Generally, yes. I'm among those who think it's a sickness and we need to find out a way to help them. (Favorite E.R. episode is the one where the pedophile carves evil into his forehead to scare away children because he can't help himself.) Everybody should have the chance to turn their lives around.
As I see it the problems are in:
1. Are we sure that everyone of them can be helped? It could be deeply rooted problems that are hard-wired to the brain, making the behaviour emerge again in a few years. This might be helped, in some degree, if a person with these urges didn't get crucifed on sight when they try to seek help.
2. Not everyone wants to be helped, and you can't help those who don't want to be helped. Some will fake all the way through treatment and have no plans on stopping for real. Sexual urges lie very close to our most basic nature. Some find a threat to their sexual preferences a threat to their very being. I do think that this is one of the few cases where the good of the general public outweigh the rights to privacy.
3. How can we make sure they don't re-offend? We can't. A system isn't that hard to fool when every organisations and goverment agencys constantly overworked and is being forced to handle cases within minutes and not days. To keep check on them assistance from the public is needed and for that we need the lists.
4. No matter how society evolves there will always be parts of the public who act like the villagers from Frankenstein's Monster. If we put offenders on a list they'll still be punished for life, no matter what judge, jury and victim thinks. Only way they'll ever be left alone is if they save the lives of every single person who is persecuting them, or something equivalent.
5. In many places, if two young teenagers have sex they're both guilty of a crime and can be labeled a sex offenders, even if they both are the same age and it was consentual. No, I'm not saying they should be doing this, there's an age limit for a reason, but do you really need to be labeled for life for such a thing? The again, there's nothing else stopping a underaged child to rape another.
The problems are connected to each other and you can't solve one without make at least another one worse. If it was an easy question, it'd be solved by now.
As I see it the problems are in:
1. Are we sure that everyone of them can be helped? It could be deeply rooted problems that are hard-wired to the brain, making the behaviour emerge again in a few years. This might be helped, in some degree, if a person with these urges didn't get crucifed on sight when they try to seek help.
2. Not everyone wants to be helped, and you can't help those who don't want to be helped. Some will fake all the way through treatment and have no plans on stopping for real. Sexual urges lie very close to our most basic nature. Some find a threat to their sexual preferences a threat to their very being. I do think that this is one of the few cases where the good of the general public outweigh the rights to privacy.
3. How can we make sure they don't re-offend? We can't. A system isn't that hard to fool when every organisations and goverment agencys constantly overworked and is being forced to handle cases within minutes and not days. To keep check on them assistance from the public is needed and for that we need the lists.
4. No matter how society evolves there will always be parts of the public who act like the villagers from Frankenstein's Monster. If we put offenders on a list they'll still be punished for life, no matter what judge, jury and victim thinks. Only way they'll ever be left alone is if they save the lives of every single person who is persecuting them, or something equivalent.
5. In many places, if two young teenagers have sex they're both guilty of a crime and can be labeled a sex offenders, even if they both are the same age and it was consentual. No, I'm not saying they should be doing this, there's an age limit for a reason, but do you really need to be labeled for life for such a thing? The again, there's nothing else stopping a underaged child to rape another.
The problems are connected to each other and you can't solve one without make at least another one worse. If it was an easy question, it'd be solved by now.