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6/10
Puzzling prudishness
2 April 2019
Having watched this film I need to ask why, when nobody in that 'disorderly house' was at any point abused in any way against their will, was there any need for the raid by police and prosecution. The moral prudishness that seemed to justify this is not seen when unwilling victims are assaulted, such as at workplace initiation or in many cases by bro called birthday stripp o grams. Many of these leave victims devastated, but are barely seen as wrong. I think the Brita have a very twisted idea of what is right and wrong.
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9/10
Moral dilemma
28 April 2017
The question this film brings to mind is why in real life do people like that Tory MP attempt to use the moral platform as as a springboard by attempting to criminalise people who are quite simply doing nothing wrong. I have read accounts of workplace ignition ceremonies in which unwilling victims are subjected to appalling assaults. These are certainly "against Christian teachings" but nobody crusades against this. He thinks of the club members as perverts and yet there is no mention of the countless abuses committed by church men. The hypocrisy is grotesqe. Furthermore stripp o gram acts, when forced on unwilling victims as they often seem to be, are genuinely breaking the law, leaving victims mortified. Some of these could do with police investigation.
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