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Upskirting bill blocked

(219 Posts)
crystaltipps Fri 15-Jun-18 18:38:26

Anyone else outraged that this bill which was to make taking photographs up a woman’s skirt illegal was blocked by one old Tory MP. He also blocked a bill which would have made it a crime to attack a police dog.

PECS Wed 20-Jun-18 16:47:16

baggs I find it interesting that you really think 'no damage' is being done if the women do not know men are taking covert photographs of their vulva/buttocks, pubic hair, pants/tampon strings and bloody leaks & to then distributing them on the internet .
Would you argue that photographing babies and toddlers genitals and distributing them is a 'no damage' action too because the kids were too young to really know what was going on? My DGD (Yr7) always wears her lycra shorts under her school skirt. I find that to be an unhappy situation.

maryeliza54 Wed 20-Jun-18 17:40:16

Yes Baggs funnily enough we know the bill has not being blocked forever - but by making a fuss about CC’s behaviour we have ensured it will come back - as it is doing. Any important legal details would have been sorted our if it had gone through last week - it didn’t need objecting to to ensure that happened - and most of us knew that as well.

Jalima1108 Wed 20-Jun-18 17:58:01

A woman or girl does not have to be a feminist to not want her knickers, her genitals or whatever is hidden from public view to be photographed and shared on the internet, whether or not she is aware of it.

Baggs Wed 20-Jun-18 18:21:47

PECS, "no damage" is indeed saying too much. What I should have said is no damage to the indidvidual who was upskirted if she didn't know about it. Oh wait! That is what I said.

I don't feel qualified to comment on whether damage is done to society in general by such activities and the posting of that sort of picture online. I suppose it could be seen as general damage in the same way as robbery or murder is general damage. They also damage individuals directly which, I think Williams and others are arguing, upskirting doesn't if it is done seruptitiously and the individuals to whom it is done don't know about it.

PECS Wed 20-Jun-18 18:25:59

So do you think it OK to post babies gentitals/ anus on porn site if the child was not harmed when photo taken?

Baggs Wed 20-Jun-18 18:26:13

So, to be clear, if I were upskirted and pictures shared but I didn't know it had happened I would not be damaged in the least.

This does not mean that the upskirting was not wrong, only that I wasn't hurt by it. Nor does it mean I'm not disgusted by the idea of it done to anyone at all.

Baggs Wed 20-Jun-18 18:27:52

Images of babies and children should not be used for porn purposes. I presume we have laws that deal with this.

Baggs Wed 20-Jun-18 18:28:41

I'm not really sure what you're getting at, pec. My morals?

Eloethan Wed 20-Jun-18 19:23:50

baggs Your logic seems to be that if a woman doesn't know she has been "upskirted" then it doesn't harm her personally - and therefore what? there is no need to criminalise such behaviour? If it were not an offence to, for instance, secretly film women in the shower or the toilet, would you say that there is no need to make it a criminal offence because the woman was not aware that it had happened?

The point surely is that even if the person in question is unaware she has been photographed/filmed, if the perpetrator knows that, even if he is found out, what he has done is not seen as a criminal offence, he will no doubt continue with the behaviour (and there is quite a bit of evidence to suggest that such behaviour can escalate to even more serious acts).

It's not a "moral panic". If a woman chooses to be photographed in these sorts of situations, that's fine but if a woman has not consented to it then it is an invasion of her privacy, both in the surreptitious taking of the photograph/film and in distributing it on line.

I imagine that at one time we did not have laws to prevent images of babies and children being used for porn purposes. I expect the law referring to this specific activity only came into force once it was discovered that it was happening. When there was no internet, for instance, such photographs and films could not be distributed in that way.

Jalima1108 Wed 20-Jun-18 19:56:58

As I logged on, I was thinking of what to say in a post on this thread and it is exactly what Eloethan has just posted.

Iam64 Wed 20-Jun-18 20:13:08

More thanks Eloethan for the way your set out exactly why the response to CC and up skirting isn't a moral panic.

Paedophiles often use catalogues, like those issued by Mothercare, which show photographs of babies and infants modelling eg nappies, pants, vests, those snuggle towels you put around infants when they come naked out of the bath. Yep, those men use the images to masturbate to. I wonder what the response of those posters here, who continue to intellectualise the issue of upskirting, arguing that if a child/woman doesn't know she's been up skirted, she hasn't been harmed, would also say the infants in those images hadn't been harmed.
It's like arguing there is no such thing as society - we're all harmed by disgusting behaviour.

