- This topic has 89 replies, 46 voices, and was last updated 2 years ago by matt_outandabout.
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STW Morality Question of the day
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johnnersFree Member
The boy was 16 at the time. Abuse of power yes, but not statutory rape
We don’t have a charge of statutory rape
Presumably it was a reference to Age Of Consent, which I believe is revised upwards to 18 where someone is in a position of trust. Also the sexting or sexual communication is itself illegal if the recipient is under 18.
lesgrandepotatoFull MemberIt’s a matter for the courts. I don’t see that she presents any risk to your wife or you. Nor are you facilitating and further risk by using her services.
She’s been found guilty and she’s taken the consequence. It’s not your place to add to that. That’s just pitchforks.
You never done owt you regret? Or reacted badly when called out on it? I’m no a religious chap but that stuff about he who is without sin cast the first stone and all that seems to fit here.
P-JayFree MemberBut really, OP who cares? We all take instant like/dislike to all kinds of people, that is our gut/prejudice etc. who you choose to spend your money with is up to you, you do not need to justify it. Do we need to be involved in your navel gazing?
It’s just a question, we have all sorts of moral debates on STW. TBH, my decision to stop using her was 90% practical and 10% nonse related and it was 2 months or so ago.
I thought it would be an interesting discussion away from the usual Covid / Brexit / eBike stuff, I’m sorry you felt obligated to join in against your will.
convertFull MemberI remember this case as it was local and being a teacher too it created a bit of discussion. About if there was gender bias in the sentence and about if society view the offence the same this way around. She also didn’t come over too well at the time. A bit deluded and to be frank not taking responsibility by acknowledging she and the lad were not any adult and minor as she was in a position of responsibility. That is what rankled those in the profession most about it. At the time I remember thinking she really needed help. Her ‘I’m the victim’ assertions at the time were about the boy having feelings towards her (or so she thought) and messing her around. It was a bit pathetic really. So arguably not the strongest, the most rational or best placed to handle post conviction hassle.
My thoughts
You didn’t sack her.
I’m assuming as you were stopping using her service anyway your real issue is looking like you are being judgemental about her conviction now as you are stopping at at a time when this has come up. Just one of those things.
Should the convicted out themselves at every opportunity – no. It’s not going to serve the world much good. I’d rather not pay for her benefits for the rest of my days. She needs to be able to make a living as long as it is not with minors and if she is earning more than you’d like – tough. In a similar vein I’d quite like convicted muggers to be able to earn an honest crust and not to have to resort back to violence and crime.
Do men with similar convictions keep in gainful employment afterwards too – Google Brett Sutton.
IdleJonFull MemberAbuse of power yes, but not statutory rape, hence the suspended, relatively short, sentence I guess.
That’s not what she was charged with, iirc. (It was fairly well publicised.)
IdleJonFull MemberYou never done owt you regret? Or reacted badly when called out on it? I’m no a religious chap but that stuff about he who is without sin cast the first stone and all that seems to fit here.
Yeah, plenty of people will have done some weird stuff especially when younger, but most of us haven’t even got close to being on the sex offenders register.
5plusn8Free MemberI thought it would be an interesting discussion away from the usual Covid / Brexit / eBike stuff, I’m sorry you felt obligated to join in against your will.
Sorry, I was just mucking around, hoping it was obvious irony on my part, seeing as I had commented…
But I still think you shouldn’t need to justify sacking her, I think you felt obligated to keep her on when you probs did not really want to and this was a decent reason to bin her. Don’t over think it.molgripsFree MemberMOlgrips – if you agree that its wrong for a teacher to have sex with a child in their care under any circumstances then what else is there to know? Nothing.
If only life really were so simple.
lucky7500Full MemberSurprised that the thread has continued from this.
The internet is not real life. There are no winners. I wouldn’t have sacked someone who was giving a good service and who has served a conviction. Either you believe in restitution or you don’t?
bearnecessitiesFull Memberit’s time for coffee and biscuits
You mean fizzy pop and sweeties.
chakapingFree MemberI wouldn’t have sacked someone who was giving a good service and who has served a conviction.
But he wasn’t using the service and thought she showed an unpleasant personality when her dirty linen got aired.
Is he allowed to sack her?
I still think this is a shit dilemma BTW, because it’s using the sex offence as a hook when the real problem is the person just being a ****.
grumFree MemberHer defence was that she was unaware that she wasn’t allowed to have sex with a pupil, even if they were 16
I used to do a lot of youth work and we had it drummed into us by loads of training etc that we weren’t even supposed to be in a room alone with one of our young people, and certainly not be exchanging flirtatious messages with them etc.
