can and should form our own opinions but those
opinions must have a foundation on which to be based, there must be
constraints. There can't just be a free for all can there ?
For example in the Rodney King case those policemen formed an opinion
that Mr. King was a threath to their lives so they beat the shit out of
him. To each their own ? I think not.
This note is really dealing with sexual morals and how we value
ourselves and our partners and I've been thinking that, well if you
can make a distinction between fucking and making love then your
decision in regard to the indecent proposal is moot.
But then that is why I posted the note concerning Homosexual sex
because if you can regard sex as a purely animal act then the nature of
the sex should make little difference and I was interested to see if any
responses (Of which there were none. I wonder why ?) confirmed this.
By the way Lorna speaking about old notes I have a 23 year old who's
looking for a baby sitter :-)
Peter
|
58.161 | How about a different complication ? | GYMAC::PNEAL | | Tue May 04 1993 09:38 | 27 |
| It's my turn to agree with you...
"There can't just be a free for all can there ?"
No there can't, but to constitute good fiction we need a complication. In the
case of Indecent Proposal the question is 'sex for money' the complication,
you're in financial trouble, you don't have work and the future isn't looking
too bright. Along comes a good looking guy (not an unpalatable proposition) and
offers a million (inadvertently the answer to all your financial problems) for
the services of your wife (the affront to your moral or ethical standard). Each
one of us will begin to weigh up the issues within the context of the complicat-
ion - for ourselves - which is only right. Maybe in the process the views of
society are challenged and will either change to be more representative of
the times and pressures within which we live or will hold.
If you're heterosexual then the proposal 'a million for homosexual sex' even
with this complication will bring you out in a cold sweat and probably give
you the shivers just the same as if you're homosexual and somebody offers 'a
million to have sex with a woman'. It's not going to happen.
But try this - the question is 'taking the life of another human being'. The
complication, your wife is being held by a gunman who will rape her within the
next few minutes. Along comes a man and offers you his rifle. This man also
shows you how with one shot you can hit the gunman in the only part of his
body that can be seen from where you stand - his head. Do you shoot ?
- Paul.
|
58.162 | Yeah I'd Shoot | ESSB::PHAYDEN | It's not how long it takes but how well you do it ... | Tue May 04 1993 10:22 | 27 |
| Yeah I shoot.
The movie is one thing but I don't thing that there are many people
contributing to this notes file who are that desperate for money,
but yet they are prepared to accept the offer.
Someone mentioned earlier about it not being the soul but just the body
that is been taken by Monsieur Redford. My point is that if is isn't the
soul i.e it's purely a physical/animal act (for survival) then what difference does
the form of sex make. In the same way as I wouldn't have any hesitation
in pulling the trigger if someone was attacking my wife (No matter who
they were). It's a question of survival. An animal instinct.
My conclusion: It's not about survival I'ts about greed ! *Ordinary People*
out there have got to the stage where they will sell themselves and
others for money and It's only a small step before one can rationalize
the selling of someone without their consent.
The views of people are distorted because Robert Redford is an attractive
man. A lot of married women would sleep with him for free on the basis
that it is only a once off (or maybe twice. He's getting a bit old for
any more in one night) ! The reality of the proposition would be more along
the lines of John Candy with a flatulance problem :-)
Society stinks !
Peter
|
58.163 | At least for *me* it's not a moral dilemma. | SMURF::BINDER | Deus tuus tibi sed deus meus mihi | Tue May 04 1993 10:34 | 11 |
| Re .161
I shoot without thinking about it for even a nanosecond; it takes me
exactly as long as is required to aim and squeeze. And I hope that the
rifle is a .44 Magnum loaded with a dumdum - I don't want there to be
even the remotest possibility that the scum will survive to tell a
lawyer about it.
But this situation is not at all parallel to the premise of "Indecent
Proposal." This is not a moral dilemma, it is pure and simple defense
of self or family from a visible, imminent threat of grievous harm.
|
58.164 | Scratch one | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Tue May 04 1993 11:06 | 5 |
| re .161
I'd say his life expectancy would be about .2 sec.
fred();
|
58.165 | | DEMING::VALENZA | My note runneth over. | Tue May 04 1993 11:10 | 3 |
| Nope, I wouldn't shoot.
