I believe the girl was 17- it happened 14 years ago. And he didn't actually rape the girl. It was also consentual- it was statutory rape.
I believe you're right too. Still, statutory rape - he KNEW he would get in trouble (and she most likely did too) so...that is that. Two people making insanely stupid decisions.
Again, I know of too many examples that prove it has nothing to do with being older. Wisdom doesn't come with age. It comes with work. With study and soul-searching. In terms of life in general, not just relationships, we see everyday people who are in their 40's and beyond that continually do stupid things.
And we've discussed your relationship before, Anita. The point is, that your relationship is still new. And especially the fact that you two are at a distance from each other suggests that you have a ways to go. I certainly wish you the best with it, but when you've made it through 10 or 20 years, you can retrospectively offer relationship advice.
Haha, the more I interact with older people (now that I'm almost 30), the more I'm continually confounded by how immature older people CAN be.

You are absolutely right - maturity comes with effort. But on the whole, 18-year-olds are much less worldly than 40-year-olds.
Yeah, we've discussed my relationship before. I initially got all

when you popped into the thread and insinuated my fiance was going to dump me eventually, because I don't think giving oral sex is the funnest thing in the world. That was incredibly insightful and complexity-considerate of you.

Don't play this "I'm giving all sides consideration because I'm so incredibly mature" game.
BTW, the relationship advice thread is for those people who want to GET into a relationship. For people who are already in a relationship who want advice, I have two things to tell them:
- Stop talking to your family/friends/Facebook sycophants.
- Start talking to your partner.
The end.
I know people who have been married for years (in one case, 10 years) who
hate each other's guts. Length of the marriage/relationship means nothing. So to say that your relationship is more valid than mine, because you just so happened to be married longer means nothing.
The fact that we're long-distance
right now (we weren't before) also means nothing. That's also an incredibly complexity-considerate opinion you made right there as well.
So clearly a teacher dating a student didn't destroy your parents' lives. And their situation also isn't unique. And I've also agreed that this guy Hooker was a jerk for betraying his family. My overall point is that things are often not as black-and-white or simplistic as some folks would like to make it out to be. Having a simple yes/no approach to life might make it easier for some folks to process, but it doesn't mean that's the best way.
I dunno, the fact that this is a pattern for Hooker makes things a lot more simple. He's a predator, or at least so weak-willed he can't say no to a barely-legal nubile young thing.
If it really is true love (a la Woody Allen and Soon-Yi, which is also ethically wrong but at least it wasn't a pattern and they're still together), Hooker wouldn't be in jail now for statutory rape of another girl. I bet many men would claim it was "true love" for barely-legal nubile young things if that meant you could get to hit it whenever you wanted..
They're in a position of authority regarding their learning. Not their sexual conduct. And there's also a fluid dynamic. If you're talking about elementary school kids, the teacher, as an adult has greater influence. But as the student matures that influence decreases and the student becomes more independent, the same as in the parental relationship.
Wait...so...it's okay for a stepparent (or God forbid, a biological parent) to schtup their child?
J/K, I know what you're going to say.

Just playing devil's advocate. In this case, someone needed to put a stop to it, and considering he had more to lose, Hooker needed to be the one to do it, and he didn't.