// Trying to persuade someone to commit a crime, currently stands as incitement. Even though- we know- you literally cannot make someone commit a crime against their will.
This is getting boring.//
OK. I'm repeating what I've said over and over because, every time I say it, you seem to argue against something that I didn't say. Why does it matter, for example, that you cannot literally make somebody do something that is against their will? Incitement is about persuading people think that it *is* their will, and is in their interests, to do something criminal; not about making them act against their will. Even if you remove the "inciter", it should be clear that there are plenty of examples when people have acted in a way that is in fact against their best interests, and the best interests of others, presumably because they either thought the opposite or because they weren't thinking at all. It also shouldn't be difficult to realise that, if therefore people are capable of acting irrationally, even when sane, then it is possible for others to exploit that.