-- Mike
|
58.166 | | SMURF::BINDER | Deus tuus tibi sed deus meus mihi | Tue May 04 1993 11:12 | 3 |
| Serious question, Mike:
How would you feel afterward, when he had raped and killed your SO?
|
58.167 | Check out the complication again. | GYMAC::PNEAL | | Tue May 04 1993 11:22 | 4 |
|
I didn't mention kill - just rape.
- Paul.
|
58.168 | Bang Bang!!! | ESSB::PHAYDEN | It's not how long it takes but how well you do it ... | Tue May 04 1993 11:41 | 7 |
| re:165
Me thinks Mike is looking to be a bit controversial...
Or if not let's have an explanation there Mike...
Peter
|
58.169 | | DEMING::VALENZA | My note runneth over. | Tue May 04 1993 11:43 | 4 |
| No, I'm not looking to be controversial. I just stated what I would
do, just as those who preceded me stated what they would do.
-- Mike
|
58.170 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | a sense of wonder | Tue May 04 1993 11:44 | 54 |
| This conversation is getting interesting.
I agree with -dick binder (oh, my god, did i really say that?) :-), in
that if someone were about to rape someone I loved, it would not be a
moral dilemma for me. I strongly believe that people have a right to
protect themselves and their loved ones from physical assault, and I
would have no problem (except that I've never used a gun!) BUT,
*morally* I would have no problem shooting someone who was about to
rape someone I cared about. As a matter of fact, I don't think I'd
have a problem shooting someone who was about to rape *anybody*!
I have a real problem with people using physical force on others,
EXCEPT for self-defense or the defense of victims unable to defend
themselves.
However, I do not see this as comparable to the situation in Indecent
Proposal. I think a better question would be - Would you murder
somebody for a million dollars? I wouldn't, no matter how much I
needed the money. So, here we have it. My moral values. I would
sleep with somebody for a million dollars, but I would not murder
somebody for a million dollars. The reason is that I don't see any
problem with sex between consenting adults, but I believe that taking a
life is wrong (except for self-defense).
Peter, I agree that society cannot just be a free-for-all. But, I
guess the way I see it, is that there are a few basic guidelines, such
as: do not kill, do not steal, do not physically assault other people,
do not rape. However, there are many other issues where I have
questioned the guidelines and rules I was taught in early childhood. I
feel that there are a few basic rules that by far the majority of
people agree on, and then there are all these others in a gray area.
Some people seem to be willing to let others (religion, cult leaders,
who knows?) tell them what to think on every single issue, whereas I
have always preferred to question, observe, read and decide for myself.
Or, as said in the words of my very favorite Irishman, "no guru, no
method, no teacher." I can think for myself and have desire to follow
a messiah.
Also, Peter, I *am* in desperate need of money. My ex-husband and I
have a house that is in danger of being repossessed by the bank, since
my ex got layed off from DEC (after 19 yrs.), last December, and now
neither of us can afford to pay the mortgage, and in the depressed real
estate market of N.E. there have been no offers. So, don't be so
certain that there aren't people reading this file who would have a
special need to get their hands on a lot of money fast!!
So, Peter, you think your son might like my daughter (age 19) for a
babysitter?? She's looking for a summer job, and would love a trip to
Ireland. :-) She's probably spend more time trying to track down Bono
than babysitting, though! :-) (especially now that you've told us
where to look!)
Lorna
|
58.171 | | CALS::DESELMS | Opera r�lz | Tue May 04 1993 11:53 | 25 |
| RE: .166
I can see where Mike is coming from.
If it were against my principles to counteract violence with violence, I
would be incapable of shooting the guy. But does that mean that I wouldn't
be distraught after it happened?
We have to make sacrifices to keep our principals intact.
Hey, let's generalize the "indecent proposal."
Would you commit any act which you find morally repulsive, if you could
have any wish, any wish at all, granted?
So you can reshape this into:
"Would you allow your partner to have sex with someone else for $1M?"
"Would you kill another human being if it meant your spouse could live?"
The fundamental question is:
"How strictly do you follow your set of morals?"
By the way, I'd kill the guy. It doesn't go against MY morals.
