Saturday, March 1, 2014

Staring

Okay, this one's been bugging me for a long time.  Staring is not a form of assault. 

The concept of assault rests on the basis that people have an inherent right to control what goes on with their own bodies, and that doing anything to another person's body without their consent is wrong.  Rights conflict in the real world, which is why we need to establish rules.  The classic example is "your right to swing your fist ends at my nose".  

I have a right to control my own body, and that includes what direction my eyes face.  Since my eyes are devices for detecting radiation rather than for emitting it, what direction my eyes face impacts no one.  In the conflict between my right to point my eyes where I please, and your right not to have someone point their eyes in your direction, the right to control one's own body trumps the right to force someone else to do something with their body you don't like. 

I don't live in a society where we worship god-kings who can demand I downcast my gaze when they grace my presence.  I will not live in such a society. 

The last time someone tried to treat my gaze as an assault, I was quite ready to meet their explicitly threatened violence with violence of my own.  I have no regrets about my actions in that incident.  

4 comments:

  1. I disagree.

    My concept of assault does not rest on ideas involving a right to control what goes on with one's body.

    A right is something that is granted by someone, e.g., a government. You can come up with your own ideas of rights, but if no one is there to enforce them, then it may be that they become nothing more.

    Whether your eyes are detecting or emitting radiation doesn't matter. It matters whether you are making someone uncomfortable. Staring can be useful for that.

    I agree, however, that staring is not a form of assault.

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    1. If you want to go that route, you define rights out of existence as a concept, and it just goes back to whoever has the biggest club gets to tell everyone what to do. It's might makes right, so why bother trying to define any kind of ethical justification anyway?

      I don't really much care how uncomfortable someone is because of which direction I've chosen to face. That's their problem, not mine.

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  2. "I can go to the park and watch kids play, sit next to kids on the bus, get dragged off to be used as a piece of playground equipment, even notice a girl in my AoA rubbing herself while standing in line, and not question for an instant where I stand, but this sort of thing, I need to actively keep out of my life for my own health and sanity."

    A person who desires to use a child for sex hypersexualizes anything child does. My daughter has rubbed herself in public. Why? She had a yeast infection. It is a constant burn and itchy feeling. So rubbing feels good. She would rub it constantly. Not sexual at all. A child can behave in ways you see as sexual for many non-sexual reasons. Your brain is clouded by your delusions and fantasies that you assume this little girl is being sexual and wants a man like you to use her. No. You don't know her but already pushing your desires and thoughts on her. How can you not see this as grooming? You desire sex and assume this girl is trying be sexual. You don't seem to consider another possibility.

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    1. First off, if your daughter has a yeast infection, you should take her in to a pediatric gynecologist and get that looked at. She shouldn't have to suffer from a medical condition because you're a prude.

      Secondly, can you please respond to my posts in the same thread I post them in? It's irritating to see you pull random quotes from me out of context and stuff them in random places on my blog instead of just responding to the post you are quoting.

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