Rape has always been a problem to define and here's the latest with statutory rape for children under 13. Ohio's statute is now void for vagueness when both persons involved are under 13. (Sad that we have to have this situation at all but....)
http://www.cleveland.com/open/index.ssf/2011/06/ohio_supreme_court_says_rape_l.htmlHere, both parties were boys under the age of 13 so there really was no way to determine who was the "victim" and who was the "offender." The law just wasn't well written, so the court struck it down.
This case illustrates a few problems:1.) We have no idea how to deal with GLBT kids. The thought that kids could be gay blows our minds. They exist, I was one.... Never did anything like this but in today's culture, it's foreseeable. No sex education for them at all = this kind of crap is more likely to happen.
2.) We don't really know how to define consent very well. Even another child witness said the acts were "consensual" and that nobody forced anything on anybody. Granted, anyone who has sex with a child 13 or under is guilty of statutory rape, but what if, as in this case, they are both under 13?
3.) We can't seem to wrap our minds around the idea that rather than or in addition to punishing, we should educate or reform.
4.) Gender bias.... This case screams it. We have no idea what to do when there is no female in the situation, in addition to other things.
The Ohio Supreme Court agrees that this law is crazy, because under the law as written, both boys are guilty of raping each other, which... makes no sense.
The whole point of teaching our kids sex ed is to avoid this kind of senario....
As for the law in question, it needs to be rewritten.
As for consent with adults, you can usually consent by conduct, but then you have to ask if the conduct was "coerced" and then you get into all kinds of gray area. I dunno. It really is a mess and there is no simple way to sort it out. Ideally, you'd have two adults who knew each other well and even expressly agreed to make love. That doesn't seem to happen in the real world though. Flirting simply doesn't include a contract you sign in most cases. I don't know what the answer is. I just know it's a problem.