- Jim
|
58.172 | | SMURF::BINDER | Deus tuus tibi sed deus meus mihi | Tue May 04 1993 12:05 | 11 |
| Re .167
Right. You didn't mention killing. But it is perfectly reasonable to
believe that killing could likely follow the rape, especially if the
perp is armed with a gun. Insofar as the question of "will he or won't
he?" is concerned, the presumption is that he is already committing a
violent crime of power and he is therefore not likely to balk at
another (the ultimate power over another, to take his or her life) to
cover his identity/tracks - especially if the victim resists his power.
Therefore, in my book, violent rape --> murder.
|
58.173 | | SMURF::BINDER | Deus tuus tibi sed deus meus mihi | Tue May 04 1993 12:12 | 14 |
| Re .171
it's not quite so easy to generalize the question into "would you do
something you find morally repulsive...?" Morals are elastic, in that
there are some truly repulsive things that do not equate to the taking
of a life - which is clearly, in the context of the rape scenario, not
repulsive to some percentage of us here. For example, although I would
unhesitatingly kill a man who was raping my wife, I would not attempt
to injure him and then make him suffer. This latter response is
intolerably repugnant to me.
It comes down to an ad hoc basis: would you do *this* thing for X
money, would you do *that* thing for X money? Each case must be
considered on its own merits.
|
58.174 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Tue May 04 1993 12:15 | 32 |
| Re the ever-popular situational-ethics example of the gun and the
rapist: there _are_ other options than killing the guy or standing
there and watching, you know. [Sure, one could tailor the circumstances
to exclude those other possibilities; those who enjoy the
but-what-would-you-do-if game can earn points by doing such, and the
rest can opt not to play.]
As for the generic "would you sacrifice your principles for money"
question, there's still a <fairly> clear-cut difference between
sacrificing "principles that only involve myself" and "principles
involving other people". Thus, one might be willing to personally
undergo any treatment, however "immoral" or degrading or painful, for
sufficient compensation, but one might not be willing to inflict such
treatment on a non-consenting third party.
Or - here's a grey area. What if the mysterious billionaire with the
quirky conversational gambits proposes to give you $1 million if you
and your spouse will agree that one of you will seduce your next-door
neighbor - WITHOUT telling him/her about the deal. A seduction, not a
rape, mind you, but the money doesn't get paid if the deed doesn't get
done. It's still "just sex," but now it involves someone outside of the
arrangement - an "innocent bystander," if you will.
Some may feel that, if the neighbor is "seducable" at all, what's to
worry? Consenting adults and all that. Side effects such as hurt
feelings or broken hearts (or jealous spouses showing up with
flamethrowers) are all part of the risks one takes as a consenting
adult, right?
Just wait 'til "Indecent Proposal II" comes out. ;-)
-b
|
58.175 | | DEMING::VALENZA | My note runneth over. | Tue May 04 1993 12:20 | 11 |
| >[Sure, one could tailor the circumstances to exclude those other
>possibilities; those who enjoy the but-what-would-you-do-if game can
>earn points by doing such, and the rest can opt not to play.]
This is true. With these sorts of hypothetical scenarios, you can
change the detail at will to try to manipulate the outcome, with the
intention of boxing in the respondent. Joan Baez once put together a
wonderful parody of this phenomenon (in her case, the example involved
someone pointing a gun at her grandmother.)
-- Mike
|
58.176 | | BUSY::DKATZ | I unpacked my adjectives... | Tue May 04 1993 12:26 | 11 |
| I despise situational questions of this ilk -- they're geared mostly to
gain a reaction based upon situations that most of us, thankfully, have
never encountered.
My response? I don't know and I hope to hell I'll never find out.
It's all fine and well to *say* how you think you'd react in a crisis.
Quite another making an accurate determination when you haven't been
*through* that crisis.
Daniel
|
58.177 | I thought it might be contentious but then that's the whole idea isn't it ? | GYMAC::PNEAL | | Tue May 04 1993 12:39 | 27 |
| I'd contest that there is a parallel between the two cases - but in a notesfile
it's impossible to argue every point.
In the 'sex for money' the moral issue isn't just prostitution but adultery too.
