My roommate is astoundingly hot. Her room is being repaired
(the ceiling fell in), and, at her request, I’m letting her and
her boyfriend sleep in my room while I take the couch. I’ve been
able to contain my attraction just fine up to now, but the minute
she entered my space I had this feeling that all bets are off. I’m
considering spying on her with a hidden surveillance cam. If I had
video of this girl naked, let alone being fucked, I could happily
beat off to the footage for the rest of my life. Obviously it’s
a breach of trust, and I’m a shitty roommate for considering it.
I have a few concerns. Is this normal? Assuming that there’s no
way she could find out and that I kept the video to myself and myself
only, would it be so wrong? What is her reasonable expectation of
privacy once she enters my room?
Thanks In Advance
Before we get to your tech-related queries, TIA, a word about a
young man in Florida with tech-related troubles.
America’s current teen-sex panic — it’s always something — is about
“sexting,” teenagers sending each other pictures of their sometimes-underage
junk, their frequently underage racks, or their young and dimpled/pimpled
rear ends. (Oh, if only we could return to the comparatively innocent
and entirely fictional days of “rainbow parties”!) Shortly after
the kids went crazy for sexting, the authorities went crazy for
prosecuting kids for sexting. Take Phillip Alpert, an 18-year-old
in Florida who got mad at his girlfriend and forwarded a digital
photo of her naked to dozens of her friends and family.
This Alpert kid (he had only just turned 18) pulled an asshole
move — the gaping asshole of moves — and he owes his girlfriend,
her friends, and her family an apology, restitution, and a pound
of flesh. (And I mean that pound.) A just, proportionate
punishment might involve, say, nude pictures of Alpert being displayed
on a billboard in Times Square. For a year. Instead, Alpert was
convicted of distributing child porn and “sentenced to five years
probation and required by Florida law to register as a sex offender,”
CNN reports. “You will find me on the registered sex offender list
next to people who have raped children, molested kids, things like
that,” Alpert told CNN.
A message for concerned parents, outraged school officials, and
teen-sex-obsessed prosecutors: We’re gonna have to either make it
illegal for teenagers to own camsphonescomputers, or we’re gonna
have to give them drugs to delay the onset of puberty until after
they’re 18. If we’re unable or unwilling to do those things — technology
is hard to contain, and delaying puberty could have unwelcome health
consequences (although it would have spared Levi Johnston’s DNA
from the ignominy of mixing with the Palins’) — then the intersection
of horny teens and newer technologies is going to require us to
rethink the simplistic application of laws that criminalize the
possession and distribution of sexty (ugh) pictures, particularly
in cases where they were created by teenagers, for teenagers.
Yes, Alpert was a douchebag; yes, it was wrong for him to forward
that picture to embarrass and humiliate his girlfriend. But if Alpert
is a child pornographer and a sex offender, so are millions of today’s
teenagers. They’re all e-mailing each other pictures of their junk.
Making an example of one unlucky asshole who got caught isn’t going
to stop teenagers from sexting each other anymore than making an
example of hundreds of thousands of unlucky pot smokers stopped
people from smoking pot.
Okay, TIA, on to your question: While it’s normal to contemplate,
even obsess about, something you know is wrong, secretly videotaping
your roommate, even if she’s “in your space,” isn’t just an asshole
move. It’s an illegal move in most places, and the consequences
for asshole moves involving digital images, as illustrated above,
can be dire. And until submitting to video surveillance is widely
understood to be a known risk of sleeping in someone else’s bedroom,
your roommate and her boyfriend have an entirely reasonable expectation
of privacy.
As for no-way-she-could-ever-find-out, I could sneak into your
house and use your toothbrush as a sound, and you’d never find out.
And although it would hurt me more than it would hurt you, TIA,
it would still be wrong — even if there was no way short of DNA
testing that you would ever find out. And while you may intend to
keep the video to yourself — such the gentleman — what if your laptop
gets stolen? What if you take your computer in for repairs and someone
makes a copy? Digital images — photos, video, whatever — are too
easy to lose control over.
Don’t do it, TIA.
I am a 30-year-old female with a live-in boyfriend. While we’re
not without our problems, the relationship is wonderful. My only
big issue is that I don’t enjoy cohabitation. Before living with
my boyfriend, I lived in a studio apartment, my little castle, and
I relished having my own space. I would love to go back to us each
having our own domicile, but I am afraid of losing him. And the
thought of being “with” someone and then going back to your own
home has been met with such criticism by my friends that it makes
me wonder if there may be something wrong with my relationship that
I just can’t detect consciously.
But I want my own space. Is it unusual to want your own space?
Independent But In Love
I know a nice, loving couple — married, straight, with kids — who
each have an apartment in the same building. The kids’ rooms are
in mom’s; the meals are prepared and eaten at dad’s. They decided
to live like this because, like you, they both liked having their
own spaces.
You can do it, too, IBIL. But you won’t be able to have what you
want until you stop worrying about what other people think and start
being honest with your boyfriend about your preferred living arrangement.
As you’ve proven in the past with “santorum” and “saddlebacking,”
you have considerable influence. So to reward the Vermont legislature’s
recent decision to override the governor’s veto and legalize same-sex
marriage in that state, why not encourage your listeners and readers
to purchase products made in Vermont? And Iowa? Think of it: Your
millions of fans could trade in chocolate body paint for maple syrup
as the sexy edible substance of choice, all the while supporting
this legislative victory and (we hope) spurring others like it.
D.J.’s Fellow Gayby
P.S. I have absolutely no stake in Vermont’s economy. I just
want my dads to be able to marry one day in the state where my family
lives.
That day may come more quickly than we think, DJFG, thanks to the
bravery of elected officials in Iowa and Vermont. As for rewarding
Iowa and Vermont …
Like most Americans, I consume way more corn syrup than a person
should (that shit’s in everything), so Iowa is covered; but I will
make sure the next bottle of maple syrup I purchase is from Vermont
— but I’ll be pouring it on my pancakes, thanks, not my boyfriend.
Food is for after sex, people, not before, and never, ever during.
Food is not a sex toy, not even chocolate.
ATTENTION JOURNALISTS: The deadline for this year’s Sexies — the
Sex-Positive Journalism Awards — is approaching. The Sexies recognize
writers “who stick to high journalistic standards” while reporting
about sex “in a climate of repression and misinformation around
human sexuality.” More info at www.sexies.org.