JerryChicken wrote:
I've heard it cited by individuals, (parents and members) at our club too, whether its true or not, (and it seems to be far-fetched), whether or not you can find any examples on the internet, (I am not going to go searching for some
) is irrelevant, totally irrelevant - what DHM is stating is the position that a private club committee funded and guided by a central professional body have to take into consideration in order to allay the fears of the most paranoid and "prove" that their club takes child safety seriously, on and off the pitch, like his club our club have a nominated Child Safety representative, ours is by coincidence a female school teacher and so takes the job very seriously - by another coincidence she is also the same person who is particularly talented at taking very good photos of the action shots that the kids like to see on the web - in all things there is a balance to be taken.
That wasn't the point that I was attempting to make.
I was attempting to gain a better understanding of DHM's response to Wizeb's interpretation of the issue he had raised.
Beyond that, DHM says that there
is an issue, and "one that I would hope few people have experience of directly but the use of images of children to generate obscene material in photoshop. This is a very real issue."
Not a perception of an issue, but "a very real issue".
For clarity's sake, I am not having a dig at DHM. But this does seem to rather get to the heart of the matter. If it is "a very
real issue" [my emphasis], then there will be evidence of it. By which I mean police warnings or court cases etc.
Otherwise, it seems that the issue – and none-the-less real – is the paranoia.
And it remains a point that DHM's apparent objection to how Wizeb rephrased his "very real issue" is hard to understand. What else would he imagine people would go to such lengths for, using "obscene" materials? Is there not then at play a further issue – that of a somewhat puritanical fear of spelling out things clearly, for what they are?
Jerry raises an interesting point though: at what stage does an organisation say: 'enough is enough – there is no evidence for this'?