A clear transgression of one of the 10C's. The couple are destitute - like many
people - and could use the money. Prostitution is wrong and so is adultery. If
they didn't take the offer they'd still be in the shit but over the long haul
they'd probably survive - if their relationship was strong enough. If they do
take the offer they risk the relationship in more insidious ways; jealousy,
questionable values (pimping, prostitution etc) but again if their relationship
was strong enough they'd survive that too. Some would find taking the offer an
affront to their values others wouldn't hesitate.
In the 'life for the wife' the issues are different but follow a similar line.
Taking another life transgresses one of the 10C's. Different folks different
strokes. The couple are in a tight spot but it's not life threatening. If the
guy doesn't take the offer his wife *might* get raped but over the long haul
they'd survive it - if their relationship was strong enough and the woman got
enough support. If the guy shoots then he's taken a life, the wife gets
splashed in blood and brains - but they'd get over that too wouldn't they.
Convinced now ? I doubt it.
If you're interested I'd shoot the guy too - but then I'd take the million (of
course only if we were destitute).
- Paul.
|
58.178 | Blow their ballons off | ESSB::PHAYDEN | It's not how long it takes but how well you do it ... | Tue May 04 1993 12:59 | 13 |
|
Personally I find rape to be a more henious crime than murder.
I would blow away any rapist/child molester without hesitation *period*
Exterminate the scum !!!
re: 170
Lorna I'm sorry to learn of your circumstances and I apologise for
jumping to conclusions but I still don't agree that sex for money is
the solution to any situation which could be solved in a different
manner.
P.S The babysitter I was talking about was the Brandy swilling Pool
playing one. Remember ? :-)
|
58.179 | | SMURF::BINDER | Deus tuus tibi sed deus meus mihi | Tue May 04 1993 13:00 | 18 |
| Re .177
The "life for the wife" choice does not transgress one of the 10Cs,
even for those who believe that the 10Cs are actually *rules*. (Given
that humans are not perfect, I believe that they are signposts telling
us the ways we are *going* to fail.)
The C in question is "You shall not murder." (For those who read it as
"Thou shalt not kill," I will point out that the King James Version is
written in a language that is not 20th-century English, and it cannot
be interpreted as if it were. The meaning of a passage in the Bible
must be traced between its original form and *current* language.)
Anyway, murder is the killing of a human being unlawfully and with
intent. Killing a violent criminal is lawful if *he poses an imminent
threat of harm to you or your family. Hence, killing a gun-wielding
rapist is not unlawful, it is not murder, and it does not violate the
10Cs. (I won't go down the rathole of lex talionis, which is also
supported by Biblical scripture.)
|
58.180 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | a sense of wonder | Tue May 04 1993 13:00 | 26 |
| Well, I'll say one thing right now. If *I* were the wife getting
raped, and my husband just stood by and didn't try to fight off my
attacker, I'd friggin divorce the jerk, if I survived the assault.
Why the heck would I want to be married to a guy who wouldn't even be
willing to lift a finger to help me if I was being attacked? I would
consider it a betrayal.
Also, if somebody started to assault my husband, or SO, I would try to
do something to help. I'm a small person and I don't know how
effective I would be, but I would never just stand by while someone I
loved was being assaulted. (Twice when I was married my ex-husband
almost got in fights with other people, and both times I ended up
screaming at the other guy to leave my ex alone, and the fights were
averted. Both times the guys just seemed too shocked by my yelling to
continue. I guess I was just lucky.)
Daniel, it's true that nobody knows how they would actually behave, but
people can speculate at least on how they would *like* to behave in a
certain situation. For example, if I did shoot somebody who was raping
someone else, I'd be at ease morally. But, in reality, I might just be
so scared that I'd run away. I don't know, and don't want to find out,
like you said. But, I know I'd have no moral qualms about shooting the
guy, if I had the guts and ability to carry it out.
Lorna
|
58.181 | not a worry in real life | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | a sense of wonder | Tue May 04 1993 13:07 | 6 |
| re .178, re: sex for money, well, not to worry, I've not gotten any
offers. :-) I don't look like Demi Moore and I don't know any
billionaires. :-)
Lorna
|
58.182 | | ESSB::PHAYDEN | It's not how long it takes but how well you do it ... | Tue May 04 1993 13:18 | 9 |
|
Sounds to me like we're getting into "Indecent Proposal" meets
"Thelma & Louise" country...
