Jump to content

Talk:Pedophile movement/Archive 13

Page contents not supported in other languages.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Silent War (talk | contribs) at 10:18, 25 September 2006 (Merge [[Abolition of age of consent laws]]). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

READ BEFORE COMMENTING

SIGN YOUR EDITS PLEASE!!
A Plea: Please SIGN YOUR EDITS so the discussions can be followed correctly. I can't tell where some comments begin or end.

--DanielCD 00:42, 30 December 2005 (UTC)

Archives

Earlier material in Archive 10, Archive 9, Archive 8, Archive 7, Archive 6, Archive 5, Archive 4, Archive 3, Archive 2, Archive 1 and Talk:Girllover

Proposal for Deletion

This article was proposed for deletion and failed to reach a consensus. The deletion discussion is now archived here at Talk:Childlove movement/Deletion_debate_archive. -- Cecropia | Talk 23:49, 18 Aug 2004 (UTC)


Brief history of modern pedophile activism

I'd like to note that three paragraphs of mine under the heading Brief history of modern pedophile activism have been removed twice, along with my referenced primary sources, without any given comment, announcement, or justification here on the discussion page, and that I can't find any reasons for that. Additionally, even all academic degrees I added to the still remaining rest of the section have also been removed.

In the first paragraph, I refer in three sentences to pivotal figurehead of pedophile activism, psychologist and sexuologist Dr. Frits Bernard starting together with activists and scientists of the Dutch branch of Hirschfeld's Wissenschaftlich-Humanitäres Kommitee and others specific pedophile activism in Holland in the late 1930s, why it was connected with the WHK, how this activism ended by the German invasion in 1940, and that hence, the Dutch WHK was disbanded and all its documents destroyed to prevent Nazi investigations.

In the second paragraph, I refer in two sentences to Bernard and others forming the international pedophile activism Enclave kring organization after the war based on former infrastructures of the Dutch branch of the WHK, its self-definition and its purposes as a research and activism organization, its international influence, its international support, and the results of its work.

In the third paragraph, I deal in two sentences with Bernard's 1972 book Sex met kinderen, the fact that it detailed and summarized what I've referred to in my former two paragraphs, and its pivotal founding role of 1970s pedophile activism in Western Europe.

All that with detailed primary source citations for each detail of information presented, and phrased in what I think to be a NPOV, supporting neither side. Plus I added the four primary source scholarly books that I drew this information from to the article's References section.

By doing so, I even made obsolete the first citation needed comment currently appearing in the article.

What's wrong with that? 3 paragraphs comprised of 2-3 sentences each can't be so long as to conflict with the 'briefness' referred to in the headline. Is it the fact that members of the renowned WHK supported pedophile activism? It's a fact that I gave several sources for. Is it the fact the sources I quoted and identified profoundly and accordingly aren't published in English, but other Western languages? Please don't tell me that it makes them any less reliable.

As it is now, this section of the article can't be referred to as a 'history' of specific pedophile activism as the half of its 60 years existence isn't covered at all, which I attempted to do in a very short, very condensed and summarized form. As it is now, all the activity, all the humming and the melting pot of the 1970s comes out of nowhere, a huge mass created all of a sudden without any origin. What is referred to as 'history' is but a highly detailed chronicle of decline. Would you start an article entitled Roman history with the murder of military officer Stilicho in 408 a. D. and then go on and on about Germanic tribes invading Italy because of this?

I hereby accuse the editor(s) responsible for these removals of significant, validified primary source informations of unjustified vandalism and demand that my three paragraphs, the academic degrees I added, and my additions to the References section will be restored. -TlatoSMD 17:51, 30 April 2006 (CEST)

You ask why the material you have recently added to the article has been reverted. Unfortunately, for you, your reputation for vandalism of the Virago and Asian fetish articles preceeds you (the Virago article was subsequently deleted; the Asian fetish matter is documented ad infinitum in the archives of the Asian fetish talk page). Briefly stated, the content you added to the latter article was rejected by consensus (defined as a two thirds majority of users who commented on that page). The page had to be protected and then semi-protected in order to prevent your repeated attempts to add this material. Editors of that page regarded your actions as vandalism.
However, the material you have added to this article is different in kind and therefore (perhaps) does deserve comment. I have reverted it for the following reasons:
  1. It is unencyclopedic (see WP:NOT)
  2. It contains numerous errors
  3. It is overly wordy
  4. It is irrelevant.
Please do not waste the time of the editors of this page. They have lots on their plate and your proven inability to collaborate will not be helpful here. As you persistently seem to fail to understand what Wikipedia is, or how it is produced, you have previously been asked to take your project elsewhere. Please do so now. Sunray 18:51, 30 April 2006 (UTC)

Before you mentioned them here, I didn't even know a Virago and an Asian fetish article existed. Claiming that I contributed to the talk pages of those two is a lie as evidenced by the fact that my nick appears not a single time in the talk pages to those articles, nor their archives. This article on Pedophile activism is the very first and the only article and this article's talk page is the very first and the only talk page I ever contributed to in the English-language Wikipedia. Concerning the further informations you provide and the socio-psychological connotations with at least one of the subjects before mentioning my actual contributions, I must therefore regard your lie as an act of irrational slander adding to my accusation of vandalism, provided it is not based on a simple error on your side. In order to prevent any such slandering, I've just registered my nick to Wikipedia ( http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benutzer:TlatoSMD ).

I however did contribute under the same nick as here to the German talk pages on the German Wikipedia of other historiographical articles Ase (English as Æsir), Barbar (English as Barbarian), Klemens Wenzel Lothar von Metternich (English as Klemens Wenzel von Metternich), Slobodan Milosevic (English as Slobodan Milošević), and Heiliges Römisches Reich (English as Holy Roman Empire). These German article talk pages, this one English article on Pedophile activism and its talk page comprise my complete history of Wikipedia participation.

Concerning the reasons you give:

  1. There is no definition whatsoever to be found of the term unencyclopedic you employ in the link you provide, the term itself does not even appear. Therefore, this argument suffers of vagueness due to lack of definition, and you must provide definition in accordance to the link you provided.
  2. I quoted a variety of printed primary sources authored and published by academics and/or people with a completed university education. If you cannot evidence that I quoted these sources incorrectly, you must at least attempt to falsify these informations given therein by employing other sources of an equal or higher authority. Otherwise what you express is a personal, unfounded opinion. You may be entitled to your own opinion, yet you are not entitled to your own facts.
  3. I repeat that I've managed to compress 30 years of complex historical processes into 3 paragraphs of 2-3 sentences each. The author(s) of the current form of this section failed to achieve this brevity for the same amount of time following in number of sentences, number of paragraphs, and amount of screen area used.
  4. I myself gave reasons why I regard my contributions to this article as highly relevant. For your argument of lack of relevance you do not even attempt to falsify these.

I therefore regard all of your provided arguments refuted in their current form. -TlatoSMD 21:56, 30 April 2006 (CEST)

Well, if I am wrong about you being the same individual on those other pages, I will apologize. Nevertheless, your style is remarkably similar. I will stand by my reasons for reverting your additions to the article, however. Perhaps I was being somewhat circumspect in my criticism. The gramatical errors alone are egregious. The paragraphs you added are not suitable for an encyclopedia article. They do not summarize the material well. The references are not well done and detract from the readability of the section. They bring in irrelevant argument (e.g., reference to gay activism). I could go on, but I don't have the time to take this on. That too is similar to the Virago vandal: He wastes people's time. Sunray 21:56, 30 April 2006 (UTC)

Thank you for apologizing and toning down your behaviour. I hereby take back my accusation of slandering. I'm also thankful for that you not seem to question the existence of my sources any longer as I'd interpreted your former post.

I admit my use of the English language might be flawed since it's not my native language. However, I see this in itself not as a reason for revertings, in fact when information is presented in a gramatically or orthographically unsound way but considered reliable (which I'd like to put up for debate in my case here on the talk page) it ought be improved in these aspects by editors of better command of the language.

I regard your argument of improper summarizing as a similar matter of form, not information relevance.

I am aware that implementing my references was unusual in that it was not relating to resources available online, and I admit that my way of identifying my sources did not aid in providing a readable text. Therefore, I'd like to ask you guys to educate me on a better, more suitable way of indentifying such offline sources, or link me to an appropriate help article. Similar as your argument on language and proper summarizing, it's a matter of form, not of content significance or relevance, and in the case of information relevance ought be a matter of editing, not reverting.

I'd like to challenge your argument that support for a set of ideas evidenced in a primary source and deemed significance and relevance of this support therein is actually not relevant, especially since we're dealing here with a set of ideas centered upon support, the quotes these informations of support are drawn from are primary sources, and in order to be honest and fair these sources are signified as authored by supporters themselves. In the case of primary sources such as those I employed, it's the most immediate sources we have, i. e. they are closest to the original events, and the authority of these primary sources is increased by academic degrees as demanded by Wikipedia's rules, however neither of this negates the fact that it's supporting sources.

I'd also like to hear other people's opinions on this section of the talk page (I doubt it can be about the matter in its entirety since on this talk page, I only summarized my text in question), especially since this seems to be an active page. -TlatoSMD 00:45, 31 April 2006 (CEST)

Primary sources can be misinterpreted, so they have to be used with great care. Secondary sources are preferred for that reason. For general information on what we allow as sources, please see WP:RS. Also, English-language sources are preferred so that other editors may verify themn easily. -Will Beback 23:05, 30 April 2006 (UTC)

Agreed. Use sources in English whenever possible. After a bit of searching, here's an online English article by Frits Bernard:

http://www.ipce.info/ipceweb/Library/dutch_movement_text.htm

I would feel more comfortable if you were to pull quotes from there. Hope that helps. Best, Wzhao553 00:19, 1 May 2006 (UTC)

Thanks a lot for your IPCE link Wzhao553! The particular 1987 article seems to be an intermediate form between two sources available to me. Looks like my former shrugging away from internet pedophile resources due to my personal bias based on commonly held socio-psychological believes was not helpful in the past (what about those believes here, since pedophile and internet are heavily charged buzzwords in connection?). I'll attempt to adjust my contribution to using those English sources. However, it's undecided as of yet how this will effect the attitude concerning my contribution also considering my grammar, how do I go about finding out? Microsoft Works spell and grammar checker didn't yield any such flaws except when distracted by non-English words.

