COMMENTS: 101
We Are All Roman Polanski's Victims, And We All Deserve Justice
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Let's get one thing clear from the outset: Roman Polanski raped a 13-year-old girl. Yes, Whoopi, he even "rape-raped" her, whatever that means. Ignoring her explicit pleas and protests, he fed her champagne and a Quaalude, forced her to undress, and then vaginally and anally penetrated her. That's rape, by any definition -- and with any number of hyphens. And it's all there in the public record.
So if this tempest-in-an-extradition isn't about what really happened 32 years ago, what is it all about? What is it that's inspired public intellectuals such as Washington Post columnist Anne Applebaum and The Nation editor Katrina vanden Heuvel (who has since, commendably, come to her senses) to write breathless defenses of the man? Why is Debra Winger more concerned with the sanctity of international film festivals than with seeing justice done? Why have France, Poland, and -- for the love of God -- Germany, issued outraged statements on Polanski's behalf? Why has the entirety of Hollywood (save Kirstie Alley, Kevin Smith, Greg Grunberg and Jewel, bless their C-list hearts) lined up not just to defend him, but to take up his cause as though he were the victim in this case, launching a "Free Roman Polanski" campaign so popular among the entertainment elite that if you were to boycott everyone who signed on you could never watch a film again?
By now, we all know at least part of the answer: hero worship. Polanski is a genius director with a tragic past, and if there's anything we like better than a genius with a tragic past, it's a rich and famous genius with a tragic past. In the confused minds of many, Polanski is a real-life Batman, a flawed anti-hero living outside the law because that's the only way he can truly overcome his tortured history.
But Batman uses his past as a moral compass, not a get-out-of-jail-free card, and he certainly never raped a 13 year-old girl (or anyone else for that matter). Besides, surely our obsession with our celebrity heroes is just part of the story. Even Mackenzie Phillips was treated with more consideration last week when she accused her famous father of raping her, and there's nothing remotely like grand jury testimony backing her up, the way there is for Polanski's victim.
Which brings us at last to the heart of the matter: who Roman Polanski hurt, and who has the right to demand he face justice? His literal victim, after suffering a lifetime in an unwelcome media spotlight, has famously requested that the charges against Polanski be dropped. Polanski's defenders have seized on her statements, arguing that if she can "get over it," then those of us who haven't are just humorless harpies who want to see an old man suffer.
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Posted by: leerhok on Oct 2, 2009 11:39 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Even the victim herself wants the case to be forgotten - full stop!
The US should look to Europe. Not to China and the Muslim world!
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» RE: not smart at all
Posted by: neko_sake
» Everyone seems to be forgetting the current crime Polanski is wanted for.
Posted by: batmagoo
» allowing lies to be told unchallenged is real American crime
Posted by: luzmejor
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Posted by: melpol on Oct 2, 2009 12:05 PM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Polanski was tricked into pleading guilty to a lesser charge. The deal was for the judge and his partners to get half a million for no jail time. But once Polanski pleaded guilty the price went up. He was threatened with 50 years if he did not come up with the money. Polanski would not give up all his assets and fled the country.
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» This is the description at the time --
Posted by: tatamchwh
» RE: This is the description at the time --
Posted by: thrdr
» Trampy Daughter!?
Posted by: Ayla87
» Further More.....
Posted by: Jethro2112
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Posted by: melpol on Oct 2, 2009 4:36 PM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: Greed,Perversion,And Corruption
Posted by: luzmejor
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Posted by: whealeydj on Oct 2, 2009 9:38 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» And a waste of taxpayer money
Posted by: tatamchwh
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Posted by: leTerrassier on Oct 3, 2009 5:17 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» why are we afraid of the truth?
Posted by: luzmejor
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Posted by: JoshuaLudd on Oct 3, 2009 6:05 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It has been 30 years and California has many other crimes to worry about that are happening now to spend their limited funds on this.
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» RE: No...
Posted by: ankius...
» RE: No...
Posted by: Jethro2112
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Posted by: JoshuaLudd on Oct 3, 2009 2:27 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You are simply using rape victims and in this case one very specific rape victim who has had to suffer not only through rape, but the constant and unwanted press over something that happened 30 years ago.. to advance your own agenda regardless of their feelings.