PECS Wed 20-Jun-18 20:35:32

no not at all Baggs just trying to comprehend a viewpoint different to my own. Woud you feel harmed or disturbed if you discovered someone had entered your home, and even if they did not steal anything ?

Baggs Wed 20-Jun-18 20:46:16

baggs Your logic seems to be that if a woman doesn't know she has been "upskirted" then it doesn't harm her personally - and therefore what? there is no need to criminalise such behaviour?

Then it seems you've misunderstood my logic, eloethan.

I suggest you read all my posts and count up the number of times I've said or implied that there should be legal consequences to behaviour that harms others, including when it is upskirting.

Joanna Williams questioned the need to criminalise upskirting, though I don't think she stated outright that she thought it was a bad idea. Perhaps you are confusing me with her.

The only place I differ from most other posters on this thread is that I'm prepared to believe Chope had a good reason for temporarily blocking (i.e. forcing more detailed debate) the bill. I have not argued anywhere that there should not be punishements for people who are caught upskirting and I have made it perfectly clear (several times) that I think it's a disgusting practice.

What I haven't done is join in the mass virtue signalling.

Iam64 Wed 20-Jun-18 20:49:39

It isn't mass virtue signalling Baggs. it's expressing genuine outrage.

PECS Wed 20-Jun-18 20:49:48

Oh! Virtue signalling another popular term to close down discussion!

Baggs Wed 20-Jun-18 20:50:17

I said on Friday evening (without the underlining; that's new):

Joanna Williams is arguing that the idea of making upskirting a criminal offence ( as opposed to a moral one, which it already is ) is yet another way of making women into victims.

Baggs Wed 20-Jun-18 20:52:23

Haha! So now I'm closing down discussion! Chortle. I've been trying to look at angles outside the outrage.

OK, iam, but the outrage has seemed a bit hysterical in some quarters. Not on here, but some of the stuff directed at Chope.

Jalima1108 Wed 20-Jun-18 20:53:26

It is a criminal offence imo.
The same as voyeurism is a criminal offence.

Stalking was not a criminal offence until genuine outrage made the government of the day introduced it to sit alongside the Harrassment Act.

Baggs Wed 20-Jun-18 20:54:33

Also on Friday evening, muffinthemoo said this:

but the people who engage in this offence display extremely unpleasant conduct towards girls and very young women

and I agreed with her wholeheartedly straight after that post.

Jalima1108 Wed 20-Jun-18 20:55:04

Are we virtue signalling when we express outrage at pictures of babies and children being circulated on internet porn sites?

The babies and small children are unaware of this, therefore should it matter, should it be an offence?
Yes, it should.

Baggs Wed 20-Jun-18 20:56:02

That's another thing a few people (not on GN) have brought up too, jal: the fact that current laws may cover it already.

They also may not and if they don't then amendments or a new bill will.

Baggs Wed 20-Jun-18 20:57:17

I think you need to read some of my recent posts, jal. I've already agreed about child porn.

It's really quite weird how people seem to be wilfully misunderstanding my stance.

Baggs Wed 20-Jun-18 21:03:38

My next post, on Saturday, was quite long but was summed up by this:

I'm not arguing against greater punishment for convicted perpetrators of upskirting or attacks on police dogs

So far I haven't found anything untoward, anything I've said that excuses upskirting or implies that it isn't a very bad thing, so why do people seem to think that's what I have been saying?

I'll keep looking through my posts in order to find out why people misunderstand what I've said. I'm beginning to think that my fault is I have stayed calm and rational about it all even though I'm just as disgusted by it as anyone else.

Jalima1108 Wed 20-Jun-18 21:08:05

That's another thing a few people (not on GN) have brought up too, jal: the fact that current laws may cover it already.
I did mention that Baggs, but questioned if present legislation covered it precisely enough.
www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2003/42/section/67

I am not wilfully misunderstanding

Baggs Wed 20-Jun-18 21:16:04

Wasn't accusing you, jal. You are not the misunderstanding type.

Actually, I think I might have hit on what I've "done wrong": I didn't come straight out and blast Chope. I didn't immediately assume that he wanted to make excuses for upskirting.

I still don't think that was his purpose. And even if it was, that purpose is well and truly scuppered now, which people should be pleased about.

I'm off to read some other threads now.