Thank you for kindly providing that Wikipedia guidelines link Will Beback. I do accept the guideline that secondary sources are to be preferred to primary sources, of course. I'm afraid that secondary sources on specific matters on pedophile activism prior to the 1970s are not available, though of course I'd like to be proven wrong. However, that doesn't mean using primary sources must be banned since it's the only sources we have.

Also, WP guideline Evaluating sources states about primary and secondary sources that both can be reliable.

One might construe a supporting primary source as being of dubious reliabilty (though I'm a bit concerned that this term might have a very broad definition potentially inviting vandalism), however I've attributed the informations in question to its sources as demanded by Wikipedia guidelines for sources of dubious reliabilty. I'd say that this dubious reliability guideline in cases of information relevance also applies to biographies of living people.

I suppose the most pivotal WP guideline for this matter of primary sources here is that concerning Self-published sources in articles about themselves:

Self-published sources, and published sources of dubious reliability, may be used only as sources of information on themselves, and only in articles about them. For example, the Stormfront website may be used as a source of information on itself in an article about Stormfront, so long as the information is notable, not unduly self-aggrandizing, and not contradicted by reliable, third-party published sources.

I attempted to do exactly as proposed in that guideline and claim to have met this aim. I'd also argue that it might be a standard way of compiling information about an organization by employing informations from the organization itself, though of course not using this source exclusively, if possible. Similarly with the WP guideline on Self-published sources in articles about themselves, and also that one of Partisan websites (...should never be used as sources for Wikipedia, except as primary sources i.e. in articles discussing the opinions of that organization or the opinions of a larger like-minded group, but even then should be used with great caution, and should not be relied upon as a sole source.)

As on the additional matter of source authority, I quote the WP guidelines on Beware false authority:

Look out for false claims of authority. Advanced degrees give authority in the topic of the degree. [...] Use sources who have postgraduate degrees or demonstrable published expertise in the field they are discussing. The more reputable ones are affiliated with academic institutions. The most reputable have written textbooks in their field: these authors can be expected to have a broad, authoritative grasp of their subject.

All these criteria of source authority are met in my contribution in question (potentially one might argue about affiliation with academic institutions though, which might be sorted out by further biographical sources and definitions of such institutions). In this context, observing scientific methodology also comes to my mind, however I'm afraid that's out of the question as per WP guideline on original research.

P. S.: Please tell me if I'm too wordy here on the talk page. My problem is that I'm afraid the shorter I make it, the more misinterpretable it could be. -TlatoSMD 02:59, 31 April 2006 (CEST)

I'm done fixing my original contribution, so let me ask again, how to go about this? Directly inserting it in the article, or putting it up for debate here first? Which way might work out with least harm done to the atmosphere among debaters?

Also, I've come across another non-English information and like to ask about its relevance in case it can be validified. In a published interview, Bernard claims (after having been on Dutch TV during the 1970s, other source) he appeared as 'special guest' 'invited by NBC Television' on the Donahue live show on February 5th 1987, freely advocated pedophile activism for one hour straight, supported by a 23 year old male who as a child had been involved in a 'sexual relationship with an adult', and that Donahue was regularly broadcasted 'via 250 TV channels in the US and Canada'. This I think is relevant for several reasons, such as 1987 was a date when pedophile activism already was increasingly under public attack compared to the 1970s situation in Western Europe, and the fact that pedophile activism has always been less active (and arguably less successful) in the US compared to its presence in Western Europe up to the 1980s (in the same interview, Bernard himself regrets significant ignorance in sexual matters in general in the US). -TlatoSMD 13:19, 1 May 2006 (CEST)

You can add a tag like {{globalize/USA}} or {{toofewopinions}} as the first line of the article. (See WP:CSB for examples of the output that the templates produce.) Or, in your edit summary, you could indicate that you are introducing a global viewpoint that may not be familiar to Americans. In my personal opinion, if you provide sufficient warning to the reader about the viewpoint that is being introduced, then your edits will seem more acceptable. --Wzhao553 19:12, 1 May 2006 (UTC)
Please insert your new revision directly into the article.
Non-english sources are not favoured on the English Wikipedia, but are perfectly legitimate all the same: feel free to cite them. JayW 21:40, 1 May 2006 (UTC)

In spite of the fact that I've managed to base each of the first four paragraphs in this section on the one before, I'm not happy about this new form of my first paragraph of this section, however I suppose you can sense where I'm going with that first paragraph by the second paragraph's first line. By the first paragraph I'd like to emphasize that Enclave kring was based upon members of Dutch WHK so people will be able to identify where this came from and what it was built upon. Beside that, I'd like to hint to that due to the Netherlands being under the control of Nazi occupation forces, Bernard for five years of his life had to face the contemporary fact that the Nazi enforcement of German Penal Code section 176 was carried out more rigorously and brought more severe consequences upon pedophiles even than the Nazi enforcement of section 175 caused for homosexuals, as written by German historian Burkhard Jellonek in his 1990 book Homosexuelle unterm Hakenkreuz ("Homosexuals during the reign of the swastika"). -TlatoSMD 07:39, 2 May 2006 (CEST)

A reason to include more view-points

In spite of the fact that already many sources have been quoted to represent sets of ideas, I feel many of them appear to be overtly simplifying sources preventing insight by only naming conclusions but not explaining argumentations, reasonings, or analyses leading up to those. I've intended to sketch a more accurate, in-depth portrayal of ideas held and promoted by 1970's pedophile activism in Western Europe in the first paragraph of the section Scientific papers' impacts on pedophile activism, and the fact that this edit of mine has not been reverted but only a [citation needed] tag has been attached to it seems to indicate that this in-depth description is not bordering irrelevance. Therefore, I have introduced a {toofewopinions} box heading the article as suggested by Wzhao553, even though one might argue that to an extent it could be replaced with a {limitedgeographicscope} or a {globalize/USA} as these come also into play since the majority of pedophile activism took place in Western Europe and as a result of that has never been recognized on such a wide scale in the US during the time when it was most active. -TlatoSMD 07:44, 2 May 2006 (CEST)

Continuing problems with recent additions

I have attempted to begin editing your (IP 80.171.188.253) additions to the article under the "Brief History" section. It is, however, much too detailed for a general encyclopedia article. I request that you attempt to summarize it and do what you can to make it more readable. It might have been better to do that here. German writing style is considerably different than English and an encyclopedia is not an academic text. Also, please avoid making broad generalizations such as "gaining support in the gay activist scene in New York." The material needs a great deal more work before it will be acceptable. I won't revert it if you will agree to simplify it and make it more readable. Sunray 15:14, 3 May 2006 (UTC)

As I said myself, I'm not happy about what the first paragraph now looks like and thus fleshed out the ideas behind it (the fact of using existing WHK infrastructures and problems due to potential Nazi persecutions) above so other editors might summarize it according to that. "Gaining support in the gay activist scene" was no broad generalization that I made but a direct quote from Bernard. I could have added 'prominent figures in...' at the beginning as that's what he specifically writes, however that would've made the quote even longer. As based on my description of my first three paragraphs above, I was asked to use English sources for them so I could re-insert them, so I suppose it can't be the mere informations I introduced are irrelevant in themselves. Again, I in no way claim infallibility concerning the language and if people feel like fixing that language I use, I have no problem with that. -TlatoSMD 20:07, 3 May 2006 (UTC)

My point about the "gaining support" statement is that it really doesn't matter what Bernard thinks. He is not a sociologist who has researched this particular issue. He has a point of view that he wants to put forward. However, there has been extensive discussion of the matter withiin the gay activist community and I would say that his view is not widely held. Therefore one couldn't reasonably include his point of view unless it was clear that is marginal and given proper historical context. This would need a section rather than a throw-away line. Meanwhile, it is a generalization that is not supportable as it is currently referenced. If you are going to put up this kind of material, please understand that it will be edited. Perhaps you should try to work with that. Sunray 18:23, 3 May 2006 (UTC)

I did not argue against you removing those 6 words, only that I myself authored a broad statement instead of simply shortening a quote. -TlatoSMD 20:29, 3 May 2006 (UTC)

I see you have already cleaned up my first paragraph. Thank you. -TlatoSMD 20:35, 3 May 2006 (UTC)

POV paragraph?

"By the 1970s, Bernard's Enclave kring had established a rich variety of scientific and social movement activities concerning pedophilia and advocacy of adult-child sexual activities in the Netherlands and to a lesser degree in Western Europe."

Lot's of words and phrases in the above paragraph have connotations in favour of the so called "Childlove" movement. For example "Rich variety", "Social movement" and "Advocacy". Not only content but also tone can be POV. Signed Timothy Scriven.

