blanc wrote:I can recall previous discussions on RI where the idea that consumption of porn can create an escalation to the even nastier kind has been assertively denied, yet this recent article in the Daily Mail seems to confirm that this is the case. I'm more concerned about the effect that this has on victims who end up serving these dopamine hungry pervs than their eventual impotence. For me, those who buy into sites selling images of the rape and/ or torture of minors are guilty of aiding and abetting those rapes, and sentencing should be commensurate with that, not the typical 3 years which has been dished out in the past.Those who host those sites are equally guilty I think. If we were talking about images of another kind of crime, lets imagine for a moment that film of blowing up buildings full of innocent people became a money spinner, a dopamine spiker, a source of vicarious pleasure for the disconnected sociopaths with minimal capacity for empathy, netting the crime industry and its bankers a goodly pile through contributions from viewers, would we have been as blasé as we are about the flood of images of child pornography? Say it were random murders which became the turn on - would our police find the time and resources to investigate, or would there be the string of excuses the victims of the porn industry have lived with for so long? Or rent a riot, sites dedicated to allowing the armchair beast to direct the destruction of someone's neighbourhood the way some sites allow the remote direction of infliction of pain on innocents. Would that be tolerated, shrugged off as a boys will be boys affair?
Okay. I'd like to try approaching this again, from a slightly different angle.
It troubles me to see the "consumption of porn" (first sentence) equated, without qualification or demur, with buying "images of the rape and/or torture of minors," which are produced by "the crime industry and its bankers" and then purchased by "disconnected sociopaths with minimal capacity for empathy."
And it does seem to me that they really are being equated here -- ie, being treated as one and the same thing -- in view of how closely the follow upon this much less ambiguous and concise statement of that view...
Its harmful to the consumer because its harmful in a particular kind of way to the victims of the 'industry'. I don't really have to spell this out do I?
...upon which they appear to be intended to expand.
And blanc -- if I'm wrong about that, please correct me. I mean, I'd still be troubled by it, pretty much equally, even if I were. As it happens. But since understanding what someone else is saying is a virtue in itself, I'd pretty much equally still want to know if I was in error. So let me know.
Here's why it troubles me:
Almost all men masturbate regularly starting in adolescence and for the whole rest of their adult lives. And that includes almost all gay men, straight men, men who hate women, men who love women, men who also regularly have sex with a long-term partner, and men who never have sex with any partner. Because it includes almost all healthy men. With the exception of men who have been so aggressively conditioned to fear and abhor the practice by religious indoctrination that the conditioning certainly amounts to a form of emotional abuse and arguably amounts to a form of sexual abuse.
Almost all men who masturbate regularly -- ie, almost all men -- sometimes use pornography as an aid to masturbation. And most of them regularly use it. I'm not totally happy with the figures I'm finding, since all of them were produced by the same far-right Christian groups with whom the basic talking points of the internet-porn-badness public awareness campaign originated. So they might not be wholly reliable. Howver, fwiw and until I have the time to come up with some better search terms, according to a survey in which I can't see any obvious flaw or bias, about seventy percent of male internet users avail themselves of online pornography at least once a month. Which strikes me as both reasonable and plausible, on a common-sense basis.
In short: Regular masturbation is nearly universal among men as is the occasional consumption of porn. Furthermore, the regular consumption of porn is very common. A very small percentage of those men become compulsive masturbators who are dependent on pornography for sexual arousal. That's problematic for them, and also for their partners and families, if they have any. I don't deny it.
However, a very small percentage of all men have been compulsive masturbators who were dependent on pornography since long before the internet. It's always been problematic for them, and also for their partners and families, if they have any. And there's never been any more evidence than there is now that frequent exposure to porn is what creates or otherwise causes the problem. Because there's an incalculably greater number of men who have been frequently exposed to porn without developing that or any other kind of sexual pathology than there are men who are pathologically sexually compulsive masturbators.
A very small percentage of all men also become vicious sexual predators, obviously. And equally obviously, there's never been and still isn't any evidence that vicious sexual predation is caused by freqent exposure to pornography. For the same reasons just stated.
In short: There's no evidence that porn consumption leads to real acts of sexual predation, and an enormous body of indirect evidence that indicates it doesn't. There is also no real correlation between sexual compulsion/addiction and sexual predation. The two groups sometimes overlap. But that's all.Turning to pornography itself: There's a lot of it everywhere, and even more of it on the internet. Prior to the internet, most of it was commercially produced in the San Fernando Valley and a few other places by adults and with adult performers, a large number of whom came from abusive backgrounds (including but not limited to sexually abusive backgrounds) and a significant number of whom were exploited and abused by people who directly profited from keeping them personally and emotionally subjugated to themselves. And also, quite freqently, drug addicted. HIV infections were very widespread among professionial porno actors for a while there, too. Moreover, professional commercial porn production in the United States is and long has been a mob-controlled business.
In short: Serious human rights abuses for which there should be zero tolerance were endemic in the commercial porn industry before the internet and they still are. However, rape and torture are not comprehensively representative of those abuses. Nor are they exemplary instances of it in any conventional sense of the words "rape" and "torture" when broadly applied to the commercial porn industry, which is dependent on going out of its way not to use underage performers for its continued existence, cf -- Tracy Lords.Furthermore, in view of how lucrative it is, there's little (if any) reason to think that criminalizing pornography rather than criminalizing criminal abuses would be an effective means of reducing the latter. And, if the lessons of history are granted to have any validity, there's every reason to think that it would increase them. Prohibition. Et cetera.
Let it be noted that there's also an enormous amount of non-commercially produced porn on the internet to which none of what I just said is applicable. As a matter of fact, there are whole genres of it -- eg, alt-porn, amateur porn, etcetera -- each of which lends itself to its own characteristic form of endemic abuses, all of which need to be and should be addressed on the real terms of their existence, imo. Because there's really no other effective way to address them.
And...I guess that for reasons of length, I'm just going to leave that at so-noted status and move on.
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blanc --
If all pornography was child pornography, everything you say would be fully justified. But it's not.
Moreover, the overwhelming majority of the porn consumers whom you're describing as criminally perverted sociopaths, engaged in an ever-escalating quest to slake the insatiable appetite for ever-nastier forms of sex are in fact men engaged in having male sexuality as it naturally occurs for most of them.
You can see how that easily might be stigmatizing to the point of harm, can't you? Because I can. In fact, I can see how it might be among the factors that make (just for example) any attempt by women to explain to men what it feels like to live in a rape culture such an insanely charged and futile exercise. Now that I come to think of it.
Anyway. That troubles me. No fault, blame or even responsibility for anything bad attaches to you at all in connection with it, as far as I'm concerned. In fact, in my view, everything you say is important to say, assuming a small contextual adjustment that it's not very difficult to make. So I'm not calling you out for it in any way.
However, since the people who are most likely to be stigmatized by something are (by definition) the least likely to be capable of making the small contextual adjustments that would protect them from it, I am calling it to your attention.