After 30 years, she just wants to finally move on and not be reminded of it every few years.... but activists just see her as fresh meat to exploit for their own gain. Yes, their aims and even your aims are noble and laudable... but that doesn't excuse exploiting others to achieve them.
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» Their aims are noble and laudable?
Posted by: tatamchwh
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Posted by: wireup on Oct 3, 2009 5:15 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The child he raped is now a woman. She came to a settlement with him and has asked this to stop. She wants him released and the whole thing settled.
Does she have no say in this? The refusal of ANYONE to acknowledge this woman is utterly inexcusable.
I make no excuses for Mr. Polanski. As a woman and as a human being I think that what he did is absolutely reprehensible.
But SOMEONE has to acknowledge the victim; SOMEONE needs to listen to her. Why is no one doing that?
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» RE: There is no excuse for rape,
Posted by: JSquercia
» RE: There is no excuse for rape,
Posted by: rww
» RE: There is no excuse for rape,
Posted by: wireup
» RE: There is no excuse for rape,
Posted by: Longdream
» RE: There is no excuse for rape,
Posted by: Caleb Darkstar
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Posted by: tazdelaney on Oct 3, 2009 5:28 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
in the first place, if you remember the event at the time as i do, the girl at that time said flatly that she adored roman polanski, did her best to land him and that it was only her family's desire to cash in on it that was driving the case, not her own feelings, which at that time, as now, she complains bitterly had nothing to do with her own interests.
also, at the time, polanski, speaking what apparently, according the girl herself, was the truth, told the judge that"she may have been only 13 but she was a 13 year old woman and she seduced me.
as geoffrey chaucer, the first great writer in english history, wrote in his fabulous 'canterbury tales,' "if there be hair down there, to romance is fair." and in 1900, inengland, the average age at which a girl was married was just under 14, for men, 17. the famous world-historians and chroniclers of the arts and philosophy histories, will and ariel durant, met when will was 28 and teaching history in massachusetts, and ariel was a 14 year old student. they were run out of town, married, spent the next 70 years happily and extremely productively married around their love of history. today, some jerks would ship him to prison as a 'sex offender' and put her in the care of some shrink who will load her up on those world's worst drugs.
ludwig wittgenstein was 60 when he also fell in love with an 18 year old student and they had 15 fine years together. the young man devoted his life to the great philosopher's work. likewise, georgia o'keefe had a grand love affair with a man in his mid-20s when she was in her late 70s and early 80s. shame on them? no shame on prude clitoral mutilators and castrating PTA bible-belters.
let's consider oscar wilde, the great playwright and quotemaster. he fathered two sons and doted on his wife and all of these loved him. one of his sons after years of enduring the 'family disgrace' wrote a loving book about his father. but the victorian age, so rife with bawdiness due precisely to the suppression of sex, saw fit to imprison wilde and brutalize him ferociously therein. (his comment, "if this is how queen victoria treats her prisoners; she doesn't deserve to have any.") his young lover, a teenaged lad, stood by him completely and was there to meet him when his prison term was up. others than his wife and sons in the family forbade them to associate with oscar. the lad lived the hard life with oscar til his death.
similarly michael jackson. while americans mostly don't give a damn about the million children we've butchered iniraq alone since 1990... mention jackson at a hick bar, PTA or church meeting and they're ready to lynch this 'child molester.' once again, even under intense family and official pressure to sell michael out; none ever did. my position is that when i was 13, i was desperate for someone, anyone, as long as they were gentle, to give me a blowjob. it could've been a goat of either sex and i wouldn't've cared a whit. the king of pop giving me a suck? that's a crime? are you kidding?
i live in new york state where if you are 19 and have sex with a 17 year old girl or boy, you can be imprisoned for statutory rape and live the rest of your life with signs posted in your yard that you are a sex maniac! in oklahoma a couple of years ago, some insane judge sentenced an 18 year old boy to 15 years in prison for giving a consenting 15 year old a blowjob. what? imprison that judge fast would be my notion of justice! a 14 year old girl was recently arrested for handing out prints of her in the nude to passersby and was promptly arrested, charged, convicted as a sex offender and sent to some horrible spychiatric torture chamber.