The messed-up "References" section

Is someone going to cleanup this awful, awful section? Cite every note properly. Skinnyweed 17:17, 3 May 2006 (UTC)

Sorry, it seems it was me forgetting one slash. Fixed that. TlatoSMD 19:46, 3 May 2006 (CEST)

It's not just that, it's the fact that they are not named, just numbers. Skinnyweed 18:06, 3 May 2006 (UTC)
I agree with Skinnyweed. This section is not formatted correctly. For an example of a properly formated "References" section, see the "Notes" section of Native Americans in the United States. Major work needs to be done. Sunray 18:12, 3 May 2006 (UTC)

That's what I found about 90 percent or more of them to be like for this article before I started adding more in the same fashion recently. Gonna check about your link. -TlatoSMD 20:16, 3 May 2006 (CEST)

Here's another one with academic references: Albatross. Sunray 19:23, 3 May 2006 (UTC)

Is there a preference for Harvard or footnotes? Both are used sometimes even within the same sentence and it is quite unhelpful. Kotepho 18:07, 6 May 2006 (UTC)

By 'Harvard', I suppose you mean naming author, date, and page in brackets? I used that only when no online resource was available for a specific information, otherwise I used footnotes linking to online sources. The latter practice had been established before I started editing sections of this article, however I found I couldn't link to offline material, so I used the Harvard way as it had been used before by a few other editors in the Views and strategies of pedophile activists section. -TlatoSMD 23:50, 6 May 2006 (CEST)
Yes, that is what I mean by Harvard citation. There is nothing wrong with using a footnote for something you do not have a URL for though. Kotepho 22:36, 6 May 2006 (UTC)

Okay, in a cumbersome, hours-long editing marathon, I've made it to properly wikify 90 percent or more of the footnotes, completing them. I've also removed a few dead links and even found the particular 1999 US Congress Bill condeming Rind et al, properly linking to the exact PDF (the original unnamed note linked to a temporary cache search long since gone, actually). However, might someone please check what went wrong about footnotes #11, 12, and the first one in the section Controversy and public reactions... as to behave that wonky? And what is a .wp file such as that one used as a source in footnote #30? Furthermore, I'd like to suggest removing source #31 as it's too similar to source #32 (one might assume it's actually two transscriptions of the same document) which is much better formatted and both are used to validate one and the same (set of) fact(s) that are found in each of them. Any objections? -TlatoSMD 18:11, 9 May 2006 (CEST)

.wp is word perfect maybe? I pulled this text from it " COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA Present: Judges Bray, Overton and Senior Judge Duff. JOHN DAVID SMITH MEMORANDUM OPINION Record No. 1546 97 4 by JUDGE CHARLES H. DUFF DECEMBER 1, 1998 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF STAFFORD COUNTY James W. Haley, Jr. Judge Jeffery Garth Edmunds, on brief), for appealant. blah blah John David Smith, appellant, appeals his convictions..." On 31 and 32 they seem to be two seperate documents from the appeal. I haven't had the chance to look at them closure, but I don't believe them to be duplicates. I'm not sure what is wrong with 11, but I fixed the others. Kotepho 17:58, 9 May 2006 (UTC)

Length of article

This article is becoming rather long and cumbersome. For example, the section now titled "Overview of modern pedophile activism," with recent additions is now much more than a "brief history." I propose that that section be moved to a new article (titled "History of pedophile activism") with a short summary and link to replace it in the "Overview..." section. This is an accordance with the guidelines on Writing better articles (see subsection on "Size"). Sunray 19:50, 3 May 2006 (UTC)

I support this idea. I've fancied it myself, but didn't want to pressure creating more articles on this topic on anyone. -TlatoSMD 22:38, 3 May 2006 (CEST)

Okay, since nothing has happened on this matter during the past few days I've moved the section's content to its own article now by copy-paste and replaced it with a summary here. I've made a first try at roughly breaking the new article into sections, however I couldn't think of a proper introduction without simply repeating the one from here, so help is needed, also to further wikify the new article itself. -TlatoSMD 17:25, 8 May 2006 (CEST)

That section looks better now. Major editing is still required to get this article down to a reasonable size. Sunray 19:42, 11 May 2006 (UTC)

Unsourced statements?

I'd like whom recently categorized this article as containing unsourced statements to tell me which statements they'd like to be sourced, and I'll try to find sources for them. I suggest that if no-one will object within a week this article will be removed from that category. -TlatoSMD 17:54, 11 May 2006 (CEST)

A week is quite generous to me. Skinnyweed 16:29, 12 May 2006 (UTC)

Many child abuse prevention advocates, law enforcement officials, and journalists note that the movement's claim of separating advocacy from abuse does not always hold true. Members of the movement often respond by claiming that high-profile child abusers were not members of the movement, or that the movement could have even helped them avoid crossing the line into abuse. [citation needed]

  • Charles Jaynes, also allegedly a member of NAMBLA [1], was convicted of murdering a 10-year-old boy then having intercourse with his body; the parents of the boy sued NAMBLA and its steering committee [2], alleging that Jaynes wrote in his diary that participating in NAMBLA and reading NAMBLA publications helped him overcome his inhibitions about having sex with young boys [1]. (See also Curley v. NAMBLA.)

Are the statements that were tagged (see the {{citation needed}} [citation needed] tag). Kotepho 17:01, 12 May 2006 (UTC)

I've added a source, there are plenty of others as it's a well-known case. -Will Beback 20:20, 12 May 2006 (UTC)

Since the statements in question are now sourced, I ask this article to be de-classified as unsourced. -TlatoSMD 00:00, 13 May 2006 (CEST)

Once all of the [citation needed] tags are gone it is automatically out of the category "Articles with unsourced statements" or whatever they are calling it now. I might have missed one when I scanned the article though... time to Control F for them. Kotepho 15:36, 13 May 2006 (UTC)

"Many members of the childlove movement are also opposed to the current state of sexual education in many countries. [citation needed] They argue that enforced ignorance and abstinence only forces those young people who wish to explore their sexuality to do so in secret, making them more susceptible to unsafe environments and coercive relationships. John Coleman of the Trust for the Study of Adolescence says:" from the literature section.

Categories

I don't deny that Activism is an appropriate category for this article, however I also think that Support group that I'd categorized it as is just as appropriate, just see the statements

"The primary activity of the movement is support for pedophiles. They attempt to provide support to others who would otherwise be reluctant to discuss their attractions for fear of being ostracized. To this end, some organizations provide online counselling and suicide prevention services."

in the Activities section. Apart from that, I think we're also dealing with a social movement in the classical sense (such as feminism, gay movement, Jewish emancipation, socialism, etc.), a term which I didn't find a literal category for but Social networking, and this movement certainly is a social network as well (see media coverage on pedophile networks, for example). -TlatoSMD 06:36, 13 May 2006 (CEST)

This article is not about a group. It is about general activism. The support group category may apply to individual groups. Or, if you think it is the more apporpriate topic, we can move the article to "Pedophile support groups". As for social networking, that does not appear to be the general context of the activism. If you look at the other entires in those two categories, you won't find other articles about activism. -Will Beback 05:31, 13 May 2006 (UTC)
PS: if you look in Category:Activism you'll many "movements", so I think it is the category you were looking for. -Will Beback 05:44, 13 May 2006 (UTC)

"These categories should be constituted by such factors as"

This large section of text is unreferenced, and very original. As an essay, we can agree that whomever wrote this makes sense, but encyclopedias are interested in how things are categorized by published sources, not how they should be or might be.

"These categories should be constituted by such factors as

  • coercive, aggressive, oppressive, and/or violent behaviour vs. the lack of such behaviour,
  • simple consent (i. e. agreement, willing; a few put informed consent here instead) vs. the lack of it
  • whether the adult involved could actually be diagnosed as a pedophile in the medical sense,
  • biological age of the child involved,
  • incest vs. non-incest,
  • anal/vaginal intercourse vs. the lack of these penetrating acts, and which was the penetrating party if any,
  • age disparity,
  • biological sex of the parties involved,
  • common social relation between the involved parties both on an individual and a wider, non-individual scale,
  • which party initially brought up sexual aspects and behaviour and under what circumstances,
  • prior believes and values held and experiences made by the child concerning sexuality in general (if any),concerning sexual acts between members of the involved sexes (if any), and concerning adult-child sex interactions (if any).

These effects of adult-child sex interactions themselves should be categorized as primary detrimental effects. Secondary detrimental effects

According to pedophile activists, aforementioned prior believes and values are supposed to be interdependent with and easily subject to manipulation by 'after the fact' actions taken by intervening authorities and peer groups as soon as this fact becomes known, thus play a role in secondary detrimental effects caused by such measures, and allegedly these secondary detrimental effects are neither accordingly distinguished into a seperate category from primary effects due to sexual interactions. Pedophile activists point to studies suggesting that secondary detrimental effects might frequently be significantly more negative and severe than the effects even of most intergenerational sexual interactions.


Secondary detrimental effects vs. False Memory Syndrome

Though often mixed up, this secondary effects issue is not identical to the False Memory Syndrome which is mostly adults becoming aware of supposedly repressed memories through means of therapeutical work (see Recovered Memory Therapy), although pedophile activists claim similar patterns by means of manipulation can occur during the same time as secondary effects. Simply put, the difference is changing attitudes about actual events and/or causing detriments by means of labelling and sometimes even maltreatment by authorities (including relatives) and peer groups during and after investigations and councelling on the one hand (secondary effects), and the fabrication of memory and conviction concerning events that never happened on the other (False Memory). Via socio-psychological pressure and labelling either way, children would thus suffer secondary effects by adopting new values concerning events and their own identities.

Claim of coercion

A third claim by some pedophile activists is that children during police investigations would be coerced against their will into testifying about events that the children themselves don't believe to have happened. This would be the less severe case of what otherwise would become False Memory Syndrome due to basically manipulative coercion."