What type of a person would allow someone to be raped without even
putting up a fight ?
Peter
|
58.183 | | DEMING::VALENZA | My note runneth over. | Tue May 04 1993 13:23 | 29 |
| A couple of comments. First, being unwilling to take one particular
action does not necessarily imply standing idly by and watching. As a
pacifist, I often encounter the myth that pacifism equates to
passiveness. This is incorrect. I don't know what I would do in a
given terrible situation; I would probably get blown away by the rapist
myself. But one thing I can't do is condone killing the rapist. That
is my choice, and those are my values. If we are really going to
discuss scenarios like this in detail, I have to wonder why a man who
just happened to walk by with a gun would stop and take the time to
show me how to shoot someone in such and such a way, hand me the gun,
and expect me to do the deed, all while the crime is ready to take
place at any minute,, when he could have made his own moral choice
about shooting at the guy himself. Oh well.
That being said, some of the replies in this topic, with phrases like
"exterminate the scum", suggest that their goal would not just be to
stop the crime, but to carry out a vindictive punishment against the
person perpetrating the crime. It is one thing to say that killing a
person in some carefully constructed hypothetical scenario is a
necessary evil in order to stop a crime; it is another thing altogether
to feel vindictive glee over the taking of another human life. Since
we are inventing hypothetical scenarios, if we could conceive of one
where you had two options for preventing the rape--one which involved
killing the rapist, and one which did not--it sounds like some people
here would opt for the killing option simply because it would make them
feel good to kill the guy. If so, those are most certainly not my
values, and it would sadden me to hear people talk that way.
-- Mike
|
58.184 | | SMURF::BINDER | Deus tuus tibi sed deus meus mihi | Tue May 04 1993 13:47 | 9 |
| Re .183
Because I used the word "scum" does not mean that I was, or am,
thinking in terms of exterminating the scum. I am, on the other hand,
only too aware that criminals injured in the act by their victims can,
and do, sue the victims-turned-police, and win. It was my intent to
indicate that while I consider killing a rapist a proper action I do
not consider it equally proper that said rapist should, if I miss,
litigate against me. So I would ensure that he died.
|
58.185 | | DEMING::VALENZA | My note runneth over. | Tue May 04 1993 13:51 | 4 |
| I was making a general comment; you were not the only one using that
term.
-- Mike
|
58.186 | murder and rape | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Tue May 04 1993 13:56 | 26 |
| I'm not a pacifist, but I would still agree with Mike on this one. Murder
is a very serious thing, and I'm not sure I would really murder someone
to prevent a rape.
While I'm at it, I would also agree with several previous noters, that in
the real world there would always be other alternatives, and anyway I don't
know what I would do until I actually face the situation.
If I were in the situation, and there were no alternative, I don't know what
I would do.
If I reverse the situation, and I were the one being raped, and there were
no alternative, I would *not* expect my wife to kill the guy. (Of course
it was a guy! Being raped by a woman is closer to fantasy than crime.) I
would expect her to kill to save my life. Which says, I guess, that I would
take being murdered more seriously than being raped.
When I was taught Catholic ethics, I learned that killing in this situation
would be a mortal sin, because the death of the rapist was essential to
preventing the rape. If I could make him incapable of rape, and that
happened to kill him, it would be OK. Catholic ethics was strange stuff.
It may have changed since my time. I hear they say Mass in English now.
The legal position depends on the state (and presumably the country). I live
in NH, but am writing this in MA. These two states take very different
positions on the use of force to prevent crimes.
|
58.187 | | ESSB::PHAYDEN | It's not how long it takes but how well you do it ... | Tue May 04 1993 14:33 | 17 |
|
Mike thanks for your answer. Now I know where you're comming from and I
respect your opinion but I as a tax payer resent having to finance the
incarceration of sexual offenders who are on the whole twisted pepole
incapable of reforming their characters.
Yes I used the word *scum* but I would never take sadistic pleasure
in killing anybody. I simply feel that these people are a threat to
the wellbeing of my family and friends and as they are unwilling or
unable to reform are not worthy to live.
