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THE CASE AGAINST PORN

Name: Anonymous 2006-09-08 23:21

I quote from an excellent article on http://www.erasethedark.com/ourcase.html

"Every hour in America, sixteen women will encounter a rapist.  Since 1960, rape has risen 500%, and it is reported once every forty-six seconds.  One in eight women will be raped at least once.  Comparatively, in a study of convicted rapists, 86% of the rapists admitted to routine use of pornography, while 57% said that they would actually mimic specific pornographic scenes while raping a woman.

Pornography has grown into a thirteen billion dollar a year industry, and it exceeds the combined revenues of America’s foremost sport franchises--baseball, basketball, and football.

The dual proliferation of pornography and rates of rape in America are not coincidental.  Pornography, rape, and other acts of injustice directly coincide; it is time for the dark perception in society that says pornography is a victimless crime and harmless freedom to be erased."

Go to http://www.erasethedark.com/ and learn about the dangers of pornography to women.  Thankfully, there are great women out there winning battles for women, such as the recent ban on violent pornography in the United Kingdom (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/berkshire/5297600.stm).

Pornography is vile and disgusting, degrades women, and further legal attention may be needed for women.  The notion that it is simply a 'victimless crime' or a 'harmless freedom' is a dangerous one.  Pornography is harmful to women and women's rights.  Women have the right to live free of the fear of being raped, and free of being regarded as mere sex objects. 

Pornography firmly entrenches in people's minds the notion that women are mere sex objects or hunks of meat.  If we are to have a future in which the sexes are truly equal and a future in which women are respected, pornography must go.

Name: Anonymous 2006-09-09 1:12

>>28
"violent video games dont create teenage murderes, even though those kids might have playd said games before participating in criminal activity."

Yet another classic example.  Experiances in environments shape the way a person will turn out.  Playing excessively violent video games might make one become a violent person.  Watching violent pornography can make one view women with disrespect, and causes some people to commit rape.  Having a culture that glorifies and proliferates guns leads to gun violence. 

Obviously, we have a very volatile mixture here.  When combined, we can see the formulation of our modern violence epidemic.  It is necessary to sacrifice some of our freedoms to keep women safe.  Again, if it saves just one woman, wouldn't it be worth it? Obviously you must compromise some freedom for the sake of safety. 

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