Evil thoughts?
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Re: Evil thoughts?
Post #31Yes it is what? Evil OR wrong?Adonai Yahweh wrote: ↑Mon Jul 10, 2023 5:15 pmYes it is ,Is it evil, or wrong, for someone to fantasize about molesting children if he never acts on it?
Higher than not? I ask because as much as I wouldn't mind one wit if Donald Trump met with a bullet or two there is zero chance I would ever be involved in such an encounter.your actions are heavily influenced by your thought process , exercising self-control starts from the mind meaning that you must choose to actively engage or disengage certain thoughts , also if you are entertaining such thought processes there is a high probability that you will act on it ,
Because he has developed good self control. Not everybody is at the mercy of their fantasies, re. my fantasy about Trump.because if a molester left in a room alone with children with no adults around . Why would he not give in to his fantasies since there is no one to stop him and he can also frighten the child not to report it .
One encounter does not a cycle make. "35% of male perpetrators had been victims of sexual abuse themselves,"* and I don't consider 35% to be many, "a large number."Instead we should encourage such individuals to receive psychological help , many molesters were victims themselves when they were children . Thats why its important to encourage individuals that have gone through childhood trauma to seek psychological help urgently , to end the cycle of trauma .
* source
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Re: Evil thoughts?
Post #32It is evil to fantasize about molesting childrenYes it is what? Evil OR wrong?
your actions are heavily influenced by your thought process , exercising self-control starts from the mind meaning that you must choose to actively engage or disengage certain thoughts , also if you are entertaining such thought processes there is a high probability that you will act on it ,
The example of Trump is not even logical . The probability of interacting with a child is much higher than interacting with an ex- head of state .According to the CDC 1 in 4 girls and 1 in 13 boys experience child sexual abuse in the US . The cognitive behavioural theory states our thoughts and interpretations of events directly influence our emotions and subsequent actions. By identifying and challenging negative or distorted thoughts, individuals can modify their behaviors and improve their well-being. Another psychological concept is the Thought-Action Fusion states that individuals who experience intrusive or repetitive thoughts may feel a stronger connection between their thoughts and the need to act on them. So the more you repetitive thoughts you have on molesting children then more you feel a stronger connection to act upon them .Higher than not? I ask because as much as I wouldn't mind one wit if Donald Trump met with a bullet or two there is zero chance I would ever be involved in such an encounter.
https://www.cdc.gov/violenceprevention/ ... tfact.html
So if one of your mates says that he fantasizes about molesting children but as never acted upon it ... you would be comfortable leaving your children in his care in an room just because he has never acted upon it . How would you determine that he has developed good self control , his first victim can be your child .Because he has developed good self control. Not everybody is at the mercy of their fantasies, re. my fantasy about Trump.
You're refering to a blog which is not accurate , there no author identification or mention of the qualifications or even a bibliography of the cited sourcesInstead we should encourage such individuals to receive psychological help , many molesters were victims themselves when they were children . Thats why its important to encourage individuals that have gone through childhood trauma to seek psychological help urgently , to end the cycle of trauma .
One encounter does not a cycle make. "35% of male perpetrators had been victims of sexual abuse themselves,"* and I don't consider 35% to be many, "a large number."
* source
“ in a study using a 45-year follow-up, Ogloff et al. (2012) found that CSA victims were 1.43 times more likely than non-CSA peers from the general population to have a police contact, were 7.6 times more likely to be charged with a sexual offense, and 8.2 times greater odds of being charged with a different (non-sexual) violent offense. Although 95% of CSA victims did not subsequently have a sexual offense on their criminal record, male victims of CSA were more than eight times more likely than males in the general population to perpetrate a sexual offense.”
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/a ... 3419302121
Also victims of child sexual abuse are more likely experience revictimisation in their adulthood .
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/1 ... 8018823274
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Re: Evil thoughts?
Post #33Adonai Yahweh wrote: ↑Mon Jul 10, 2023 11:16 pmIt is evil to fantasize about molesting childrenYes it is what? Evil OR wrong?
e·vil
adjective: evil
adjective: evil
- profoundly immoral and wicked.
- profound immorality and wickedness, especially when regarded as a supernatural force.
So where did you get the notion that fantasizing about molesting children is "profoundly immoral and wicked" or a "profound immorality and wickedness, especially when regarded as a supernatural force"? Is this something you read somewhere? If so where? Or did you simply make it up?
