
20 Percent of Teens Partake in 'Sexting': Should They Face Charges?
SodaHead Living
2012/06/15 18:00:00
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407 votes
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1,040 votes
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Whatever the latest technology is, teenagers will use it to get up to no good. But that doesn't make it any less alarming that nearly 20 percent of high school students partake in sexting, according to a new study.


Donald Strassberg, of the University of Utah, found that nearly 20 percent of high school students (18 percent of males, 17 percent of females) admitted to having sent a sexually explicit image on their cellphone. Almost twice as many said they had received a sexual image on their phone (50 percent of males, 31 percent of females), LiveScience reports.
And here's the really scary part: About 25 percent confessed that when they received a sexually explicit image, they forwarded it to others. Plus, more than 8 percent said they had sent a sexually explicit photo that they took of someone else to a third party.
And here's the really scary part: About 25 percent confessed that when they received a sexually explicit image, they forwarded it to others. Plus, more than 8 percent said they had sent a sexually explicit photo that they took of someone else to a third party.
But here's the thing, kids: You can get into big trouble for doing this. In many states, sending or receiving nude pictures of someone under 18 (including yourself) could put you at risk of facing child pornography charges. Do you think teens who sext should face charges?
Top Opinion
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No+21It's their life if someone else sees it and it not their boyfriend or girlfriend or whoever who cares not my life.























And what about them talking about it? Does that also fall into this category? If so, shouldn't they be happy that these kids are not actually having sex, but just expressing their hormones in words?
Honestly, this is a waste. You can put a law over it, trying to stop it. But, then what? Are we going to have to start searching phones for naked pictures? Not a good look if you ask me. Let them make their own mistakes. Part of life is about learning from firsthand experiences. Get over it. The only problem should be if it is with two people with one being over the legal age limit allowed to have sexual relations with that specific minor. THEN! We have a problem. But, with two teens? That's dumb.
K. I'm done.
If these teens are old enough to face charges, they're clearly not in the category of "helpless naive children being victimized by predators," which is the whole point of child pornography and statutory rape laws in the first place.
Forcing these kids to face charges has nothing to do with "justice" or protecting them from anything: Ironically, it has everything to do with adults victimizing them...except this time, it's adults within "the system."
It's funny how these irrational culture warriors are constantly pretending to be horrified by the consequences "sexting" can bring to a teen's life, yet they're so eager to pile on and make it worse. Best I can tell, it's not coming from a place of genuine protectiveness but from somewhere more controlling and vengeful.
How would they enforce this anyway?