It is possible that these arguments were taken from some published source that the editor did not mention or include. But especially in the "impacts of scientific papers" this large body of definitions cannot stand unsourced. Saying "Pedophile activists claim" is not enough. Remember that this article itself is over-long. Being that there is more than the recommended amount of text on the page to start, removing unreferenced and perhaps in part unreferencable material for review here is justified, I think. Lotusduck 19:41, 23 May 2006 (UTC)

I suppose that just as with those links I added at the end of the first paragraph of this section, I won't have a hard time sourcing those statements via IPCE, just give me a few days. -TlatoSMD 04:01, 24 May 2006 (CEST)


This is a large amount of text that is arguably not central to an article describing pedophile activism. It's a detailed argument that only says "Some pedophiles purport that the counseling, therapy and litigation following adult-child sexual contact is more detrimental than the sexual contact.(see False Memory)" The intense detail into that argument goes outside of describing pedophile activism. This is the size of some stub on it's own page, and it certainly doesn't belong in the "reaction to scientific papers". If this level of detail into this argument is neccessary, add it to another page on the effects of what the law knows as child sex abuse, because beyond my example sentance, it isn't central to this article. Lotusduck 19:36, 24 May 2006 (UTC)

Dividing and reducing

While reccomendations for size says that the scope of some topics justifies the added reading time, articles above 30 and especially above 50kb should probably be divided. The size of this article does make it difficult to edit, and harms it's ease of reading. Surely, with the amount of redundancy in this article, some sections are worthy of their own article and not wholly central to understanding pedophile activism. What do YOU think?Lotusduck 16:04, 30 May 2006 (UTC)

References

While many references are in the neat numbered system, many are not. While the article itself has some very keen references, large blocks of text remain unreferenced.

IPCE documents of pedophile activist self publisehd books and pamphlets, have in the past been accepted as references on this page. Clearly now, there is no need to search far and wide for information on this topic, in fact, there is more than can be comfortably read, loaded and edited in this article alone. Verifiability says:

One of the keys to writing good encyclopedia articles is to understand that they should refer only to facts, assertions, theories, ideas, claims, opinions, and arguments that have already been published by reputable publishers."

It also says

". Exceptions may be when a well-known, professional researcher in a relevant field, or a well-known professional journalist, has produced self-published material. In some cases, these may be acceptable as sources, so long as their work has been previously published by credible, third-party publications. However, exercise caution: if the information on the professional researcher's blog is really worth reporting, someone else will have done so."

Activists are neither journalists nor professional researchers. When activists write something notable, often enough a scientific journal or popular journal will pick up on it. That may seem harsh for info you might think we could come to a consensus to accept and ignore the policy, but these are policies set up by the people that created and run wikipedia. There are other wikis, like wikiinfo, that aren't as big or as important as wikipedia, because wikipedia has standards like these.

Sections or information whose only reference is a self published newsletter or book must instead reference a trusted published source that discusses that book, newsletter or blog. If appropriate references cannot be found, the information should be removed. Lotusduck 18:01, 28 May 2006 (UTC)

more uncited material

For example, topless sunbathing, they note, is legal in some countries and treated as exhibitionism in others. Many pedophile activists argue that classification of pedophilia as a mental illness would be motivated by moral views based upon learned aesthetical perception, as well as by factual or imaginary detriments based upon adult-child sex interaction while these factors should be considered irrelevant for this classification. Mental illness classification should be constituted by etiology instead, i. e. the origins of pedophilia in the medical sense. In accordance with contemporary counterculture zeitgeist, most of 1970s Western Europe pedophile activism, especially Bernard, argued according to Freud's psychological theory of infant sexuality being polymorphously perverse (or, simply put, multi-sexual) in the beginning and that by socialization, this sexual potential would be more and more restricted and hence repressed bit by bit, especially by the super-ego based upon socio-cultural values. Pedophilia would thus be normal and not a mental illness as every human being would be pedophile in the beginning but most people would 'unlearn' this specific capability of sexual desire among a variety of others. Other activists suggest a genetical theory (thus completely eliminating any constituting mental factors), either to that pedophilia would be based on individual mutation, or that it was created by evolution serving a purpose in nature that could well be fulfilled by only a limited number of individuals in each generation. Especially advocates of the evolution theory claim that pedophilia would be fundamentally different from any other form of adult sexuality as to be not equal but complementary with childhood development.

This stuff is pretty general stuff about understanding that is repeated at the beginning of the article, and in the scientific papers section. Much of it, especially the evolution stuff is very weasel wordy, "some say, these here might say" etcetera. It's also overly technical and hard to understand.I am not against something similar to this being put in, however this section is redundant and flawed to the point I would rather you work from the citation and ignore this writing in the new version. Lotusduck 16:00, 30 May 2006 (UTC)
  • Emphasizing the fact that the common use of pedophile differs from the medical one. Virtually all pedophile activists demand a more specific differentiation in using the terms pedophile and sex offender against a prepubescent child, especially since pedophiles reportedly are a small minority among said offenders compared to the absolute numbers and "there are generally large characteristical distinctions between the two types [situational and preferential] of offenders" (Abel, Mittleman, and Becker 1985 and Ward et al. 1995, on both facts see pedophilia). For example, in a paper entitled Special Problems with Sexual Abuse Cases, Underwager and Wakefield write, "Although the terms are often used interchangeably, a distinction must be made between 'sex offender against a minor' [a prepubescent child] and 'pedophile.' The former refers to a criminal sexual behavior and the latter to an anomalous sexual preference". Many ephebophiles (or pederasts) object to the term childlover since they are attracted only to adolescents, whom they consider to be physically and emotionally adults rather than children. However, those attracted to adolescents also often use the more specific terms "boylover" and "girllover" although these are increasingly used identifyingly since the 1980s by pedophiles themselves as well. Similarly to the pedophile and sex offender issue, many activists demand a more accurate differentiation between adult-child sex interactions and incest since the advent of Recovered Memory Therapy. Some further demand a differentiation between same-sex and opposite-sex adult-child sex interactions, increasingly so since the 1980s.
  • Citing scientific research papers on child sexuality and childhood development. Many pedophile activists point to studies by Alfred Kinsey, Floyd Martinson, Alayne Yates, William Masters, and others that show evidence of sexual response, masturbation and sex play with others in young children. Given evidence that children are sexual and that some seek sex play, pedophile activists argue children should be able to consent to sexual activity with any other partner, including adults. Thus many pedophile activists argue against age of consent legislation. The exact interpretation and validity of studies of child sexuality has been called into question, especially since active research into this matter is de facto illegal. See Kinsey Reports#Methodology. Also see Scientific papers' impacts on pedophile activism.
  • Referring to biological acceleration. Many pedophile activists refer to biological acceleration, i. e. earlier occurrence of adolescence as observed during the 20th century. This prominently includes secondary sex characteristics (such as body hair growth and vocal mutation), body growth, menstruation, and physical ability to procreate of both sexes. Since 1930, an acceleration rate of circa half a year per decade has been observed, so that a 1930 physical age of 17.6 years equals a physical age of 13.4 years in 1980. Given this fact, many early advocates of the gay movement and sexual liberation supported what today would be regarded as adult-child sex interactions. For example, during the 1920s Magnus Hirschfeld supported a legal Age of Consent of 16 (which would be 12 today) for same-sex activities. When Austria-Hungarian physician Richard von Krafft-Ebing coined the term Paedophilia erotica in 1886, he even limited it to a kind of sexual attraction towards minors below the contemporary age of 14 (today 10-11). However, Western penal law codes concerning sexual activities have generally not been adapted to this fact, especially not to its continuing existence at least up to the 1980s, and its particular rate.
Basically anything saying "some" or "many" pedophile activists, or even "some" or "many" journalists, researchers or people, is poor style and conveys little information. Saying "Pedophile activists like Brongersma" for info based on his works is okay (probably.) Even paragraphs that talk about scientific papers, like some of the above, need verification for their central idea, that many pedophile activists argue as these paragraphs describe. Some info that I have not yet taken out will be once I read their sources and determine if they are self published. If and when you find published sources for any of the above claims, please write clearly and concise, um, ly. This page just got a lot more readable and editable, now being 50kb. I guess technically it's 30+ not 50+ now. Doesn't almost complying with guidelines feel good? Lotusduck 16:34, 30 May 2006 (UTC)

Netherlands Pedophile Party

Shouldn't some information about NVD be included?A.Z. 22:41, 15 June 2006 (UTC)

Pro Vs. Anti Pedophilia

The pedophilia article is splintered into a Pro Pedophilia Article and an Anti Pedophilia Article. For the benefit of the readers, they should be made aware of this fact at the beginning of the article, so that they can freely choose to read and learn about pedophilia from either the Pro or Anti article. 69.137.223.3 00:56, 15 June 2006 (UTC)

extreme bias

just thought i would mention the extreme bias of this page. it appears that no one who isn't a pedophile or does not tacitly support the rights of adults to have sex with children has reviewed this page at all. as it is, i came upon it by accident and found that the overwhelming "evidence" presented on the page is in favor of encouraging children to engage in sex acts with adults, because it's "good for them."

i shall have to come back later and find sources for my points, but here they are:

1) you cannot engage in sex with a young child without a certain amount of tearing. i think the page itself even mentions this, but is somewhat written off as no big deal. it takes an enormous amount of self-centeredness to see that injuring anyone during sex, child or adult, is no big deal.

2) sex is not in maslow's hierarchy of needs. and that is what those who really care for the well being of the child more than their own gratification should be focused on. what a child needs more than anything is stability, trust, and a nurturing environment. not sex with adults. (wikipedia source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maslow_hierarchy_of_needs#Physiological_needs)

thanks for listening, BRBX

Read what that article says you're linking to: "Maslow also places sexual activity in this category [...]". Furthermore, if you'd read the part of this article on pedophile activism closely, you'd realize that Maslow's hierarchy is used completely out of context of child sexuality. What refering to it is used for instead is what the pedophile movement tends to supply on a social level for its adult members. --TlatoSMD, 11:01, 25. June 2006 (CEST)
"you cannot engage in sex with a young child without a certain amount of tearing." Depending on how you define "young child," the veracity of this can swing either way; it's not true if you mean "anyone under 12," though. And you should know that most adult-child sex advocates define "sex" as "sexual activity," not "vaginal intercourse."JayW 23:45, 26 June 2006 (UTC)


Neither "anal intercourse", for that matter. If we go for instance by Brongersma, Bernard, Lautmann, Baurmann then penetrating ani or vaginae is no issue of paedophilia as a mental state, at the very least getting penetrated oneself would be. --TlatoSMD, 11:24, 27. June 2006 (CEST)


Maslow's hierarchy shouldn't have been brought up here as it (though, admittedly, not explicitly) refers to human adults; or at least, 'sexual intimacy' between adults and children falls outside the scope of the hierarchy. JayW was sly enough to bypass this fact. Sly, I say, as I do agree with BRBX that this article is extremely biased towards the libertine - and I do mean libertine ('do what you will'), not libertarian ('do what you will but harm none'). It looks like a steaming pile of subterfuges from grown men who are simply craving. At the very least there should be a paragraph on pedophile INactivism, i.e. celibacy, if the wellbeing of children is really an important issue.