So what if my fantasy of Donald Trump meeting with a bullet isn't logical? Fantasies typically aren't. Do you not know what a fantasy is? Here:Adonai Yahweh wrote:The example of Trump is not even logical . The probability of interacting with a child is much higher than interacting with an ex- head of state .According to the CDC 1 in 4 girls and 1 in 13 boys experience child sexual abuse in the US . The cognitive behavioural theory states our thoughts and interpretations of events directly influence our emotions and subsequent actions. By identifying and challenging negative or distorted thoughts, individuals can modify their behaviors and improve their well-being. Another psychological concept is the Thought-Action Fusion states that individuals who experience intrusive or repetitive thoughts may feel a stronger connection between their thoughts and the need to act on them. So the more you repetitive thoughts you have on molesting children then more you feel a stronger connection to act upon them .Miles wrote:Higher than not? I ask because as much as I wouldn't mind one wit if Donald Trump met with a bullet or two there is zero chance I would ever be involved in such an encounter.Adonai Yahweh wrote:your actions are heavily influenced by your thought process , exercising self-control starts from the mind meaning that you must choose to actively engage or disengage certain thoughts , also if you are entertaining such thought processes there is a high probability that you will act on it ,
https://www.cdc.gov/violenceprevention/ ... tfact.html
fan·ta·sy
noun: fantasy
1. the faculty or activity of imagining things, especially things that are impossible or improbable.
source: Oxford Languages Dictionary
noun: fantasy
1. the faculty or activity of imagining things, especially things that are impossible or improbable.
source: Oxford Languages Dictionary
What I might do in your scenario is irrelevant to your question: "Why would a molester not give in to his fantasies since there is no one to stop him and he can also frighten the child not to report it(?)" AND my answer, "Because he has developed good self control."Adonai Yahweh wrote:So if one of your mates says that he fantasizes about molesting children but as never acted upon it ... you would be comfortable leaving your children in his care in an room just because he has never acted upon it . How would you determine that he has developed good self control , his first victim can be your child .Miles wrote:Because he has developed good self control. Not everybody is at the mercy of their fantasies, re. my fantasy about Trump.
In as much as you couldn't find "author identification or mention of the qualifications or even a bibliography of the cited sources" how did you determine the blog was inaccurate? I'll tell you how, YOU COULDN'T HAVE. You simply wanted it to be so, so you said it was so.Adonai Yahweh wrote:You're refering to a blog which is not accurate , there no author identification or mention of the qualifications or even a bibliography of the cited sourcesMiles wrote:One encounter does not a cycle make. "35% of male perpetrators had been victims of sexual abuse themselves,"* and I don't consider 35% to be many, "a large number."Adonai Yahweh wrote:Instead we should encourage such individuals to receive psychological help , many molesters were victims themselves when they were children . Thats why its important to encourage individuals that have gone through childhood trauma to seek psychological help urgently , to end the cycle of trauma .
* source

Okay, but“ in a study using a 45-year follow-up, Ogloff et al. (2012) found that CSA victims were 1.43 times more likely than non-CSA peers from the general population to have a police contact, were 7.6 times more likely to be charged with a sexual offense, and 8.2 times greater odds of being charged with a different (non-sexual) violent offense. Although 95% of CSA victims did not subsequently have a sexual offense on their criminal record, male victims of CSA were more than eight times more likely than males in the general population to perpetrate a sexual offense.”
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/a ... 3419302121

Interesting I guess, but wholly immaterial to the discussion.Also victims of child sexual abuse are more likely experience revictimisation in their adulthood .
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/1 ... 8018823274
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Re: Evil thoughts?
Post #34[Replying to Miles in post #33]
35% regarded as "I don't consider 35% to be many, "a large number."" is an opinion and nothing more. Percentage-wise -if it did turn out to be accurate - is still fairly hefty in real terms - while on the other hand way better than anything larger, but significant nonetheless.
Re "opinions":
In general, the discussion is an interesting one between you and Adonai Yahweh with good points coming from both sides.