It was to the point where I felt we had to be overly paranoid about it but some of the young people were vulnerable so you can see why. Claiming she didn’t know it wasn’t allowed is utter BS IMO.
Either you believe in restitution or you don’t?
I believe in it up to a point so your black and white question doesn’t work. I worked with a guy (at the youth centre in fact) who had just come out of jail for stealing (cars I think). He seemed a nice guy, we all gave him a proper chance and began to see him as a friend. But it turns out he was thieving from us too. I think he even got another chance and messed that up too.
Now it may well have been addiction/drug laws that were the underlying problem but at what point do you stop giving people a chance?
Mister-PFree MemberI’d have had a shave, run some Grecian 2000 through my hair, popped on my old school blazer and wandered round to pay my £40 subscription in person.
argeeFull MemberMister-P
Free Member
I’d have had a shave, run some Grecian 2000 through my hair, popped on my old school blazer and wandered round to pay my £40 subscription in person.Nobodies asked for pics or a link yet, so disappointed in STW ;o)
I bet if she’s decent looking and her pic was in the paper/report she’ll be getting a lot of unwanted clients trying to join now, that’s punishment enough!
bobloFree MemberAnd in a Scooby Doo fashion “she’d have gotten away with it if wasn’t for those meddling kids”
Wasn’t it meddling with kids that started the whole thing? 🙃
5plusn8Free MemberAnyway showing any kind of reaction other than humilty in this case is daft from her. Just “I’ve served my time, I’m learning from my mistakes” and zero engangment with the witch hunt and move on. Anything else is crackers and shows she problably did not get the kind of rehab she needs.
batfinkFree MemberI think what this thread demonstrates is how differently people view male and female sex offenders – I guess thats what we are really debating here: is this as heinous as if a male teacher groomed and raped a young girl?
Not many people on here would be advocating to continue being a PT client of that male teacher – particularly if he had displayed so little remorse for what he had done as this female teacher apparently did.
Interestingly, my wife has just ditched her (male) PT for spouting some mysoginist crap during the chat while she’s doing her star-jumps or whatever – she just doesn’t really want to pay to be in his company for an hour a week any more. And I think thats legitimate: “not sure I want to pay to hang-out with this person when there are lots of different options available”.
If my (hypothetical) PT turned out to be a Trumpist, and antivaxer or a homeopath – I’d probably ditch them for that. So: an unrepentant sex-offender? Fair enough I recon.
IdleJonFull MemberNobodies asked for pics or a link yet, so disappointed in STW ;o)
I bet if she’s decent looking and her pic was in the paper/report she’ll be getting a lot of unwanted clients trying to join now, that’s punishment enough!
As a couple of us said above, it was well publicised and her pic was in the Welsh papers. Took me about 5 minutes to find the case earlier and I’m no IT genius.
5plusn8Free MemberIf my (hypothetical) PT turned out to be a Trumpist, and antivaxer or a homeopath – I’d probably ditch them for that. So: an unrepentant sex-offender? Fair enough I recon.
Indeed, which is my point about it not being a moral quandry, balls to her.
molgripsFree Membergo on then Molgrips – try to make a defense of it.
I’m not defending sex with kids. I’m saying that morality and culpability can sometimes be a complex area. I’m not going to go into it further. Read some books, watch some films. Or TV, this actually comes up in BoJack Horseman in Netflix.
sparksmcguffFull MemberSorry bud, sounds like your wife has got you beat in an argument and you’re looking for a counter blow.
cubistFree MemberI’m not defending sex with kids.
Phew! Things could have gotten awkward if you were.
It is really obvious that as a society we treat a female teacher having sex with a boy very differently to a male teacher having sex with a girl (or boy). There is an assumption that most teenage boys are “probably up for it”. I remember what it was like when I was at school and it was probably true, especially with a few of the younger female teachers. Are teenage girls any different though if they have a suitably attractive young male teacher? I don’t think so. Its all irrelevent though because teachers are in a position of trust and its illegal so thats that.
I guess the ultimate question is should an offender be able to restart their life after they have been punished. I’d say yes but in the case of a sex offender they should not be put in a position of responsibility which would facilitate them re-offending.