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» RE: grow up part 1
Posted by: Dankhank
» RE: grow up part 1
Posted by: rww
» RE: grow up part 1
Posted by: austex_chris
» RE: grow up part 1
Posted by: austex_chris
» RE: grow up part 1
Posted by: Longdream
» RE: grow up part 1
Posted by: Caleb Darkstar
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Posted by: raginghormones on Oct 3, 2009 5:59 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Whereas if you or me did any of the above, I can tell you just what would happen:
1) Get arrested the day after the crime
2) have the trial the following Wednesday
3) By Friday you are convicted
4) The following Monday you are in the penn serving as a lifer.
The uber-wealthy can hire the very best lawyers that can stretch things out for years. I wouldn't be surprised if--even after finally being arrested---Polanski manages to walk.
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» RE: There's one standard of justice for the "rich and famous", another for all the rest of us
Posted by: richholland
» RE: There's one standard of justice for the "rich and famous", another for all the rest of us
Posted by: Left of center
» An Addendum to your comment...
Posted by: Augustus_818
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Posted by: tazdelaney on Oct 3, 2009 6:15 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
brutal rape and truly predatory activities are one thing and they are clear. but all this hysteria is just that. every 10 years since 1970 there's been a study of affection as an element of american family life and every time it has gone down. the last one, in 2000 was the worst. dad's interviewed said that they were now afraid to be seen hugging and kissing their own children in public for fear of accusations!
no wonder teen suicide is up 7x since 1970 (aside from the disastrous psych-drugs which exacerbate this.) what does the typical teen suicide note say? "can't get any love." or "no one will have sex with me like i'm some kind of creep." in the native world prior to the evil white christians arrival, explorers and such as the great margaret mead discovered people so peaceable they ran from mere shouts. they went naked, had sex in public and shamanic events included music/dance/art/chants/drugs and communal sex from which none young or old were excluded. rape, murder and war were rarities rather than the norm.
likewise, there are predatory, sexually harassing bosses, but look at what the lunatic fringe has done with that. the workplace is plainly less friendly now. oh, no, mustn't touch anyone ever again in this love-disabled faux-culture; it is strictly forbidden in the new corporate state.
a friend of mine a few years ago found a 1920s baptist manual for missionaries... it was blunt and to the point... the first rules were to stamp out native nudity, public sex, homosexuality. to instill and install 'christian morality.' then they become broken cultures ready to be slaves to empire... in polynesia, for example, by age 21 a person had engaged sex some 2,000 times already. they likely had what was termed 'an attachment' who was an older person of the same sex, taken on at adolescence as a kind of lover to teach the ways of love. didn't make them 'totally gay' nor 'victims.' now let's compare this with the average 21 year old american who's had 15 sexual incidents in his life. no wonder they go off to wars to kill and die in rage and frustration.
consider that when i was 13 i knew kids who still insisted that sex was a lie because 'that's dirty. my parents would never do that!' now that's what i call child abuse.
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» RE: grow up part II
Posted by: MT512
» RE: grow up part II
Posted by: Caleb Darkstar
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Posted by: LeonBNJ on Oct 3, 2009 7:39 PM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: tatamchwh on Oct 3, 2009 7:45 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: websurfer on Oct 3, 2009 7:47 PM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Letterman gets laughs upon revealing his sexual conquests with his subordinates - another lowlife that should be fired - like any exec would be from a company who ventured into that forbidden territory!
The entire corrupt self absorbed lot of Hollywood assholes are pathetic - and these are the people we followed as they stumped for our favorite political candidate!
A nation of idiots!
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» RE: Follywood
Posted by: richholland
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Posted by: ReneT on Oct 3, 2009 9:08 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What my friends and I learned very quickly as children was that there was a general adult hysteria concerning all sexuality outside of marriage, and it was obvious to us that this was absurd. Even before my teens, I knew that what the "proper" adult world and law believed was farcical.