Collideascope 16:21, 22 August 2006 (UTC)

citation of kinsey

alfred kinsey should no longer be cited as a reliable source of data on human sexual behavior. his methodology was extremely flawed -- the large number of case studies could not make up for the fact that:

1) he used the sample groups that were available to him -- although he attempted to do what he thought was a cross-section of american society, with all age groups, income brackets and cultural groups represented, he failed to do so. nearly all of his interview subjects were white, and many of them were college students, drifters, and gay men he met at clubs. this was not due to any deliberate attempts to skew the results on his part -- they were merely the only people who would answer his surveys in the repressive early 20th century. much better data on human sexuality is available today, probably due in part to kinsey's breaking open the victorian mindset, and definitely because people are more apt to talk about their sexual preferences/behaviors nowadays.

2) particularly suspect is his data on childhood sexuality. like the case to go to war in iraq, all his data on childhood sexuality came from a single person, in this case a self-identified pedophile who presented what he thought was enjoyment on part of the hundreds of children he had sex with.

source: http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&se=gglsc&d=5001347052

thank you, BRBX

Kinsey is now a very old source. His viewpoint on the subject is not a mainstream viewpoint. Therefore Kinsey's work should not be used to back up a scientific claim. Citing Kinsey to defend the so called “child love” movement is rather like creationist cherry picking, convoluted self justification for an already held viewpoint. Signed Timothy Scriven.

Does Britannica support this opinion?

I found this interesting paragraph while reading through a Britannica article (gasp): (From the "Effects of early conditioning" section of their "Human sexual behavior" article; see here)

[A few children have] atypical sexual experiences, such as witnessing or hearing sexual intercourse or having sexual contact with an older person. The effects of such atypical experiences depend upon how the child interprets them and upon the reaction of adults if the experience comes to their attention. Seeing parental coitus is harmless if the child interprets it as playful wrestling but harmful if he considers it as hostile, assaultive behaviour. Similarly, an experience with an adult may seem merely a curious and pointless game, or it may be a hideous trauma leaving lifelong psychic scars. In many cases the reaction of parents and society determines the child's interpretation of the event. What would have been a trivial and soon-forgotten act becomes traumatic if the mother cries, the father rages, and the police interrogate the child.

Interesting! JayW 14:54, 24 June 2006 (UTC)

Interesting indeed. The stance in this paragraph is decidedly anti-pedophile as the choice is between trauma and trivial act - neither of which, I hope you agree, a child should experience.

Collideascope 15:51, 22 August 2006 (UTC)

Horrendously confusing subsection

The article subsection "Claiming pedophile activism, feminism, gay activism, and partly racial minorities would be dependent upon each other." is confusing. The sentences are much too long for easy reading, context is insufficient, and it probably breaks undue weight guidelines by being so long compared to the other subsections. In addition, it is one-sided, not even mentioning the opinions of any other group than the pedophiles on the matter. Since this point is (as best I can gather) supposed to be based on scientific research and studies, it would be nice if we knew what the scientists who came up with the theories thought, whether they agreed or disagreed with the application of their ideas, etc. From the manner it is written in, I would normally suspect original research, but it does seem to have some citations along with it. --tjstrf 10:37, 5 July 2006 (UTC)

A new article, Abolition of age of consent laws, appears to mostly overlap with this article. Therefore I propose that they be combined. -Will Beback 02:25, 15 July 2006 (UTC)

Looked at the article and agree with merger. We need to keep a close watch on these articles due to trolling and vandalism. Anything extra and unneeded makes it harder to monitor. --FloNight talk 02:40, 15 July 2006 (UTC)
There are 31 sections in this article, only 2 of which relate to pedophile activism. That's hardly an overlap. I think the articles should remain separate. BLueRibbon 22:25, 15 July 2006 (UTC)
Keep seperate. The arguments on the AOC removal page are mostly unrelated to pedophile activism, but are rather based in legal tradition. --tjstrf 22:29, 15 July 2006 (UTC)
Hmmm... I personally think the two articles, while sharing mutual goals, are not entirely equal. The Childlove Movement is much more than simple age of consent reform, which is a purely legal matter. The CL Movement is more along the lines of a sexual-social reform movement (which happens to be striving for AOC reform as part of its platform). Childlove deals with the mindsets of the people in society to accept that children are sexual beings and it's not automatically a bad thing when adults and minors interact sexually, depending on the minor's ability to consent, and the roles which the adult and the minor share in the relationship, (i.e., mentors, "big-brothers" and teachers); current social roles rarely allow this because of hysteria. The end result of this would not only lower the age of consent, but it would result in a more realistic, tolerant, and biologically correct way of looking at sexuality as a whole, including minor-attracted-adults. If anything, AOC Reform should be merged with this article, but the current uptight political climate would not allow for it to happen.--Rookiee Revolyob 06:15, 13 August 2006 (UTC)

What? Merge in Initiatives to raise the age of consent? That's like merging Pro-life into Planned Parenthood! If anything, Initiatives to raise/lower/abolish the age of consent would all be one big article, seperate from this one. --tjstrf 03:26, 18 July 2006 (UTC)

You've got a point about that one. I'll change the merge target to Age of consent. -Will Beback 03:49, 18 July 2006 (UTC)
While much more logical, I'm not sure that's the best option either, at least for the initiatives to lower. If you read the Age of Consent article, you'll notice that it has been neatly and purposefully subdivided, as is true with many important or complex subjects. However, merging initiatives to lower and initiatives to raise into, say, Initiatives to modify the age of consent, might be in order, and could help with the whole POV issue in initiatives to lower as well. --tjstrf 03:56, 18 July 2006 (UTC)
It doesn't matter to me very much which article these go into, so long as they are merged. It is unneccessary to have so many sub-articles. Do what you think best and I'll support you. -Will Beback 05:16, 18 July 2006 (UTC)
I oppose merging the article. This covers detailed info specifically on what is termed the childlove movement by its advocates. A merger would result in losing most of the more in-depth info here. -Neural 11:47, 18 July 2006 (UTC)
Oppose. The age of consent is only the legal aspect of the issue and the scope of pedophile activism and this certain article cannot be restricted to this frame. --Behemoth 18:33, 31 July 2006 (UTC)
I oppose merging the article. We are talking about two different arguments. -Gurghet 21:54, 30 Agosto 2006
Oppose. Although pedophiles are loud proponents of dropping the age of consent, it cannot be assumed that all positions which support this are pedophile positions. Radical politics comes in many forms. Age of consent laws often make child-child sexuality or teen-teen sexuality illegal. Many people may oppose this state of affairs without basing their arguments primarily on the rights of pedophiles to have access to children. Without pedophile rights as a primary reason for supporting the abolition of the age of consent, it cannot rightly be said to be pedophile activism. If you need an illustration: In Ontario, some years ago, a girl of 12 years old was charged with sexual abuse of a minor, her friend aged 11, after a sleep over that got a little exploratory. The 11yo girl talked about it with her mother, who went to the police, etc. The case proceeded on the grounds of a technicality --the age of consent-- without any regard to the contents of the exploration, which by all accounts was not abusive or coercive. Under such circumstances it is reasonable for people who do not have any interest in pedophile rights to question the age of consent laws. Therefore, the page on abolishing the age of consent should not be combined with the page on pedophile activism. 66.130.41.29 16:51, 18 September 2006 (UTC)
Oppose. Lowering the age of consent isn't a huge focus in my own activism - most of the time I'm only defending my/our rights to freedom of speech and expression! Saying that all we care about as ChildLovers is making it legal to have sex with kids is both POV and false.

