Hmm - beyond you rather tedious and rants claims that I'm not a professor you do seem to focus on two matters in your attacks on me.
Firstly that don't base my conclusions on evidence.
Secondly that I cannot be a professor because I keep getting stuff wrong.
Yet, hypocritically you never actually provide evidence to support your claim that I keep getting things wrong. All we ever get is unevidenced assertion. Now in the context of being a professor the 'getting things wrong' stuff would need to apply to my areas of expertise.
So over to you VG - let's have all these examples where I have 'got stuff wrong' in the discussion of the ethical and legal aspects of valid consent (one of my areas of professional expertise). And remember that having an opinion that you don't like isn't 'getting it wrong'. Let's have the VG - all those examples where I have been factually wrong in the points I've made about the ethical and legal aspects of valid consent.
I could point out a numbers of examples where you have made rookie errors, clearly getting stuff wrong on valid consent. But you are an armchair googler on the matter, you have no professional expertise so that's to be expected. But in you mind you and I are somehow equivalent in terms of our understanding, knowledge and professional experience of the topic.
I am sure I have made errors all over this forum. I'm here to learn, not to try to present myself as an expert and an authority on anything. I have learned an incredible amount about Islam just by being part of this forum.
Examples of where you were wrong, just on this thread alone:
You were wrong to conclude that it was clear there was no consent based on limited information in a Bible story for multiple reasons.
You were wrong to try to argue that your field of expertise is ethics around consent so your opinion on the matter carries any more weight than anyone else's, and then introduce a line from CPS guidance that I could not even find in the link, and which might have been taken out of context, to support your argument. Given you could not back it up with any examples of actual court cases with similar evidence, where a jury decided consent was absent.
It's a stupid argument to try to shoehorn consent as a legal term into a Bible story about a supernatural being. Try bringing a case against a supernatural being and you may find that legal experts will tell you that the law only applies to human beings.
It is not a story about sexual acts, nor is it a story about acts taking place between 2 people, so legal concepts that govern consent to sexual relationships between people are irrelevant to a story with a supernatural being in it.
Even if you are trying to argue that legal rules about consent can be applied to supernatural entities, the Bible story was not written for the purposes of demonstrating the existence of consent so concluding there was no consent from the lack of detail about consent in the story is illogical.
The story is hearsay and we have no idea if it is authentic.
There is no evidence to determine Mary's age. So you can't argue that she was a minor for the time period in which she supposedly lived.
If you are arguing that the consent is not in relation to a sexual act but is consent to pregnancy without sex ie a medical procedure, there is not sufficient evidence in the story to conclude that Mary could not have refused to go along with God's plan of pregnancy. Calling herself a servant of God is not sufficient evidence to conclude that she was coerced. Submission to God is a voluntary act based on belief and can be revoked at every decision a theist makes. If parental input into a child's decision to be circumcised does not automatically invalidate the child's informed consent to circumcision, then it can be argued that someone calling themselves a servant of someone or something does not automatically invalidate their consent if there it is not proved that the someone or something had undue influence or coerced them.
If you are arguing that the word "will" is proof that Mary had no choice - again it's not possible to conclude that given the different possible interpretations of the word "will" in the context of the story, and that Mary had said "Let it happen", which could be interpreted as Mary agreeing or consenting to God's plan.
So it is not possible based simply on the words of the text to prove that consent was given or not given as the text is ambiguous.