I agree totally with "tazdelaney" above: "anyone who thinks i didn't have the right to claim conscious consent is a repulsive fascist hater of youth and sex in my book, creating pedophobia!"
I wish I had said that first!
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» RE: Freedom to practice - and NOT practice sex
Posted by: ZPaul
» RE: Freedom to practice - and NOT practice sex
Posted by: richholland
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Posted by: norsegirl on Oct 3, 2009 10:15 PM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: This isn't about consensual sex
Posted by: richholland
» nobody really knows if it was not consensual sex
Posted by: masthead
» RE: nobody really knows if it was not consensual sex
Posted by: Caleb Darkstar
» RE: This isn't about consensual sex
Posted by: desidid
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Posted by: hurricane hugo on Oct 3, 2009 11:28 PM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
#@!
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» RE: the only salient fact is this: HE RAN ... he should have
Posted by: Dankhank
» Not true.
Posted by: thrdr
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Posted by: richholland on Oct 4, 2009 4:46 AM
Current rating: 1 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No matter where you might be....
Thank you God nowadays the whole world knows;
Rich or Poor, in the land of the free and brave there is still justice....
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Posted by: Allstar Cookie on Oct 4, 2009 6:43 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Given everything that comes out of the arena of entertainment, sports and politics............this newsman comes up with this brilliant extortion plan.
David Letterman had sex with the fish in the green room. There......that could make for a good extortion plan.
David Letterman had sex with the band. Not bad..........what else do you have?
Uhh....let's see.......he had sex with Leno. "NOW you're talking!!" "You sir, have the making of a great.......not good......but great, extortionist."
But no......he went with the Letterman had sex with co-workers.
So when the media talks about what this will do to his career............I think it's the newsman that should be asked that question.
I love the fact that Letterman basically told this guy to go "f*** yourself!"
Polanski, on the other hand, had "consensual sex" with a sleeping thirteen year old. What happened to his career?
I love the hypocrites of Hollywood........if it were Father Polanski they'd want him strung up by his goblets. But no....it's Roman the great director......and it wasn't "rape rape"....just........rape...I guess??
Ok...I get it. Thirteen year olds have sex and many thirteen year old girls are mature enough, I guess, to actually think for themselves. If that's what Whoopi and Woody want us to believe.....ok.....let's give them that.
But whether thirteen or thirty.....how consensual could it be when one partner had to be drugged???
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» RE: In the clergy sex abuse scandal none of the bigwigs was punished
Posted by: MeyravLevine
» RE: In the clergy sex abuse scandal none of the bigwigs was punished
Posted by: richholland
» RE: In the clergy sex abuse scandal none of the bigwigs was punished
Posted by: Allstar Cookie
» RE: In the clergy sex abuse scandal none of the bigwigs was punished
Posted by: MeyravLevine
» RE: Letterman and Polanski... and drug-fueled?
Posted by: Dankhank
» RE: Letterman and Polanski... and drug-fueled?
Posted by: richholland
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Posted by: sasha40 on Oct 4, 2009 8:06 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If his original plea deal was in line with the usual one for this type of crime in LA County in the late 70s, some kind of agreement should be reached. Normally, pleas that involve probation instead of jail time for first offenders exist to give people a chance to rehabilitate themselves. As Polanski's victim has pointed out, no one else has come forward in the last 30 years to accuse him again.
And I can't help wondering how many 13-year-old victims are currently suffering at the hands of rapists who are still at large in LA County, how many of those men will be caught, prosecuted and do hard time.
Personaaly, I rather see a Polanski anti-rape PSA than see the man go to prison.
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» he committed a felony the moment he boarded the plane
Posted by: hurricane hugo
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Posted by: Alenna on Oct 4, 2009 11:42 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"If I had killed somebody, it wouldn't have had so much appeal to the press, you see? But...fucking, you see, and the young girls. Judges want to fuck young girls. Juries want to fuck young girls. Everyone wants to fuck young girls!"