Bk-girls.org

Hi - I found a website called Butterflykisses that acts as a message board primarily for female girl-lovers. I thought this was unusual compared to some of the more obvious advocacy sites, so I added it to the list of external links. -Neural 22:50, 15 July 2006 (UTC)

Article Name Objection

Once upon a time, when this article was first conceived, the name of it was "Childlove Movement". For the longest time, this name was not debated nor argued against as much as the merits of the article itself. At some point unbeknowest to me during 2005, the name of the article was changed to "Pedophile Activism". I argue that this name is incorrect and that it be changed back to "Childlove Movement". Here are my reasons why:

  1. Pedophiles [are] only a part of the people who are involved with the movement. It is known that the terms "boylove" and "girllove" are given to the ethos of love, mentorship, and platonic sexual relationships with those before AND after puberty. The current clinical definition of a pedophile is one who is exclusively sexually attracted to someone under the stage of puberty, but evidence shows that many of the men and women involved with the Childlove Movement are in fact ephebophiles, (i.e.: People attracted to teens with pubic hair, more developed bodies, boys who are capable of ejaculation, and girls who can conceive offspring.) Society cannot give into the current mass-hysteria that "anyone who is attracted to anyone under 16 is a pedophile", because that is just simply untrue. The condition relies on biological physical attributes rather than man-made age measurement. Seeing as the current definition of pedophilia under the DSM-IV is very limited in scope, that would mean the majority of "pedophiles" are indeed not pedophiles, which makes the current title of the article incorrect.
  2. "Pedophile activism" can be seen merely as one subsect of the Childlove Movement. While it is true that pedophiles would most definately gain the ability to have consentual sexual relationships with minors of a younger age than currently allowed, the movement itself spans a much greater range of ideals and goals than simply just sexual, which makes the current title of the article incorrect.
  3. The Childlove Movement is also greatly concerned with and parallels greatly with most child-rights-advocacy groups. These groups advocate the changing of laws and views in society to allow people of younger age to have more social rights earlier on. Much of this advocacy can be seen within the Childlove Movement as well.
  4. The term "pedophile activism" gives an impression that adults are simply in this for themselves without a care of the rights, autonomy, and respect of younger people. This can be seen with anti-pedophile advocates claiming that pedophiles see children as "sexual objects" which is definately not the case; thus, the phrase "pedophile activism" assumes that pedophiles are trying to gain rights to "have their way" with children and is inherently flawed in its assumption. While it is impossible to be NPOV on this subject due to its highly controversial nature, the current title this article is given is very negative in connotation and practically condemns us before the reader has been given the chance to read further.
  5. It must be noted that if indeed the Childlove Movement succeeds in changing commonly accepted views of child sexuality in society, it is not pedophiles who will gain rights in the end. Minors will be the ones who will gain the right to be involved with who they please. Currently, adults are given the rights to consentual relationships with whoever they so chose to be with. Age of consent laws do not limit the rights of those above the legal age; it only limits the rights of people below the age. This is apparent in current events with convictions of minors engaging in sexual activity with each other where the law bars such activities. While the end result will be mutually benificial to both old and young parties, the only rights truly gained would be on the part of the young person. Because of this, the movement is not for pedophile rights, but child rights.

To make a long story short, (too late), the article was much better off being the way it was than how it is now. --Rookiee Revolyob 20:18, 16 July 2006 (UTC)


Point 5 of your argument is patently false. Adults do not possess the right to have sex with whomever they please, since as the legal definition of the term consent is specifically designed to exclude these relationships. Children would gain the right to legally consent, it's true, but this right would have no application outside of an adult-child relational context, as parental consent to sexual relations between minors already will prevent their case ever coming to court. It's also totally non-applicable to the current article, as Abolition of Age of Consent laws has its own article with its own arguments.
On the subject of the title, the article seems to cover both subjects. Perhaps an article split is in order? Additionally, the use of euphemistic titles is discouraged, and the majority of individuals view "childlove" as being euphemistic to the extreme. If we wish to have a Childlove movement article, it needs to be a different article than the one which exists here.
Also, while I would vastly prefer to assume good faith, after looking over your edit history, talk page, etc. I'd have to conclude that the POV issue here is your repeated attempts to portray things in a more positive light than the NPOV policy would possibly dictate. Take my advice here: if you have a strong opinion on a subject, stay away from it on the wiki. If everyone would do this, then most edit wars, accusations of POV pushing, etc. would simply disappear, and you wouldn't get blocked like happened last time. --tjstrf 20:36, 16 July 2006 (UTC)
I would argue that what I said is not false at all. The key word in my argument is "consent". Adults have the right to be in consentual relationships with whoever they chose. Minors underneath the age of consent do not have the right to consent to sexual relationships and thus no legal consent can be made, thus making it illegal for someone over the age of consent to be involved sexually. If children had the right to consent, adults (nor minors) would not be punished for these mutual relationships. The argument against this is that "minors under the age of consent are unable to consent". This is what the Childlove Movement argues is patently false as well as many in academia. The matter of consent is where this entire issue is based out of. If age of consent were lower, then there would be no need for a movement. This is ultimately a child-rights movement, regardless whether or not someone older would mutually benifit. Either way, it has to do with consentual relationships, not forced ones, so point five is not false. --Rookiee Revolyob 23:52, 16 July 2006 (UTC)
Not sure how to answer that, since I can't make heads or tails out of your argument. Regardless, this is not the article on abolition of age of consent laws. It's also totally your (widely disagreed with) POV. --tjstrf 00:27, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
Many within the Childlove Movement are (well notably) against current age of consent laws (both because of the ages they are set and the mode at which lawmakers set them by age rather than physical/mental maturity) and are for either the reformation or aboloshment of these laws. There is a mention of merging that article with this one. I'm split on this, myself, not everyone for the abolishment of the AOC laws are childlovers. However, not all childlovers are against the abolishment of the laws, either. So, as you can see, there's mixed opinions on both sides of the fence. I would then argue that the two articles are in fact (while potentially cross-linked), mutually exlusive. However, I can state that the Childlove Movement (this article) for the majority, are against the laws because of this issue of consent... so the truth of my point 5 still is true, not false. --Rookiee Revolyob 00:37, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
Also, I need to address something else. You stated: "but this right would have no application outside of an adult-child relational context". This is untrue. There are many, many documented cases in the states and abroad where consenting minors were put in jail.[2] Many boylovers and girllovers are underaged minors. Depending on the law of what state the two parties live in, this situation is different. So yes, there definately is an application outside of adult-minor relationships. Notice, I say adult-minor, not adult-child. The two cannot be confused. "Child" is too subjective of a term for this debate. Everyone has a different idea of what a "child" is. --Rookiee Revolyob 00:07, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
That's an interesting situation, but again, fully a subjective one as to whether that was a right decision or not. I'd say the primary authority is the parents in those situations. The decision was also obviously motivated by the sensationalism of the case, and cannot be taken as typical. --tjstrf 00:27, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
It's only non-typical in current Western Civ. Both in smaller (usually tribal cultures) and historical precident, minors turn into adults earlier on in their life as does their right to consent sexually (usually brought on by puberty). In our society, this is not the case, so is not the argument subjective both pro and con sides? We can't use that as a basis for NPOV. We can only provide both sides equally to remain truly balanced. --Rookiee Revolyob 00:43, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
One more thing about what you said: "If everyone would do this, then most edit wars, accusations of POV pushing, etc. would simply disappear, and you wouldn't get blocked like happened last time." -- I do not and never have attempted to hide my POV on here, nor anywhere else on the net. Why? Because I felt that if I were to hide my POV, then one could always make the argument against me that I am attempting to secretly, underhandedly attempt to push my POV. I don't believe in being an underhanded backstabber. Now, with that said, I can assure you that I do have NPOV in mind as far as Wikipedia is concerned. I'm not here to push my moral agenda moreso than anyone else. The issue rests once again in "what the masses consider true and false". I've argued before on my podcast that if this were 1492, Wikipedia would state the world is flat, not round. The small minority of scholars who attempted to tell the common folk that the world was round or that the Sun did not revolve around the Earth were often killed for their obvious blasphemy. My comparison is not to make me or anyone else in the Childlove Movement seem holier-than-thou .. (believe me, I'm just some schmoe without a life behind a keyboard) .. but the problem still remains: If the article is controversial, how do we really know what NPOV is? Just because the majority of people believe that adult-minor sexual relationships are bad doesn't necessarily make it so. So, a truly present NPOV would essentially be an evenly-distributed set of facts and arguments pro and con. As you can see from the history, many are unwilling to allow this. I am more than open to this. With such a controversial issue, I argue that NPOV is impossible; only Objectivity is attainable; each side showing their argument equally and evenly, with equal bias on both sides. I'm sure all civil rights issues before this one would have been handled just as such on an open forum. Anything else would be biased. I'm arguing that the title of the article is incorrect based on these merits. The Childlove Movement is not "pedophile activism". Pedophile activism is part of the movement, but it does not encompass the entirety of it. --Rookiee Revolyob 00:31, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
There is another option, other than showing or hiding your POV: simply avoid venues in which its display would even be relevant. What you are doing is POV pushing, taking an obvious stance you hold and promoting it within the articles. Leave editing to the relatively neutral. The thing you aren't understanding here is that Wikipedia is not here to promote any form of social change, with the exception of one: an increase in the amount of free collaboration taking place online. If we lived in the time of Copernicus, the proper NPOV on the shape of the earth would be that the earth was flat, according to the majority of secular and religious authority. At most, the round earth theory would deserve a mention along the lines of "In recent years, a few individuals, notably Copernicus, have been promoting theories to the contrary, and have come under heavy fire from the rest of the academic world."
Wikipedia need not be right, merely verifiable. If the rest of the world is wrong, then wikipedia will agree with their consensus. We are not a groundbreaking movement in the realms of science, sociology, or anything else. And finally, the Childlove movement is a subdivision or seperate but related entity to the pedophile activist movement, not the other way around. --tjstrf 00:46, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
"And finally, the Childlove movement is a subdivision or seperate but related entity to the pedophile activist movement, not the other way around." -- How do you know this? --Rookiee Revolyob 00:57, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
The definitions of the terms. Also a (now apparently lost) reference that had noted the coining of the term sometime in the 70's, at least 25 years after the origin of the organized pedophile activist movement. I would actually suggest writing a brief seperate article on the Childlove movement as seperate from pedophile activism, since it is not a strict overlap. --tjstrf 01:06, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
"Childlove" encompasses more than pedosexuality, as I've mentioned above. How can the Childlove Movement be part of something which it in itself is a part of? --Rookiee Revolyob 03:32, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
Hence my solution, write a second article. If you're so intent on differentiating childlove from pedophile activism, then you have an easy solution there. You can justify this by childlove's existance as a social circle/support group, seeing as it is a subclass of the pedophile activism movement that has expanded into other areas as well. There would be a certain degree of overlap between the articles, but no more than there is between this and abolition of AoC laws. (Pedosexuality? Now that's euphemistic...) --tjstrf 04:08, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
Nono, you misunderstand me. What I'm saying is that Pedophile Activism, if such a thing actually exists, would be a subsection of the Childlove Movement, not the other way around. --Rookiee Revolyob 01:26, 28 August 2006 (UTC)
Oh yes, that reminds me, I should mention that "pedophile activism" was not a term coined by pedophiles or even by NAMbLA. NAMbLA has never professed themselves to be a pedophile organization. If you look at the history of how NAMbLA started, it was a reaction to the stonewall riots and the persecution of homosexual men who had relationships with teenaged boys, and the mainstream media picking up on the spin that "homosexuals were recruiting children", (which I'm hoping everyone here can agree is pure poppycock.) What NAMbLA had come to the conclusion of was that the entire ethos of sexuality in America was bassackwards and needed to be reformed including the Age of Consent laws. What they saw was that all consenting people of every age and sexual preference should be able to express it and live freely, so they restructured their purpose and goals. It just so happened that the name they had chosen previously, "NAMbLA" was something they were rather stuck with and didn't change, so it sort of turned into a hybrid mess of clashing ideals. I believe that's what their downfall really was. But, they've never, ever professed themselves to be a "pedophile activist organization". The media did that. Just another reason why this article's name should be changed. It's not what we're trying to be. --Rookiee Revolyob 03:44, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
Are there sufficient reliable sources on the specific topic of "childmove movement" for an article? -Will Beback 02:31, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
There are a plethora of sources available here in the U.S. in Europe, and Australia, both living and deceased, who have talked in detail about the history of the movement, its origins, and if necessary, I can converse with these people and find out the entire scope of information that would be needed to reference any statements made to find out their validity. So, in short, yes. As far as written material, that would be a matter of finding out who wrote what on what subject. Some of this material would be in languages other than English, most notably in Dutch and German. The majority of this information is already available to the public, and unfortunately most of the authors of this literature are either dead, unwilling to converse, or are in jail. If you want me to gather sources, I'd be willing to give it a shot. Also, a lot of this has already been covered in BoyWiki.org --Rookiee Revolyob 03:32, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
In the context of a special article just about the "Childlove" movement - references would have to meet WP:RS, and would have to be about "childlove" specifically. If you have such soureces then the thing to do would be to add them here. Once there is sufficient info then the article can be split off. Most of what I've seen are just blogs, which don't meets our verifiability standards. -Will Beback 04:21, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
I'm suspecting that this is going to be a very large problem for Wikipedia in the future then, because the future of online publication is headed toward a blog-type of format. Even major newspapers are using the format for their commentary and editorial sections, and many major reporters produce their own blogs aside from their stories, but still retaining journalistic approach. I realize this isn't the thread to properly deabte this, but just on a personal level, I would suggest blogs are every bit as valid of a source if in fact the source being quoted can be proven and cited, just as a personal memoir of events would be if published in paperback format. Things are changing in the publishing world... --Rookiee Revolyob 01:34, 28 August 2006 (UTC)

