Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/03/13
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At 10:17 AM 03/11/2001 -0800, "Julian Thomas" <julianthomas@terra.es> wrote: >I have a mate who is a teacher in the UK. We started teaching together. We >also became the male 'abuse' rep in different schools at the same time. >After the training he refused to even bathe his young children. A few years ago, the father of an immigrant family we know came home from work and greeted his daughter with a hug and a kiss, as he had always done. The girl shrank from him and said, "Papa, you can't do that! That's child abuse!" They all laugh about it now, but it was pretty scary at the time. The girl's school had done a program on stopping abuse, and had so effectively brainwashed the kids that some were afraid of their own parents. ...and Michael Berube said: >...What I was trying to say is that in the current cultural >climate, it is too easy for you to become victim to accusations of being a >pervert for taking such a photograph. This being so, it is probably smarter >for one to avoid such situations in the first place. As I told Tim, I >disagree with the western cultural climate that is so prudish as well, but >until it can be changed, it is best to not face prosecution for something >so easily avoided. Speaking of which... last year I heard a story on NPR about the mother of an adolescent girl in Ohio. She had photographed her daughter nude at various stages of the girl's life. A local photo tech turned in some of her pictures to the local police. The mother ended up facing child pornography charges that could put her away for a *long* time. The case smacked of a prosecutor who was trying to gain noteriety for a run for higher office. But from a description of the photos given on the program, the mother may have gone a bit beyond innocence in her depictions, thought she herself didn't think so. Does anyone know what became of this case? It's chilling to think that many of our parents took pictures of us that, if we took them today, could get us into *big* trouble in the U.S. In some areas, photo techs are legally obligated to report all nude photographs of children to the local authorities. A photo of a little naked kid used to be considered the picture of innocence. Cute and funny. Hardly anyone thought anything of it. Now, sadly, we've lost that innocence. A different perspective: When I was in France 3 years ago, I often saw two or three generations of bare-breasted women sunning themselves together on ordinary public beaches along the Mediterranean. This is considered perfectly normal in France. And *no*, I did *not* use my camera! :-) - --Peter