Oh I was sure he'd carry the conversation forward from there.
I guess I will take it from here...
As stated, "Watching naked children," is a victimless crime. It is not child abuse if all you are doing is watching. Some images which would be considered child pornography are nothing more than evidence of child abuse, which would make the act being photographed a crime. Are the people who look at those images creating more victims? No. So how can one say it is a crime? Child abuse is a crime. Equating child pornography with child abuse makes light of all of the young survivors of brutal rape.
It might be argued that it is a vice. It might be argued that it perpetuates emotional distress to the individual who was abused, but why the double standard? Why do we not do the exact same thing with the photographed victims of physical abuse as sexual abuse? Visiting that wikipedia article is in no way child abuse, yet even goober is basically treating it like that. At the very least goober is treating it as dubious enough to stay away from, and so goober chooses to remain ignorant because of fear of the child pornography stigma.
The line separating right from wrong here is broad and the line is vague. By the letter of the law, my mom created child pornography. I am no victim, and most prosecutors realize that, so they don't push for my mother's arrest or for those of her peers who likewise took photographs of their young children. I took a picture of myself having sex when I was 17, so I am simultaneously the creator and the victim of child pornography in one single act? A few years I found the picture, freaked out when I realized the implication, and destroyed it. Flanagan is right to point out the absurdity of this situation.
Flanagan made an excellent point, he just wasn't ready for the lack of rationality in the child pornography debate, if there can even said to be a debate. Most people have in mind pictures of 3 year olds being raped when they think of child pornography, but our law does not make that distinction. At the very least, do you agree that there is a very big distinction between that picture of the 3 year old and the picture I took of myself? Should the law not enshrine my own right to possess pictures of myself?