I tend to agree with Rookie about the name of the article. Since the "childlove movement" is the name used by its advocates, that is probably the better name. The names of articles relating to controversial movements usually go with what those movements are called by their advocates. For e.g. the pro-life movement is not refered to as "anti-abortion activism". -Neural 11:54, 18 July 2006 (UTC)

Double Standard? (Continuation of name discussion)

Anti-abortionists are covered at Wikipedia as "pro-lifers." Double standard? JayW 23:32, 16 July 2006 (UTC)

Both Pro-life and Pro-choice are propoganda-esque terms, actually. (In fact, I believe we cite them as a prime example in our article on political spin) Renaming them to pro-abortion activism and anti-abortion activism would probably be a positive move towards non-euphemistic NPOV. If you feel like proposing the rename, I'd definitely support it. --tjstrf 00:27, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
What does abortion has to do with the title of this article? --Rookiee Revolyob 00:45, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
Euphemistic terminology. Pro-choice/life in one case, Childlover in another. --tjstrf 00:48, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
"Childlove" is is too-POV a term to be acceptable. -Will Beback 00:52, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
How is it POV? JayW 01:50, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
Euphemistic, also may be a seperate subject worthy of sub-article. --tjstrf 02:03, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
It endorses one term, which is only used by a particular segment. "Pedophile activism" is more generic and neutral. -Will Beback 02:54, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
I will readily agree that the Childlove Movement is indeed a term which connotates a positive bias toward the issue, but there's a reason for this. The reason why the name was changed is because "pedophile" automatically means "evil pervert child molester rapist murderer" in common tongue. There can be no negotiation, no talks, no discourse, and no way to address the issue of child rights and child sexuality and how it relates to minor-attracted-adults when the very word has been twisted and contorted into something it is not simply by fear and hysteria; that's the very reason for the movement in the first place. This isn't the "evil pervert child molester rapist murderer movement", this is the childlove movement. Child = pedo, phile = love. Childlove. That's what it means. It's not a euphamism. It's a reversion back to what the term really, truly means. When monks and scholars translated ancient Hebrew and Aramaic texts into the modern English language, it wasn't a euphamism; it was a translation. That's what we did is translate it into modern English. We're just saying who we are and clarifying what we're not. How is that biased? --Rookiee Revolyob 03:16, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
If people are unable to divorce a word from its negative connotations for objective discussion when it's in latin, putting it in english won't help.
Pedophile = a well-defined term with a historic meaning... and a negative connotation.
Childlover = a euphemistic term recently coined as a positive PR spin... and the exact same negative connotation. (Maybe that's because they mean the exact same thing?)
The problem here isn't the word you use, it's the meaning of the word. In this case, using the non-euphemistic form is more professional and hence preferable. Calling your pot-holes "pavement deficiencies" simply makes you look evasive and insincere, and anyone with an ounce of sense will realize the meaning is identical. Until you can convince the child rapists to only target individuals over the age of consent, you'll still have the image problem, no matter what the label is. --tjstrf 03:31, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
First off, I hope you realize that statistics show the majority of child rapists, murderers and general abusers out there are not pedophiles but sadists. Secondly, the meaning of the word "pedophile" has indeed changed into "child rapist murderer", etc. That's why the new word was coined. I am not a child rapist murderer. I am a childlover. I love children. I would never hurt one.
In all reality, do you think that changing a word from latin, where one must think about the meaning for at least 1/2 second, to english, where no such thought is necessary, will in any way aid your movement? Especially when the new word means the exact same thing? If anything, the effect will be negative, as those who find politically correctness irritating will think "Great, now not only do they rape kids, they call it love!" Obfuscation is not helpful to you, much less wikipedia's goals of clarity and accuracy.--tjstrf 04:44, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
It's interesting you bring that up. Within the boylove and girllove communities, the very same argument is taking place. Some people are saying, "Don't call yourselves a pedophile, people! You're calling yourself child molesters!". The other half are saying, "Don't change the name from pedophile to childlover because it doesn't matter! They'll hate us either way! We should change people's minds, not the word!" What I've suggested to the administrators of the boards and Sure Quality Radio is for a hybrid of both worlds to happen. Use the word Childlove, Boylove, and Girllove to remind people what pedophile really means, and educate the public that it's not rape and murder and manipulation. The end result would mean the movement be named "childlove" but the purpose behind the movement isn't to change the word, but to reeducate the public and simply say, "Hey, we're not a bunch of monsters. Lighten up!" Hopefully by reaching out to the public, we'll stop a few molestations by confused pedophiles.--Rookiee Revolyob 06:24, 13 August 2006 (UTC)
Either way, it is not pedophile activism. It involves teens as well. I've met teens that like me. I've met younger boys that like me. It is not ephebophile activism. It is not even teleiophile activism (children primarily sexually attracted to adults). It's all of the above. It is a movement that has never existed before. Of course there is a new word for it. When something new is created, and no word exists, you make a word for it. How else did the term "McJob" end up in the Oxford Dictionary? People made up the word and used it. Define euphamism? Afro-American started as a euphamism for Negro. Gay and queer were euphamisms for homosexual. Ageplay is term for adults who roleplay as children. Sneakers are a euphamism for athletic footwear. Why are these terms allowed to be on Wikipedia but ours isn't? The only answer I can see is that it's not accepted by those in control. Ain't that the very definition of biased? --Rookiee Revolyob 04:00, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
All of which is argument for a new article, NOT for an article rename. --tjstrf 04:44, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
According to whom does a term (includng the word "child") apply to teenagers? "Sneakers" is in the dictionary, "childlover" is not. -Will Beback 04:32, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
Presumably according to the pedo sexual minor -philes. --tjstrf 04:44, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
To answer Will Beback, this is yet another good question to ask, and it dives into the very heart of the issue at hand. What is a child? What is an adult? Where is the line? Is there a line at all? Is the law too sharp or too vague? Is the law consistant? Where do we hold our values? "How many roads must a man walk down before we call him a man?" Our society is screwed up in our ability to judge the transition from child to adult, in my opinion. Why do we call pornography of 17 year olds "child pornography"? They should call it "minor pornography", but those against it would say it's not a strong enough word. The same thing goes for "statutory rape"; they should call it "statutory sex", because it's definately not rape simply because the state says, "You're not allowed to give consent yet, little girl!... Even though you know more about sex than your mom does!"
Personally, I don't really like the name "childlover", either, to be totally honest, because you're indeed correct that teens are not "children", however, that's how the state refers to them as.... y'know, the older people in power. If it were my invention, I'd merge the whole childlove movement into an all-encompassing sexual-freedoms reform for all ages. That would be a more balanced way to approach the issue. It really, truly does involve all forms of sexual, political, and social reform on a mass basis for society to even consider positive minor/adult sex fathomable.--Rookiee Revolyob 06:37, 13 August 2006 (UTC)
The current title is neutral and acceptable. Wikipedia is not a place for people with fringe views to try to change the terms of the argument in their favour, which is what a 'childlove' article would do. Do not start a new article on it, the term and the associated controversy are well covered here. Thanks. The Land 21:06, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
Then why is the Intelligent design movement not refered to as "creationist activism?" Why is the pro-life lobby not termed "anti-abortion activism"? Why is pro-choice not refered to as "pro-abortion activism"? Why is the BNP not re-titled "a racist party in the UK who we shall not call by their own mame"? This is all rather silly, and smacks of censorship... -Neural 12:00, 18 July 2006 (UTC)
Pro-life and pro-choice balance each other out; and furthermore, they, together with intelligent design and the BNP, are widely used terms and references to their use are readily available in all manner of publications. The only people who tend to use the term 'childlove' are some participants in or observers of pedophile web forums. If a US State Board of Education debates whether childlove should be taught in schools (as they do intelligent design) then we might consider changing the name of the article. The Land 14:22, 18 July 2006 (UTC)
Pro-life and pro-choice "balancing each other out" is a pretty weak argument, and I'm not sure what you're getting at with that. As for "childlove" being a partisan title, my point is that there are literally hundreds of articles on Wikipedia that refer to narrow agendas or ideologies that have very POV-sounding titles, mostly only used by followers of those ideologies.
I personally think "pedophile activism" is even more POV than childlove-movement, considering the popular understanding of the term pedophile. To the average reader "pedophile" means somebody who grabs children, drags them somewhere and molests them - when in reality it only refers to an attraction.
Furthermore, as Rookiee was trying to point out, the title "pedophile activism" ignores the fact that non-pedophiles may support the same objectives. I have no particular attraction to children (women with large boobs are more my kind of aesthetic :) ). If I argue that adult-child sexual relationships are not necessarily “child sexual abuse” (a deliberately loaded term), that children can consent to sex, that the assumption of harm is false, etc, does this mean I’m a “pedophile-activist”? Maybe it does in today's climate of hysteria. Judith Levine was accused of much the same for suggesting similar things in a much more timid manner…. -Neural 16:24, 18 July 2006 (UTC)