Would I continue with a PT who was guilty of this but had served their time. Given I am unlikely to be the victim of any sort of child abuse (I’m 45) I’m not at risk. Would I leave my teenage son with her? Probably not, he’s already not a great decision maker when he’s thinking with what is in his pants and not his hat (no idea where he gets it from).
chakapingFree MemberTook me about 5 minutes to find the case
About 30 secs.
Would probably swipe right myself TBH.
MoreCashThanDashFull MemberAs sex offences go, it’s a tricky one. Yes, it’s a crime, she’s been punished, unless she’s a repeat offender, I’d give her the benefit of the doubt, she seems to be trying to rebuild a life and career that were ruined by her stupidity.
One of my best friends is married to her economics teacher, 12 years her senior. The story is that they got together after she had left school and gone to university, but I’m not totally convinced. 25 years and 3 kids later, seems to be OK.
The abuse of trust law didn’t exist when I was at school. One of my friends had a fling with our geography teacher. The metal work teacher and a head of year were also believed to gave had relationships with pupils.
While it’s easy to say the teacher has the power in these situations, a pupil can destroy a teachers life if they make a complaint. All sides should have the sense not to bother.
batfinkFree Memberunless she’s a repeat offender, I’d give her the benefit of the doubt
How about vocally unrepentant?
All sides should have the sense not to bother
Lol – have you ever met a teenager? Thats the point though – it only really needed one side to have any sense…. and she demonstrated a spectacular lack of it. Had her position when confronted about it been: “I demonstrated a spectacular lack of sense – however, I’ve paid the price and deserve a fair go”, then I’d be a bit more sympathetic.
tjagainFull MemberI’m saying that morality and culpability can sometimes be a complex area.
Yes in general – not in this case.
grumFree MemberWhile it’s easy to say the teacher has the power in these situations, a pupil can destroy a teachers life if they make a complaint.
Only because the teacher has allowed that to happen! Jeez.
tall_martinFull MemberHer defence was that she was unaware that she wasn’t allowed to have sex with a pupil, even if they were 16 and she wasn’t charged for the messages
I’m with @grum.
I trained to be a teacher in 2004. It was made perfectly clear in teacher training that this was not ok
It’s also been made perfectly clear every year in training sessions. Many, many training sessions. And sessions on what to do if you find out about stuff like that.
Having said that one of the guys off my trading course went to jail for some thing similar.
nickcFull MemberHow about vocally unrepentant?
I don’t think it makes a difference to the law regarding spent convictions. It might tweak your personal morals a bit, but there’s no requirement. Given that spent convictions rely on the sentence, not the crime, she’s done in 5 years I think. It’ll show up on a DBS, but essentially it’s over at the point that it’s spent.
BlackflagFree MemberThis “Thread of the Week” malarky has a lot to answer for.
This.
The internet has enough shocking or divisive content as it is without giving this forum a target to shoot for….
tjagainFull MemberErrmm – a mildly interesting thread with people with a range of perspectives and 70 odd comments. Nowt wrong with it at all IMO.
CougarFull MemberAt the suggestion of googling the case, it doesn’t seem to be a unique incident.
That’s five different female teachers in Wales AFAICT.
desperatebicycleFull Membergoing back over page one. Cos I wuz working.
She will also regret hugely what she has done
Doesn’t sound like it from what I read
She has been caught, done her time – and had her life wrecked by it.
Doesn’t sound like it from what I read
bruneep
Lets be honest. It was pretty much every school boys fantasy.Now this is weird. Cos I know in my teens I was only interested in girls around my age. I thought Pan’s People were old fogeys when my dad leered over them! Did anyone really lust over their teachers??
FB-ATBFull MemberLike the spelling of “buy” on the 3rd earch on Cougar’s list. Tis the mail tho’.
Is it wrong to have a chuckle at the idea of teachers being on a register? Does it get called each morning?
IdleJonFull MemberDid anyone really lust over their teachers??
Strange question! The answer is very obviously yes. (In my case, I can only remember one particular teacher who was (from distant hazy memory) very good looking and probably only a few years older than me.) Didn’t stop me from being more interested in girls my own age, for what little good it did me.
FB-ATBFull Memberlust over their teachers??
Depends on age? At grammar school in 3rd year (so 13/14) we had a maths teacher that was probably in her mid-late 30s, she had kids that were 10-12. If you needed help, she’d stand in front of your desk, lean over and explain the problem. Needless to say we didn’t understand much & needed plenty of help. From memory (albeit 40 years later) she was attractive but 1) we’d just started at an all boys school and 2) there weren’t many female teachers so any chance of sight down blouse was not to be missed.
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