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 @ISIDEWITHasked…2yrs2Y

Do you believe that consensual private behavior between adults should be regulated by law?

 @9L8J2T4 from Ohio  commented…2yrs2Y

 @ISIDEWITHasked…2yrs2Y

How does the possibility of decriminalizing adultery reflect on society's view of marriage and fidelity?

 @ImportedPoultryForward from Texas  commented…2yrs2Y

“Any criminal law that penalizes intimate behavior between consenting adults does not deserve to be on the books,”

Does this include prostitution?

 @ReformNickDemocrat from Ohio  commented…2yrs2Y

Why should fraud in every other area of life be illegal but not adultery? A person who commits adultery is engaged in an ongoing fraud that causes tremendous suffering to their spouse and exposes the spouse to disease. Each sexual act that happens in the belief that your spouse is faithful when they are not is in many ways non consensual as it happens under a false belief that it is safe and that you are in an exclusive relationship. Mugging causes far less damage. If you don't want to be subject to legal ramifications for breaking a contract of exclusivity don't enter into the contract or dissolve if when you no longer want to be exclusive. 90 days is getting off very easy.

 @RhinoGabriellaLibertarian from Oregon  commented…2yrs2Y

The greatest threat of such laws is that they are arbitrary. They are not used, but they can be to go after someone the system fears.

 @GenerousRhinoNo Labels from Texas  commented…2yrs2Y

I wish I had known adultery was criminal 30 years ago when my lawyer ex-husband left me, along with our 8-month-old and 3-year-old, for his first cousin.

 @ExuberantQuicheVeteranfrom New Jersey  commented…2yrs2Y

I'm surprised to read (apparently) that no one who has had the anti-adultery law applied against oneself has not appealed the decision to the Court of Appeals. While other states might have repealed such laws, other states' highest courts have abrogated them (and others, such as alienation of affection) as obsolete.

 @CockatooTimVeteran from Missouri  commented…2yrs2Y

A number of points in this story raise some questions.

“Whose right to privacy was infringed on?” Mr. Degnan said. “Whose marriage was put on display in the media?”

In the cited case the pair were having intercourse in a public park. I would suggest their rights to privacy were lost as soon as they embarked on that decision.

As to the woman being the only one charged with adultery, was the man even married? The author failed to mention that, as the law was written it would appear to only apply to those who are married.

As to the comment "He added, “You…  Read more

 @ISIDEWITHasked…2yrs2Y

Can removing adultery laws be seen as a step towards protecting personal freedom, or does it undermine the sanctity of marriage?

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