If we are to change the name, it will have to be to something other than childlove. So, it's between this and a contrived substitute. Personally, I'd prefer this to some title we coined ourselves. (The most direct, non-connotatively charged title if we were to choose one of our own devising might be "child sex movement" or something similar.) --tjstrf 16:35, 18 July 2006 (UTC)

Agreed. I don't much like "childlove-movement" as a title anyway. But anything has got to be better than this, imo, for reasons detailed above.... -Neural 16:41, 18 July 2006 (UTC)
well if you have a suggestion for something which is neutral, in common use, and better than the existing title, go ahead and tell us. There are many reasons why we can't have 'childlove', and ignorign them won't make them go away. The Land 08:08, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
We've already discussed these many reasons, and I remain unconviced. Nevertheless, I'll think about a more neutral title. The difficulty is finding a title to cover something so broad. Doubtless there are pedophiles who push these objectives simply to legalize their own area of interest. Then there are intellectuals, academics, sexologists, sex-researchers and others pushing the same objectives for various reasons: the belief that sexual freedom is better for kids, that it is better for society, more healthy psychologically... or whichever angle each comes from. I've spoken to adults who had sexual relationships with adults in their childhood and are angry at being labeled victims of abuse, want their experiences validated, etc... Although forced firmly underground, ignored and/or stigmatized for the most part, there are a whole range of people with a similar worldview. At the very least, there are some outspoken academics and authors pushing for change (who can be referenced).
Here are some title suggestions to start with...
  • Movement to legalize adult-child sex
  • Movement to normalize adult-child sex
  • Movement to de-stigmatize adult-child sex
Anyone, feel free to jump in with further suggestions. I think we need a title that everyone is fairly happy with, otherwise these arguments are going to rage for ever. Both "childlove movement" and "pedophile activism" are both very POV (see my reasoning a few paragraphs up) and both are also pretty vague. The title should confront what we're actually talking about... - Neural 13:24, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
Hello? Any thoughts on this? The talk page has suddenly gone very quiet. -Neural 12:57, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
"De-stigmatize" - that appears to be the over-riding objective, and it includes legalization. -195.93.21.4 11:47, 25 July 2006 (UTC)
Sorry, Neural, I was away from Wikipedia for a rather extended period of time, there. (Been busy lately.) High-fives on your open-mindedness on the issue! As far as the renaming of the article... Hmmm, y'know? That doesn't sound entirely like a bad idea. God... what would we call it, though? First of all, isn't there some form of sexuality portal in Wikipedia? Or would this issue even be allowed in that section considering it's supposedly a mental illness I have? I see there's the Paraphilia subsection within the sex portal, but that's where Pedophilia is. This is a civil rights and social reform issue. It gets even more complicated, though... since pedophilia IS a paraphilia under the DSM-IV, it is not "illegal to discriminate against persons on the basis of their sexual orientation" regarding pedophilia, thus is not currently coverable under the (accepted) various theories of civil rights listed on that article's page.
If one sees pedophilia as a mental disease, is it legal (under which country's law, btw?) to discriminate on the basis of this disease (or to discriminate against people suffering from cancer, or schizophrenia)? Apokrif 17:16, 20 September 2006 (UTC)
Let me see if I can break down the goals of the movement (off the top of my head)...
  • De-stigmatization of adult/minor sexual relationships.
  • Reform of the current age-of-consent laws and theory.
  • Expansion of the human condition to accept child sexuality in general.
  • Promote tolerance and acceptance of people attracted to minors.
  • Re-examine and educate the public about sexuality and biology.
  • Educate the public that most pedophiles/ephebophiles are ethical and want to abide laws.
  • Educate the public that someone who's into teens is not a pedophile to begin with. :P
  • Continue to protect minors (and adults) from sexual exploitation.
  • Stop vigilantiism against BLs and GLs on the parts of moral crusaders.
  • Reform the social roles and expand the rights of children in general.
  • Change laws in general to better match the rapidly changing times brought on by technology and social networking.
  • On a broader scale, hopefully change the entire concept of sex from what it is today, which would depend on
That's a lot to hold on one plate. As you can see, it covers more than simply sex. It's practically a re-write of all current concepts of social roles toward young people. It's a reform of childhood. ... "Childhood reform", pretty much... Hmm..--Rookiee Revolyob 07:09, 13 August 2006 (UTC)
it is not "illegal to discriminate against persons on the basis of their sexual orientation" regarding pedophilia
Can you point me to where the SC has defined "sexual orientation?" JayW 17:28, 13 August 2006 (UTC)
SC? Not sure what that is. What I mean is, since pedophilia is in the DSM, it is categorized as a sexual illness, not an orientation. Homosexuality was also an illness until the gay movement lobbied and fought for it to be removed. Pedophilia, pedosexuality, blay, whatever you want to call it, has not been removed, so we are granted no legal rights under the law. --Rookiee Revolyob 03:53, 3 September 2006 (UTC)

Rookie... now I'm even more flummoxed. The problem is finding a title that will please all sides... an extremely difficult job given the huge social taboo of child-adult sex - Wikipedia editors come from this society with this taboo, after all, so the article is likely to remain highly controversial (and probably somewhat biased) for the foreseeable future as a majority view (however un-objective) asserts itself. My main problem with the title is that it slants the whole meaning in a certain way. The common perception of the word "pedophile" is something synonymous with "child rapist" or "child molester", when it refers to an attraction to minors and nothing more. My other criticism was that the objectives described in the article could be advocated by anyone, pedophile or not, and there are non-pedophile academics and authors who do. For these and reasons given further above on this discussion, I think the current title is even more POV than the old "Childlove movement" that we previously had - that was POV in the other direction. -Neural 05:02, 14 August 2006 (UTC)

I wholeheartedly agree with your assessment. I realize there's no way gain a unanimous consensus on an issue that is so commonly wrapped together with "terrorism" in the media. The best solution that I can provide is to call it what the creators labelled it rather than with what the pundits do. Let the body text from the article be straight-forward and NPOV as possible; that's fair; and let the reader determine for themselves what side of the issue they wish to be on. But, don't call me a "pedophile activist" when I am not one. I'm not fighting for pedophile rights. I'm fighting for a more balanced ethos of sexuality in regards to age disparity. --Rookiee Revolyob 04:09, 3 September 2006 (UTC)

Reference request

Hi!

In french Wikipedia, we are working on the french version of this article, based on a translation of this one. We are trying to fill some gaps on references: there is one that we cannot fill, when article says "In a 1998 newspaper interview, Dutch psychiatrist Gerald Roelofs suggested the following five guidelines for relationships between adults and children: (...) " (here). May someone of you provides a reference for this "newspaper interview"? Thanks in advance!

.: Guil :. chat 11:25, 28 July 2006 (UTC)

Here: "I didn't know how to deal with it." Good luck with that! JayW 20:35, 28 July 2006 (UTC)

Psychosis

"'Declassification of pedophilia as mental illness. Activists of the movement quote Moser and Kleinplatz (2003), who suggest that all paraphilia be removed from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM). They write that objective, non-culturally-biased criteria for classifiying sexual behavior as psychotic"

Do they use the word psychosis ? AFAIK psychosis refers to disorders like schizophrenia or bipolar disorder, not to sexual orientation or behavior. Apokrif 16:52, 24 August 2006 (UTC)

I dunno, do I consider myself a lil psycho? >8D --Rookiee Revolyob 04:12, 3 September 2006 (UTC)

Discussion

I've noticed that discussion, most notably between Rookiee and tjstrf, has been straying away from the article. Can we please keep discussion to the article at hand, not the subject it informs us about?

Mickygor 22:15, 22 September 2006 (UTC)

  1. ^ Rubenstein, Kathryn (2001). "Massachusetts v. Salvatore Sicari "Molestation Murder Trial"". Court TV.
  2. ^ http://theboyloveblog.blogspot.com/2006/07/two-consenting-minors-4-years-apart.html