It obviously reveals his contempt for the idea that he ever did anything wrong. What ever happened to the idea of Justice?: You do the crime, you do the time. Our system of justice is so bogged down with inequalities; a low income “nobody” will often serve more time in prison for a simple drug offense, than a rich white collar criminal who has ruined the lives of thousands. Or a famous or elitist celebrity. I have a real problem with just letting this go. It's clear that the people in Hollywood who want to forgive him do so not because he's “suffered” enough (having to live hiding and in exile for 30 years, having his wife murdered etc), or for any other morally justifiable reasons.
They want to exempt him from justice because he's one of their talented artists and therefore deserving of special treatment because of his creative gifts. Too many rich and famous people are exempted from real laws already. Justice is supposed be equal for everyone. Let Polanski be brought to justice and serve his time just like the rest of us “little people”.
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» RE: Polanski was interviewed about this in 1979
Posted by: Bitter_Boy
» Why are we so concerned with too-late justice?
Posted by: luzmejor
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Posted by: stepp on Oct 4, 2009 12:05 PM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
his original probation report recommended he be given probation.........he fled when brain dead rittenband recinded his plea deal. thriteen is by the way the age of consent in a number of countries including japan. Anyway, its a waste of money in a cash strapped california economy. where is the outcry about the priests who have gone , simply, to another parish.......where is the outcry about kissinger still walking around? Or about sexual abuse of women in the military??
hypocrites.
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» Consensual?
Posted by: Alenna
» RE: I Get It You're A No, Really Means Yes Person
Posted by: desidid
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Posted by: sasha40 on Oct 4, 2009 12:26 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» He was...
Posted by: batmagoo
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Posted by: thrdr on Oct 4, 2009 3:54 PM
Current rating: 1 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If what Geimer said in her original testimony--and what she maintains happened to this day--is accurate and true, while not overtly violent this was not a youth and an adult engaging in consensual (though illegal and according to the sexual morals of many Americans today forbidden) sex--it was rape. That's if.
Polanski has maintained that it was consenting, and pleaded guilty to "unlawful sex with a minor." This plea was agreed to by all parties in the case: the perpetrator, the victim, and the DA. The judge presiding may or may not have shown signs of flightiness in handling sentencing, and at any rate Polanski, fearing prolonged jail-time, fled.
The case is complicated by alcohol and drugs, and Geimer's prior sexual experience: According to her testimony she had had sex twice prior to this incident (with who is unspecified), she had used alcohol and been drunk prior to this, and once taken a portion of a quaalude which she found when she was ten or eleven. The author of this article innacurately states that Geimer explicitly and repeatedly protested being "fed" alcohol and a quaalude, but her sworn testimony flatly contradicts this; at Jack Nicholson's house that day thirty odd years ago, she began drinking champaigne voluntarily when it was offered to her by Polanski, and continued drinking it casually or unthinkingly for some time; after a time posing for pictures and drinking champaigne, she took a portion of a quaalude, which she was able from her own prior knowledge at the time to recognize as a quaalude, when it was offered to her by Polanski, though in her testimony she stated "I must have been pretty drunk or else I wouldn't have." In my view at least, all this says nothing about Geimer's character (that she was some sort of teenage wanton or something), nor does it cast much doubt upon the accuracy and truthfulness of her testimony,if one regards it as plausible, though it does suggest that she was aware of the effects of alcohol and possibly quaaludes. (There may be a wrinkle here in her testimony though--with her ability to recall clearly, while she was probably "pretty drunk," the inscription on the quaalude tablet, which she describes as having been in three pieces when presented to her by Polanski--but I'll leave that aside because I haven't a clue what these things looked like.) At any rate giving champaigne and a quaalude to a minor was illegal in California--and ethically dubious in any event, even regardless of age. It was only after she had been partly disabled or weakened by the champaigne and the quaalude, according to Geimer, that she began overtly resisting Polanski, who persisted in his sexual advances. The assertion that Geimer was forced to drink booze and pop a pill isn't trivial when one considers the vehement declaration of clarity with which Ms. Friedman at the outset of this article frames her opinion.
