doubtingthomas wrote: ↑Fri Apr 15, 2022 10:06 pm
Res Ipsa wrote: ↑Fri Apr 15, 2022 9:20 pm
So, a meaningful answer to your question requires you to describe the the "grooming" behavior and how you are defining "abuse."
IHAQ should explain what he means by grooming "young people" and should explain what he means by abuse. Labels matter.
Res Ipsa wrote: ↑Fri Apr 15, 2022 9:20 pm
I don't understand why you are placing so much emphasis on labels that are, to some extent, arbitrary. Rather than trying to reason from the labels, describe the conduct and its purpose. I think it's helpful to limit the label "grooming" to non-violent behavior designed to lead to and conceal illegal sexual contact.
Yes, it would be helpful. So cinepro was right when he said, "Grooming isn't accidental. It is intentional. The person does it with a goal (abuse) in mind. "
But malkie objected, "But it's something akin to grooming, and has the same effect of desensitizing the vulnerable person to inappropriate behaviour by some other authority figure. Call it "pseudo-grooming", or "unintentional grooming" - anything you like."
So hopefully malkie explains what mystical effect is he referring to.
Labels are arbitrary. They are convenient ways to express certain ideas, but they should never be treated as the ideas themselves.
If you don't know what IHAQ intended by his use of grooming "young people" and "abuse," you should ask them to clarify. I'm responding to your use of the labels. If you don't know what you mean when you use a label, why are you using it at all?
I agree with Cinepro that, in the context of child abuse, the word grooming should be used to refer to intentional conduct with the goal of illegal child abuse. That has nothing to do with what "grooming" is. "Grooming" is just a label. It is what we define it to be. We could take the same idea -- intentional, non-violent conduct intended to result in illegal sexual contact with children -- and call it "German Chocolate Cake." Labels are not correct or incorrect -- they are more useful or less useful depending on how we use them.
If I were to describe IHAQ's concern, it's not that all bishops are grooming young people through personal worthiness interviews. It's that they are making them more susceptible to grooming by teaching them trust adults who ask them detailed questions about their sexuality in a one on one interview. Arguing over whether we should apply the label "grooming" to that pattern of behavior doesn't advance the conversation. The question is whether the worthiness interviews are harmful in some way.
The distinction between grooming and not grooming is not the same as the distinction between harmful and not harmful. We can assign labels however we want, but it won't help us get at the actual issue, which is whether the practice is harmful. If so, can the practice be changed in a way to preserves any benefits while reducing the harm?
I don't see Malkie as contradicting cinepro at all. He's simply saying that, even if we apply the label "grooming" the way cinepro applies it, that doesn't reduce the potential for harm in making the child more susceptible to grooming. You can use any label you want -- Malkie suggested several. It doesn't matter.
Finally, what Malkie is suggesting isn't mystical at all. It's all about teaching children the boundaries between appropriate and inappropriate behavior by adults in a way that makes them more or less susceptible to grooming. I do the a similar thing for my kids with respect to con artists.