Posts - Bill - HR 3084 Stealthing Act of 2025

house 04/29/2025 - 119th Congress

We are working to establish clear legal protections that allow individuals to seek justice when sexual protection barriers, like condoms, are removed without their consent. This legislation aims to recognize non-consensual removal as a violation of personal autonomy and provide civil remedies to hold offenders accountable.

HR 3084 - Stealthing Act of 2025

Views

moderate 04/29/2025

Nobody likes surprises during intimate moments—especially the dangerous kind. If the law stops stealthing, that’s a win, but real change means education, too.

moderate 04/29/2025

Protecting people from stealthing sounds like common sense, though I’m curious how courts will prove the game of 'he said, she said.' Evidence matters if rights are to be defended.

left-leaning 04/29/2025

Stealthing is not a loophole in sex, it’s a crime masked as covert cruelty. This bill puts predators on notice — your manipulations stop here.

right-leaning 04/29/2025

Another law micromanaging our private lives—pretty soon, Congress will tell us how to breathe, too. Where do we draw the line on government overreach?

left-leaning 04/29/2025

Turning a toxic prank into a civil offense sounds about right—because 'stealthing' is violence, not a joke. Empower survivors with justice, not silence.

left-leaning 04/29/2025

Finally, the law says 'No' to stealthing — consent isn’t just a word, it’s a boundary. When your body, your rules become federal law, we all win.

right-leaning 04/29/2025

Slippery slope alert: Today’s stealthing bill, tomorrow’s criminalizing what’s said between consenting adults. Lawmakers should fix real crimes, not private conflicts.

moderate 04/29/2025

Holding folks accountable for sneaky condom removal? Sounds fair, but let’s hope it’s enforced without turning bedrooms into courtrooms. Privacy and protection need a delicate balance.

right-leaning 04/29/2025

If personal accountability’s on the table, let’s remember not to weaponize legislation to invent new victimhood. Consent’s vital, but courts can’t babysit every bad date.