Anyhow, the sole charge Polanski pled guilty to was what is commonly called "statutory rape" which is not defined by violence or the use of force but rather by the age of consent. If one suggests that sexual morality is relative, and cites in addition that age-of-consent laws are not (and never have been) universal or even consistent within the U.S., then at this juncture some people invariably go into high dudgeon mode about the impossibility, except for people who are mentally and/or emotionally "undeveloped" or "damaged," of consensual sex between an adolescent and an older person. I believe this view to be pure bunk, and there is plenty of evidence that refutes it.
(continued)
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» Endless Universal Victimhood? (Part 2)
Posted by: thrdr
» RE: I read her testimony and linked on another post
Posted by: desidid
» RE: ndless Universal Victimhood? (Part 1)
Posted by: austex_chris
» Chris Hansen?
Posted by: thrdr
» RE: ndless Universal Victimhood? (Part 1)
Posted by: Caleb Darkstar
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Posted by: dayahka on Oct 4, 2009 6:28 PM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
By the same token, however, I think that all those banksters who raped the citizens of this and many other countries should also be arrested and shot, but the likelihood of that happening is nil, given that our governments are fully bought and paid for by the banksters, and I would expect the same result here--he'll get off on some technicality and be set free before he's ever extradited. The rich always take care of their own using the rationale of beyond good and evil.
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Posted by: neko_sake on Oct 4, 2009 11:15 PM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: Sympathy for the rapist?
Posted by: richholland
» RE: Sympathy for the rapist?
Posted by: Caleb Darkstar
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Posted by: kenhymes on Oct 5, 2009 7:37 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As far as the ethical side is concerned, it sure sounds like a lot of people want to have sex with children and are looking for a way to justify it. Would these posters feel comfortable with an adult having sex with their own child? Just askin'...
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» RE: common law priniciple
Posted by: thrdr
» RE: If You Are One Of Those Who Have Stated That Sex With An Underage Minor Is Okay
Posted by: desidid
» RE: common law priniciple
Posted by: desidid
» This is what's "PURITANICAL"
Posted by: batmagoo
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Posted by: davmills on Oct 5, 2009 9:35 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: Bitter_Boy on Oct 5, 2009 12:27 PM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It does, however, take a strong person to say that "a 30-year-old rape under dubious circumstances perpetrated with full knowledge of the minor's mother along with the crooked prosecution of the rapist might make this case not worth pursuing."
Of course, I wouldn't say that in front of my girlfriend mind you.
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» RE: Please Link Where The Mother Had Full Knowledge
Posted by: desidid
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Posted by: bluecoua on Oct 5, 2009 2:51 PM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: RealDeal101 on Oct 6, 2009 10:56 AM
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http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/nomeansnomeansnomenasno
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Posted by: eidolon on Oct 6, 2009 8:28 PM
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". . . I wish he would return to America so the whole ordeal can be put to rest for both of us."
And this:
"I'm sure if he could go back, he wouldn't do it again. He made a terrible mistake but he's paid for it."
And this:
"I think he's sorry, I think he knows it was wrong. I don't think he's a danger to society. I don't think he needs to be locked up forever . . . It was 30 years ago now."
If she doesn't think Polanski should be arrested 30 years later, what right does the author of this article have to support belated vengeance?
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Posted by: Caleb Darkstar on Oct 7, 2009 1:10 PM
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This would have been rape if she were 25 years old.
And he said, 'Just come down here for a second.' So I finally went down. And then he went — there was a lot of Whirlpool bath jets. He goes, 'Doesn't it feel better down here?' And he was like holding me up because it is almost over my head. And I went, 'Yeah, but I better get out.' So I got out.
___
The victim testified that after she left the whirlpool bath, Polanski told her to go into a nearby bedroom and lie down.
A: I was going, 'No, I think I better go home,' because I was afraid. So I just went and I sat down on the couch.
Q: What were you afraid of?
A: Him.
(a few minutes later)
A: He sat down beside me and asked me if I was OK.
Q: What did you say, if anything?
A: I said, 'No.'
Q: What did he say?
A: He goes, 'Well, you'll be better.' And I go, 'No, I won't. I have to go home.'
Q: What happened then?
A: He reached over and he kissed me. And I was telling him, 'No,' you know, 'Keep away.'
___
After Polanski kissed her, the victim alleged, he began to engage in oral sex.