There is high unemployment in this country and the 30,000 pounds it
takes to keep these people per anum could be better spent ! In addition
a death penalty for child abuse may deter future potential offenders and
thus would reduce the levels of abuse for as studies show the abused tend
to be the future abusers.
Peter
|
58.188 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | a sense of wonder | Tue May 04 1993 14:59 | 8 |
| re .186, you say that "murder is a very serious thing, and I'm not sure
I would really murder someone to prevent a rape." Wow. I can tell you
haven't ever had a talk with anyone who has been violently raped, have you?
I almost feel sorry for you when I imagine the first time you might ever
make the above statement around certain people.
Lorna
|
58.189 | Perspective | SALEM::GILMAN | | Tue May 04 1993 15:50 | 51 |
| Peter. Whew.
I was abused as a child, emotionally and sexually by two different
people.
It has taken me years to essentially put those events behind me.
Of the two 'experiences' for ME anyway, the emotional abuse was worse
because it occured over a period of years and got to the 'core' of my
self respect. The sexual abuse occured by a teacher and lasted for a
relatively short period of time and outright violence wasn't involved.
I have thought about those events alot over the years and with the help
of therapy have gotten my life back together.
I never felt any real desire to kill/murder either of the offenders.
Stop them, YES, but not kill them. Both individuals were/are sick and
need/needed help. The sexual offender belonged off the street so he
couldn't hurt other kids.
Now as the father of my own son I have to worry about helping HIM avoid
emotional and sexual and physical abuse. I being a parent know how
parents feel about having their kid(s) potentially mistreated. Also,
having experienced abuse myself I know how it feels to BE abused.
Whats my point? I havn't looked at either of the perputrators as
'scum'. I view(ed) them as sick people desperately needing help.
As worn out as that cliche' 'help' is that IS what they needed. Not
to be killed in the name of vengence, gotten off the street, yes,
locked up, yes, but help too.
The sweeping statements about ALL sex offenders ALWAYS recomitting
their crimes is simply not true. I wonder how many don't recommit
their crimes? We don't read about them because good news doesn't make
the papers.
I do believe it appropriate to protect oneself if being attacked and
for criminals to be punished or locked up as appropriate.
But KILLING another person is a serious thing, IMO more serious than
rape. Rape hurts a person but doesn't completely destroy the person.
Killing a person destroys the person. Thats why I consider killing
worse than sex crimes with murder not involved. If the sex crime
INCLUDES murder, then, yes, capitol punishment is appropriate I think.
If no murder, or intent to murder is involved then IMO a punishement
LESS than death is appropriate. But to kill someone for attempted
rape is wrong I believe.
However, if a person is killed while attempting rape then thats self
defense.
Jeff
|
58.190 | re: 189 | ESSB::PHAYDEN | It's not how long it takes but how well you do it ... | Tue May 04 1993 16:39 | 20 |
|
I didn't mean to imply that all of those abused as children grow to be
offenders but the *tendency* to do so, seems ,from what I have read on
the subject, to be a proven fact.
I myself come from a background similar to yours. My father was abused
as a child by a priest and like you he never turned abuser and like you
he feels more compassion for sexual offenders than I do.
I don't know why my opinions are so strong, because I have never been
abused in any form, either physical or sexual. My father can't
understand my viewpoint either...
So I don't know...but I've given it a lot of thought and I keep comming
back to the same solution i.e as mentioned previously.
Again I am guilty of straying off the topic at hand
Maybe I'll just read and learn for a while...
Peter
|
58.191 | | BUSY::DKATZ | I unpacked my adjectives... | Tue May 04 1993 16:51 | 7 |
| re: last few
40% of sexual abusers were abused as children themselves.
This is *not* the same as 40% of abused children become abusers.
Daniel
|
58.192 | "Perspective" | SALEM::GILMAN | | Wed May 05 1993 12:53 | 54 |
| Please pardon me while I reply to the last couple, I know its strayed
off the base topic.
Phil, and last few replies: I think 'our' (Societies) biggest mistake
is in lumping all sex offenses under the same title and assuming that
the same motives are involved in all cases. People murder for
different reasons and with different degrees of premeditation... thus
the different degrees, 1st, 2nd, 3rd. It does seem that often sex
offenses involve murder too.. thus people tend to lump them together in
their minds.