You're refering to a blog which is not accurate , there no author identification or mention of the qualifications or even a bibliography of the cited sources
It is generally prudent practice not to place too much stock in opinion-blogs which require no citations and/or are written anonymously, although better wording than "not accurate", such as "not overly relevant" could have been used to say so.In as much as you couldn't find "author identification or mention of the qualifications or even a bibliography of the cited sources" how did you determine the blog was inaccurate? I'll tell you how, YOU COULDN'T HAVE. You simply wanted it to be so, so you said it was so.
35% regarded as "I don't consider 35% to be many, "a large number."" is an opinion and nothing more. Percentage-wise -if it did turn out to be accurate - is still fairly hefty in real terms - while on the other hand way better than anything larger, but significant nonetheless.
Re "opinions":
In general, the discussion is an interesting one between you and Adonai Yahweh with good points coming from both sides.
- William
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Re: Evil thoughts?
Post #35[Replying to Adonai Yahweh in post #32]
It would be reckless of me to place temptation in his way by asking him to babysit and an irresponsible act against my children re their overall mental and physical well-being being placed in potential jeopardy.
To keep things realistic, if one of my mates confesses to such, there is no determining through the confession given by my mate that good self control has developed, but the signs are promising that it is a positive step toward that eventuality if I interpret the confession as him indirectly asking for help and I can and should use the opportunity afforded to make every effort to ensure that he get the help he needs.So if one of your mates says that he fantasizes about molesting children but as never acted upon it ... you would be comfortable leaving your children in his care in an room just because he has never acted upon it . How would you determine that he has developed good self control , his first victim can be your child .
It would be reckless of me to place temptation in his way by asking him to babysit and an irresponsible act against my children re their overall mental and physical well-being being placed in potential jeopardy.
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Re: Evil thoughts?
Post #36As is your post here.William wrote: ↑Tue Jul 11, 2023 6:13 pm [Replying to Miles in post #33]You're refering to a blog which is not accurate , there no author identification or mention of the qualifications or even a bibliography of the cited sourcesIt is generally prudent practice not to place too much stock in opinion-blogs which require no citations and/or are written anonymously, although better wording than "not accurate", such as "not overly relevant" could have been used to say so.In as much as you couldn't find "author identification or mention of the qualifications or even a bibliography of the cited sources" how did you determine the blog was inaccurate? I'll tell you how, YOU COULDN'T HAVE. You simply wanted it to be so, so you said it was so.
35% regarded as "I don't consider 35% to be many, "a large number."" is an opinion and nothing more. Percentage-wise -if it did turn out to be accurate - is still fairly hefty in real terms - while on the other hand way better than anything larger, but significant nonetheless.

And if Adonai Yahweh had bothered to look into the "SOURCES:" posted at the bottom of the link I gave, he would have found PubMed listed twice, and by clicking on the first one he would have found the source of the 35% figure mentioned:
NIH National Library of Medicine
Br J Psychiatry
. 2001 Dec;179:482-94; discussion 495-7.
doi: 10.1192/bjp.179.6.482.
Cycle of child sexual abuse: links between being a victim and becoming a perpetrator
M Glasser 1 , I Kolvin, D Campbell, A Glasser, I Leitch, S Farrelly
Affiliations +expand
PMID: 11731348 DOI: 10.1192/bjp.179.6.482
Br J Psychiatry
. 2001 Dec;179:482-94; discussion 495-7.
doi: 10.1192/bjp.179.6.482.
Cycle of child sexual abuse: links between being a victim and becoming a perpetrator
M Glasser 1 , I Kolvin, D Campbell, A Glasser, I Leitch, S Farrelly
Affiliations +expand
PMID: 11731348 DOI: 10.1192/bjp.179.6.482
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Re: Evil thoughts?
Post #37[Replying to Miles in post #36]
That is why I ended my post with the words:
"Re "opinions":
In general, the discussion is an interesting one between you and Adonai Yahweh with good points coming from both sides."
I dare say that most would probably agree that even that the number was lower than 51% it is still too high and more could be done about reducing the number, but that is just my opinion on what their opinions might work out percentage-wise.
Overall, I would agree that my opinion has it that 35% is too high whereas the author and perhaps your opinion is that the number is not high enough to warrant any particular concern?
Indeed. I wasn't attempting to give a contrary impression.As is your post here.

That is why I ended my post with the words:
"Re "opinions":
In general, the discussion is an interesting one between you and Adonai Yahweh with good points coming from both sides."

