this post was submitted on 21 Apr 2026
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Exactly.
The most relevant data I can provide is the mean age of motherhood: the age of a woman when she has her first child.
The lowest age I can find was in the 1970s. It was probably lower in earlier decades, but the available data doesn't support it. In the 1970's, the mean age of motherhood was only 20.2 years.
**The average age of first conception was 19.5 years. The average woman was 6 months pregnant on her 20th birthday. More women were pregnant in their teens than not. **
That is a quantifiable statistic, and it is a bleak one. Fortunately, the mean age of motherhood has risen to 27.5 years, and is climbing rapidly.
The data in question is not quantifiable. From what was posted, we can determine the relative difference in the ages of rapists and their victims, but we cannot determine their actual ages. We don't know from this data if the ages in the typical case of 10-years difference were 19 and 29, or 9 and 19. From this questionable data, We can't even determine the prevalence. This data might be based on 6 cases, 60 cases, or 60 million cases. We cannot determine the scale of the problem from this data.
The rapidly rising age of motherhood tells me that however "bleak" the problem was when this data was compiled, the current scale of the problem is considerably less "bleak". That doesn't mean the problem has been solved, but it is certainly trending away from the problem and not toward it.