Comments on: Report: 5,585 sex offenders purged from Facebook
Two state attorneys general who have been particularly vigilant in policing social-network safety announce the tally, the Associated Press reports.
Two state attorneys general who have been particularly vigilant in policing social-network safety announce the tally, the Associated Press reports.
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I agree that there are people who deserve to be outcast. Those who prey on children - actual pedophiles - and those who have shown a consistent pattern of behaviors need better restrictions, and better help. The problem is that we label so many people as sex offenders today that it's hard to see past the mob mentality. I agree that one is to many, but where is the same standard for murderers, arsonist, etc?
Isn't it time we figured out what is really wrong with our system? Isn't it time we stopped trying to prosecute everyone we think is a threat and start paying more attention to what are children are doing in the first place?
Just some facts here:
Sex offenders were less likely than non-sex offenders to be rearrested for any offense ?? 43 percent of sex offenders versus 68 percent of non-sex offenders.
Most sexual assaults are committed by someone known to the victim or the victim's family, regardless
of whether the victim is a child or an adult.
So really, can we stop the hype and get back to reality?
Note: this is not in response to Cnet, more focused toward Myspace, Facebook, and the senators who thought this was the reasonable response to this problem. It's not.
Remember when there were actual chat rooms? Then apparently one day sex offenders and predators got the better of the likes of AOL and Yahoo and they closed all their chat rooms down.
Problem solved, right?
Not quite. By that time social networks had nearly taken the spot light from chat rooms anyway so those who hadn't already just moved over to MySpace, Friendster, Facebook, and Meebo.
and remove them from the social networking sites
Before these purges, we had the ability to track, follow and watch the actions and interactions of 95,585 sex offenders.
Now, by deleting their accounts, we'd tipped them off that we were on to them. So they'll be even more careful when they immediately create new accounts to resume their attempts to do bad things to our children.
Yeah, I'm fear-mongering, but I think I have a point. We've not shined a light on sexual predators, we'd turned the lights out on ourselves while a few politicians get to stand up and say "Look how great we are!"
- by tellmw23 October 2, 2009 12:10 AM PDT
- Why not put all the sex offenders in one place where they can all do what they do best: http://www.pointsincase.com/columns/casey-freeman/facebook-of-sex Or is that just wishful thinking?
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