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sex crimes committed by female teachers
>> Why Are So Many Female Teachers Sleeping With Students?
Why are so many female teachers RAPING CHILDREN.
There, fixed it for you.
I think current dating culture contributes. Single women know they have to compete with porn, so they’re more open to sex or oral really soon after meeting if the guy seems interested in them. Apps and websites facilitate this meat market mentality. I’ve been married a while, but this was already starting when I met my wife. Women on dating websites would be down for quite a lot quite fast after meeting up. From what unmarried coworkers tell me, it’s freaking ridiculous now. The women know they are competing with other women from the dating apps and use sex as a way to try to stake a claim on a guy they like. Fulfilling his fantasies is their ticket to relationship status and possibly even marriage, if they just do it well enough.
Feminism liberated women’s sexuality, men took advantage of that, and now these liberated women have to behave like willing whores, submissive to the man’s every desire if they want to achieve the same goddamned thing they used to get right out of...
so they’re more open to sex or oral really soon after meeting
Liberals said that there is no shame, anything is ok. Liberals promote and celebrate all kinds of sexual perverts on television and oscars any chance they get. No wonder, some people are buying into liberalism.
FortWayne saysLiberals said that there is no shame, anything is ok. Liberals promote and celebrate all kinds of sexual perverts on television and oscars any chance they get. No wonder, some people are buying into liberalism.
Within the United States of America, it's currently illegal for two adults to engage in consenting sex in exchange for money. And yet, the so-called liberals are fine with that.
What you're seeing is known as cultural hypocrisy, where ppl want the Puritanical standards in place, to extort the law abiding men, while giving a free pass for all the deviants out there.
I don’t think I’m hypocritical.
I absolutely disagree with infidelity, and homosexuality. All those destroy society and it’s moral fiber.
What about two straight single ppl (neither party is married), having sex, but being criminalized by statute because there's money involved?.
I absolutely disagree with infidelity, and homosexuality. All those destroy society and it’s moral fiber.
In Texas, home to the largest number of teacher sexual misconduct cases in the country, investigations into alleged inappropriate teacher-student relationships has grown 27 percent over the past three years, to 179.
FortWayne saysI don’t think I’m hypocritical.
I absolutely disagree with infidelity, and homosexuality. All those destroy society and it’s moral fiber.
What about two straight single ppl (neither party is married), having sex, but being criminalized by statute because there's money involved?
exploitation of young men and women as sex slaves by business
Then you really don't know women very well. Many of them simply want a guy to pay their bills. And a business is simply getting a sole proprietorship or partnership. That's not exploitation, it's capitalism.
If murder or suicide was legal
Because prostitution once legalized, leads to exploitation.
Just say it, MY RELIGION DOESN'T ALLOW FOR LEGAL PROSTITUTION.
Now, was that so hard?
I'm merely explaining the underlying reasons for this. The society banned this practice, because prostitution has hurt many people and therefore was banned for those reasons. It is not illegal to have sex. It is illegal to exploit people for sex. Prostitution is exploitation, hence banned.
young boys and girls
Liberals are ruining our society, moral decline.
MY RELIGION DOESN'T ALLOW FOR LEGAL PROSTITUTION.
Liberals want society to benefit people instead of enslave them.
Does Christianity claim that LEGAL PROSTITUTION is sinful? Where?
I posed this question on my Facebook page a few days ago: “Is there much/any social science on the phenomena of female teaches suddenly sleeping with students?”
This was shortly after news broke that a 24-year-old Texas teacher was on the lam for allegedly sexually assaulting a 13-year-old student who had also impregnated her, according to reports. (Editor's note: Here is the latest example, which involves an Arizona teacher accused of performing oral sex on her 13-year-old student in the classroom.)
A lively social media conversation quickly followed. Many theories were offered and most of the comments (surprisingly) were thoughtful.
My reason for asking the question was that I wanted to better understand why there appears to be an increasing prevalence of female teachers—many of them young and attractive—having sex with their students.
I say “appears” for a reason. I’m aware that the nature of these stories make them ripe for media attention and sensationalism, something several readers pointed out. So, do the numbers bear out an actual increase in prevalence?
A decade ago, William Saleton of Slate asked this question. His answer? No, it doesn’t.
Saleton pointed to a bulk of research that showed that female educators convicted of sexual assault appeared to make up a fraction of overall cases, 4 - 20 percent, depending on the study. (Overall, females committed just 3.5 percent of sex crimes in the U.S.)
But that was a decade ago. Our world has changed a lot since then. What does more recent data reflect?
It appears things have changed.
Terry Abbott, chairman of Drive West Communications and a former chief of staff at the U.S. Department of Education, wrote an article in the Washington Post in 2015.
He said teachers are committing more student-related sex crimes, and he cited several examples, including the following:
In Texas, home to the largest number of teacher sexual misconduct cases in the country, investigations into alleged inappropriate teacher-student relationships has grown 27 percent over the past three years, to 179. Kentucky schools reported more than 45 sexual relationships between teachers and students in 2011, up from 25 just a year earlier. And a surge has been reported in Alabama, where the state investigated 31 cases during the year ending July 2013, nearly triple the number it had investigated just four years earlier.
But this data involves teacher-student sex crimes generally. What about female educators specifically?
Though Abbott did not directly address this question, the research he cites suggests that female teacher-student sex crimes are on the rise.
In 2014, Abbott said, two-thirds of reported teacher-related sexual misconduct cases with students involved men; that means one-third of the cases involved female teachers.
If Abbott’s statistics are accurate, it would represent an enormous increase from just a decade ago, when female teachers accounted for as little as four percent of reported sex crimes involving students. (This, of course, assumes the studies cited in Saleton’s article are accurate.)
What does it all mean?
A more precise review of data is no doubt warranted before it would be prudent to declare this a sexual epidemic. Anyone who has worked with statistics knows they can be fickle.
But sometimes conventional wisdom is right.
So let’s assume for a moment that sex crimes committed by female teachers are on the rise. The question becomes: What is driving it?
Abbott points to social media. A lot of people might be tempted to roll their eyes at this answer, but it’s a theory that makes sense and is supported by the data. (For one, it would fit the timeline of the rise. Additionally, Abbott's group found that women used social media in 40 percent of the sex crimes they tracked.)
Still, is there anything else that might explain an increase in prevalence? Could other factors besides technology be driving so many young women to commit crimes of passion that seem certain to land them behind bars?
Finally, to come full circle, why can’t I find some good social science on this?