Sex offenses are motivated for many different reasons, with different
degrees of violation of the victims rights... ranging from outright
murder (the ultimate invasion IMO) to the cases where some guy has
'touched' a kid inappropriately. There are of course all sorts of
variations in between also. I know that if someone 'touched' my son
vs. raping him and killing him, I would be FAR angrier in the latter
case. Therefore I would not take the position that the 'toucher'
deserves the SAME punishment as the rapist, which some seem to believe
is appropriate. (Treat them all the same, hang em all high).
The molestation which occured to me as a boy occured with no violence
involved. (At least no PHYSICAL violence). Had I been dragged into
a ditch and raped I might feel quite differently in the degree of
animosity I feel toward the perpurtrator. At the TIME I was Bull
xxxx over it. Now, after years have passed, and with the help of
therapy I have a much better understanding of what motivated him.
He was a very lonely person who was unable to relate to adults.
Since he could relate to kids somehow they became sexually attractive
to him too. He found a vulnerable kid (me) and there is a set up for
abuse. The degree of emotional deprivation involved in SOME of the
offenders is beyond belief... otherwise what would 'force/turn' a
person away from normal sexual outlets? With some of them the desire
is obviously so powerful they are willing to risk their LIVES, (angry
Dads' and Moms') to satisfy their emotional and physical needs. The
degree of deprivation is beyond my understanding, but obviously it is
there, otherwise they wouldn't do it.
Violent offenses are driven my a different 'class' of offenders with
different needs. Since my 'research' in therapy hasn't involved
discussions about violent offenders I don't know as much about it and
will not attempt to explain their motivation.
It is interesting that at least in the case of two people you have
communicated with who have been sexually abused that they seem to hold
less animosity than you do who have never 'experienced' it.
Moderator: If you want to move this to an appropriate string, feel
free.
Thanks,
Jeff
|
58.193 | Knowledge | SALEM::GILMAN | | Wed May 05 1993 12:56 | 11 |
| One more thing I forgot to mention: If we as a society hope to STOP
abuse BEFORE it occurs we must gain understanding of what MOTIVATES
these people to commit it and spot/help the potential offenders BEFORE
they do it. That way everybody wins, nobody is molested, no one gets
locked up, and society doesn't have to pay the emotional and financial
cost of dealing with abuse AFTER it occurs. Its like closing the gate
after the horse is out of the corral. We need proactive not
retroactive action... and the best way to accomplish that is via
knowledge.
Jeff
|
58.194 | | ESSB::PHAYDEN | It's not how long it takes but how well you do it... | Wed May 05 1993 13:17 | 17 |
|
re:192 & 193
Thanks for the reply. It has given me an understanding of abusers
and their possible motivation. My language was very strong yesterday
and my comments were on the whole sweeping generalisations. I still
feel that when an offender is *unwilling* or *unable* to reform the
punishment must fit the crime and IMO (in the case of rape) that is the
death penalty.
Maybe it would be more appropriate if this topic of conversation were
moved to a different string.I think though that it would be benificial for all
concerned if this discussion were continued.
Thanks,
Peter
|
58.195 | rape and murder | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Wed May 05 1993 13:43 | 17 |
| I take rape very seriously. I think we should do a great deal to prevent it,
and we should punish rapists severely. I am still not sure I personally
would murder to prevent a rape.
.188> I can tell you
> haven't ever had a talk with anyone who has been violently raped, have you?
No, I haven't. I've talked to several people who have been assualted, and one
who was raped, semi-violently. None of them said that they would have killed
to prevent the rape. I've read accounts by rape victims, and only a few of
them said they would have killed the rapist, before or after.
> I almost feel sorry for you when I imagine the first time you might ever
> make the above statement around certain people.
Are some of those "certain people" readers of this conference? So far, your
almost sorrow is almost wasted.
|
58.196 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | i musta got lost | Wed May 05 1993 14:51 | 4 |
| re .195, no, to my knowledge, they are not readers of this conference.
Lorna
|
58.197 | | PEKING::SNOOKL | | Fri Jun 04 1993 09:43 | 5 |
| Re the original question:
I would not do it, and I would hate it should my other half (at any
point in the relationship went out with another woman(in the romantic
sense) let alone did anything like sleep with them.
|