The quote you provide doesn't site a figure. Even so, it would be an interesting exercise to get a percentage of those who practice Psychiatry who don't consider 35% to be many, or a large number against those who practice Psychiatry and do consider the number high.And if Adonai Yahweh had bothered to look into the "SOURCES:" posted at the bottom of the link I gave, he would have found PubMed listed twice, and by clicking on the first one he would have found the source of the 35% figure mentioned:
NIH National Library of Medicine
Br J Psychiatry
. 2001 Dec;179:482-94; discussion 495-7.
doi: 10.1192/bjp.179.6.482.
Cycle of child sexual abuse: links between being a victim and becoming a perpetrator
M Glasser 1 , I Kolvin, D Campbell, A Glasser, I Leitch, S Farrelly
Affiliations +expand
PMID: 11731348 DOI: 10.1192/bjp.179.6.482
I dare say that most would probably agree that even that the number was lower than 51% it is still too high and more could be done about reducing the number, but that is just my opinion on what their opinions might work out percentage-wise.
Overall, I would agree that my opinion has it that 35% is too high whereas the author and perhaps your opinion is that the number is not high enough to warrant any particular concern?
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Re: Evil thoughts?
Post #38The immediate quote I provided, in the blog, states: "35% of male perpetrators had been victims of sexual abuse themselves"William wrote: ↑Tue Jul 11, 2023 7:36 pm [Replying to Miles in post #36]
Indeed. I wasn't attempting to give a contrary impression.As is your post here.![]()
That is why I ended my post with the words:
"Re "opinions":
In general, the discussion is an interesting one between you and Adonai Yahweh with good points coming from both sides."![]()
The quote you provide doesn't site a figure.And if Adonai Yahweh had bothered to look into the "SOURCES:" posted at the bottom of the link I gave, he would have found PubMed listed twice, and by clicking on the first one he would have found the source of the 35% figure mentioned:
NIH National Library of Medicine
Br J Psychiatry
. 2001 Dec;179:482-94; discussion 495-7.
doi: 10.1192/bjp.179.6.482.
Cycle of child sexual abuse: links between being a victim and becoming a perpetrator
M Glasser 1 , I Kolvin, D Campbell, A Glasser, I Leitch, S Farrelly
Affiliations +expand
PMID: 11731348 DOI: 10.1192/bjp.179.6.482
And the blog got this information from the statement:
"The overall rate of having been a victim was 35% for perpetrators and 11% for non-perpetrators," whose source, if you follow the "Source" links, can be found HERE <-- click on and scroll down to "RESULTS"
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Re: Evil thoughts?
Post #39[Replying to Miles in post #38]
So is it that the author of the blog took the statistics and added his/her opinion that he/she considers the percentage low - perhaps too low to show any significance to be drawn from it?
And you - in citing the blog - agree with the opinion of the author of the blog?
Thanks for that additional information Miles.The immediate quote I provided, in the blog, states: "35% of male perpetrators had been victims of sexual abuse themselves"
And the blog got this information from the statement:
"The overall rate of having been a victim was 35% for perpetrators and 11% for non-perpetrators," whose source, if you follow the "Source" links, can be found HERE <-- click on and scroll down to "RESULTS"
So is it that the author of the blog took the statistics and added his/her opinion that he/she considers the percentage low - perhaps too low to show any significance to be drawn from it?
And you - in citing the blog - agree with the opinion of the author of the blog?
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Re: Evil thoughts?
Post #40Not that I could tell---I only did a cursory read through.William wrote: ↑Tue Jul 11, 2023 8:46 pm [Replying to Miles in post #38]
Thanks for that additional information Miles.The immediate quote I provided, in the blog, states: "35% of male perpetrators had been victims of sexual abuse themselves"
And the blog got this information from the statement:
"The overall rate of having been a victim was 35% for perpetrators and 11% for non-perpetrators," whose source, if you follow the "Source" links, can be found HERE <-- click on and scroll down to "RESULTS"
So is it that the author of the blog took the statistics and added his/her opinion that he/she considers the percentage low - perhaps too low to show any significance to be drawn from it?
Which opinion are you talking about? I was only interested in the Child Sexual Abuse Statistic referencing male perpetrators who had been victims of sexual abuse themselves.And you - in citing the blog - agree with the opinion of the author of the blog?
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