KHarvey16 said:
Explain why consciously possessing is worthy of a crime and unconsciously possessing it is not. You are being vague.
Okay let's estabilish the parameters for consciously possessing and unconsciously possessing, and this only holds for this exercise:
Unconsciously: Browses 4chan, see (load to cache here) the occasional CP, 3 files, forgets to clear the cache.
Consciously: Browses the same 4chan, see 3 files and save all. (without this, it would hardly estabilish consciousness, unless a great amount of files were in the cache, and he wasn't cleaning it).
Now since both cases lived in the same building, both are raided. Have in mind here purpose doesn't count.
Now why is one worth being tagged as a criminal and the other is not?
Because one hoarded the material.
Of course prosecuting him would tell if he just saved those 3 because he thought it was (sickly) funny, or if he enjoys said material (a deeper raid would eventually cover this).
While the other, even with a deeper raid, would find nothing.
If they did, he would be a criminal too because he jumped from case 1 to case 2.
And as I said, that's why quantity too should weight: to wage the punishment, be a fine or jail.
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Oh just read your post above KHarvey16.
That's actually what the police does, isn't?
Go for the ring participants. And yes, that should be the utmost priority. Same with drugs, going for the drug cartels.
But in my view, that shouldn't excuse minor hoarders, or minor (but above the limit of possesion

) users.