A: ... I was ready to cry. I was kind of — I was going, 'No. Come on. Stop it.' But I was afraid.
Q: And what did he say, if anything?
A: He wasn't saying anything that I can remember. He was — sometimes he was saying stuff, but I was just blocking him out, you know.
___
The victim testified that Polanski began having sex with her, but sodomized her when he learned she wasn't using birth control.
A: He asked, he goes, 'Are you on the pill?' And I went, 'No.' And he goes, 'When did you last have your period?' And I said, I don't know. A week or two. I'm not sure.'
Q: And what did he say?
A: He goes, 'Come on. You have to remember.' And I told him I didn't.
Q: Did he say anything after that?
A: Yes. He goes, 'Would you want me to go through your back? And I went, 'No.'
___
The victim testified that after the sex, she got dressed and waited in the car for Polanski to drive her home. Before driving her home, he asked her to keep the incident a secret.
A: He said to me, he goes, 'Oh, don't tell your mother about this.' ...
Q: What did you say?
A: I wasn't saying anything. He says, 'Don't tell your mother about this and don't tell your boyfriend either.' ... He said something like, 'This is our secret.' And I went, 'Yeah.' And then later he said, 'You know, when I first met you I promised myself I wouldn't do anything like this to you.'
___
Source: Transcript of the grand jury testimony in The People of the State of California v. Roman Raymond Polanski. March 24, 1977.
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Posted by: batmagoo on Oct 9, 2009 4:50 AM
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People who clamor for him to receive "justice like the rest of us" live in a delirious universe where they believe that a 2 tier system prevails: One for the "privileged" and one for the rest of us mortals...That's absurd.
Equal Justice is not an option - anywhere - under ANY circumstance - and has never been...Judges have good days, bad days, people can afford good representation or not, jails are overcrowded, forcing the early release of offenders everywhere, plea deals, dropped charges for political agendas, lawyers can be incompetent or unprepared, trends affect jury opinion, relevant testimonies are denied by authorities, celebrities and odd cases are hounded by media frenzy, insanity pleas are entered, Twinky Defenses, people being attacked or even raped while in custody (hey, why don't you write a post on male-rape in jail? - or perhaps the issue of masculine humiliation does not compel you...)
YOU and I cannot even get identical justice on the same day.
Justice is a coin-toss, at best, everywhere.
There is no reason to write articles on Polanski and forget to call for the jailing of George W. Bush, or Henry Kissinger, yet, there we are -
Did you protest Ronald Reagan's "no me recuerdo" defense during the Iran-Contra lies? -- boy...those lies caused some pain and suffering...
How about Robert McNamara's- was your concern for justice expressed when he was allowed to die out of jail a few months back?
Are you at all interested in justice for all of us?
focusing on a sex case because our own tawdry obsessions are far easier a target than the awesome truth that justice has nothing to do with our lives, one way or another -- This post by a well-meaning wary-eyed woman is another voice in a mob-rage calling for yet another public lynching of a symbol among us - a Scarlet-Letter - in predictable puritanical terms.
There are about a thousand tiers in our justice system on any given day. Most pundits who opine on Polanski did not know his case 2 weeks ago, and are merely voicing ideas on the issue of rape and their frustration with the topic, which is fine, but has nothing to do with either Samantha Geimer, the victim, Roman Polanski the perpetrator, or the judges and prosecutors who dealt with his case 30 years ago -- Morally superior commentators are merely commenting on their 2009 self-congratulatory attitudes: that they are enlightened to child-protection issues -- Roman Polanski is about to become a human pinata dragged-out in public and flogged as a focus of all our anxiety directed at sex - underage and otherwise - pain, suffering, the rich, the lucky, the powerful, and the cats that got away like OJ and Robert Blake.
Roman Polanski is about to become a public example of American shame and angst dragged-out in the media and flung by political punditry...
You call that "justice like for the rest of us"?
Justice is one thing Roman Polanski will NEVER get in America.
You are Pollyanna to his Polanski --
( but we'll look-out for you in the lynch-mob )
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Posted by: Blackpool Hotels on Oct 31, 2009 5:10 AM
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