France Passes Law Saying Children Can Consent To Sex With Adults

Sep 5, 2018 by

President Macron’s government has voted against having an age of consent in France, becoming the latest nation to give in to pressure from an international network of liberal activists determined to normalize pedophilia and decriminalize sex with children across the world.

Federal law in France now has no legal age of consent, meaning adults who have sex with children of any age will not be prosecuted for rape if the child victim is unable to prove “violence, threat, duress, or surprise.”

The draft bill against sexual and gender-based violence, known as the Schiappa law, was signed into law by the French Parliament on 3 August, sparking outrage in France as parents and children’s rights groups accuse Emmanuel Macron’s government of betraying the nation’s children.

The lack of an age of consent places millions of children in serious danger of sexual abuse in France, according to child protection officials.

Childrens’ rights groups criticised Emmanuel Macron’s government for failing to provide a legal age of consent to protect children, pointing to the recent decision by French courts to refuse to prosecute two pedophiles for the rape of 11-year-old girls because authorities couldn’t prove the children did not consent.

Read here

Editor’s note: there has been some debate over whether this story is accurate. The ‘Factchecker’ website Snopes says that the YourNewsWire report, on which the Prepare for Change piece is based, has “misled readers”, because France has never had an “age of consent”.

However a report in the Telegraph from May, while confirming that France has never had an age of consent law in the same way as Britain or America, has certainly missed an opportunity to create one and thereby offer better protection for children. While apparently tightening up some laws on rape, it appears to continue to permit paedophilia if coercion cannot be proved.

So technically France has not ‘decriminalised sex with children’, but has missed an opportunity to do so, and appears to maintain blurred ethical and legal lines which can be exploited by paedophiles.
 
However we must not miss the underlying point. From a UK perspective, while there may not be overt campaigns in the mainstream media and Parliament to relax laws prohibiting sex with children (which still remains a taboo in society), there is no doubt that intentional sexualising of children is taking place through new methods of sex education as well as pornography and other media. Society is bombarded with subtle messaging that wants to replace centuries old boundaries around sexual activity, based on Judaeo Christian ethics and enforced by law, with new concepts of “consent”. We see examples of this in recent cases of large scale abuse of young teenage girls by gangs of predominantly Muslim backgrounds, which were not dealt with not only because of fear of accusations of racism, but because Police and social workers did not see a problem as the girls appeared to be ‘consenting’.
 
This may be part of a deliberate strategy by sexual revolutionaries, to ensure that the next generation does not in future recognise concepts of sexual taboos and boundaries which we believe are essential for the proper functioning of society. The effect of sex ed and porn consumed by children today could bring about the decriminalisation of sex with children in ten years time.

 

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