COMMENTS: 389
Is Pornography Really Harmful?
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That's the theme running through Jensen's book, which AlterNet excerpted in late September. The excerpt, viewable here, stirred a fiery debate among readers, with dozens of commenters defending pornography as a healthy form of sexual expression and dozens more condemning it as dangerous. For all the discussion, a lot of questions remain: Can men who view violent pornography separate fantasy from reality? Do men who are aroused by this type of porn want to hurt women? What influence does porn have on the people who view it? Under what conditions can it be healthy? Harmful?
In a quest to better understand these issues, AlterNet decided to ask some experts. Below, clinical psychologists Michael Bader and Vivian Dent go head-to-head on pornography and why people watch it.
But first, a refresher from Jensen's book:
Although few admit it, lots of people are afraid of pornography. The liberal/libertarian supporters who celebrate pornography are afraid to look honestly at what it says about our culture. The conservative opponents are afraid that pornography undermines their attempts to keep sex boxed into narrow categories.
Feminist critics are afraid, too -- but for different reasons. Feminists are afraid because of what they see in the mirror, because of what pornography tells us about the world in which we live. That fear is justified. It's a sensible fear that leads many to want to change the culture.
Pornography has become normalized, mainstreamed. ... As a New York Times story put it, "Pornography isn't just for dirty old men anymore." Well, it never really was just for dirty men, or old men, or dirty old men. But now that fact is out in the open. That same story quotes a magazine writer who also has written a pornography script: "People just take porn in stride these days. There's nothing dangerous about sex anymore." The editorial director of Playboy, who says that his company has "an emphasis on party," tells potential advertisers: "We're in the mainstream."
There never was anything dangerous about sex, of course. The danger isn't in sex, but in a particular conception of sex in patriarchy. And the way sex is done in pornography is becoming more and more cruel and degrading, at the same time that pornography is becoming more normalized than ever. That's the paradox.
The paradox of pornography
First, imagine what we could call the cruelty line -- the measure of the level of overt cruelty toward, and degradation of, women in contemporary mass-marketed pornography. That line is heading up, sharply.
Second, imagine the normalization line -- the measure of the acceptance of pornography in the mainstream of contemporary culture. That line also is on the way up, equally sharply.
If pornography is increasingly cruel and degrading, why is it increasingly commonplace instead of more marginalized? In a society that purports to be civilized, wouldn't we expect most people to reject sexual material that becomes evermore dismissive of the humanity of women? How do we explain the simultaneous appearance of more, and increasingly more intense, ways to humiliate women sexually and the rising popularity of the films that present those activities?
As is often the case, this paradox can be resolved by recognizing that one of the assumptions is wrong. Here, it's the assumption that U.S. society routinely rejects cruelty and degradation. In fact, the United States is a nation that has no serious objection to cruelty and degradation. Think of the way we accept the use of brutal weapons in war that kill civilians, or the way we accept the death penalty, or the way we accept crushing economic inequality. There is no paradox in the steady mainstreaming of an intensely cruel pornography. This is a culture with a well-developed legal regime that generally protects individuals' rights and freedoms, and yet it also is a strikingly cruel culture in the way it accepts brutality and inequality.
The pornographers are not a deviation from the norm. Their presence in the mainstream shouldn't be surprising, because they represent mainstream values: The logic of domination and subordination that is central to patriarchy, hyperpatriotic nationalism, white supremacy and a predatory corporate capitalism.Standing Up for Sexual Fantasy
By Michael Bader, DMH
Porn is not harmless. But neither is it an important cause of sexual violence or misogyny. Partisans on both sides of this debate have littered their arguments with distortions, hyperbole and cheap rhetorical tricks. We have to wade through a lot of bullshit to get to the truth.
When representatives of the media conglomerates that produce $10 billion of porn each year come out and talk about the "free choice" of the women starring in their videos and the harmless "entertainment value" provided to male consumers, they're making a silk purse out of a sow's ear. The actors in these films are degraded, underpaid and used up by an industry with the morals of a slaughterhouse, despite what Jenna Jameson and Nina Hartley say. The women come into the industry with the self-esteem of earthworms, histories of physical and sexual abuse, and are often plunged into alcohol and drug abuse as a way of coping with their jobs. When the apologists from the porn industry point to the "voluntary" nature of this work, they are using a legal technicality as a fig leaf to cover up the normative pathology and exploitation in this industry.
Furthermore, with the near-universal availability of porn, there are now thousands -- perhaps tens of thousands -- of men who have become addicted to it. Spending between 10 and 50 hours/week glued to their computer or TV screens looking at porn, talking dirty in chat rooms, seeking out greater and greater taboos to violate, these particular men are being victimized, their relationships betrayed, and their families and friends cheated of their presence. Such men were likely never really connected to others in healthy ways before the advent of porn, of course, nor can it be convincingly argued that the absence of this outlet would make them so, but like any addict, their compulsion makes any other options impossible, including that of getting psychotherapeutic help. The presence of a casino doesn't cause the tragedies that sometime result, but neither are casino operators morally innocent.
So much for harmless porn.
On the other hand, it is amazing to me how literal and concrete is the thinking of anti-porn advocates like Jensen who watch a porno, note its sordid and dehumanizing story line, and then assume that the man masturbating to it must really hate women and secretly want to dominate and devalue them. The shock value of the story line (to the extent there is one) is intended to carry the weight of an argument that is basically superficial. After all, if some guy gets off on watching 10 men ejaculate on a woman's face -- while she begs for more -- he must be either a misogynist watching his wishes come true or one in the making.
Except that he's not. I've treated dozens of guys who might get aroused by such scenarios who don't hate women at all. They have decent and loving relationships with women. And most important, they are able to distinguish between a fantasy and reality, something that Jensen seems both unwilling and unable to do.
What turns them on in porn scenarios depends crucially on the fact that the woman is depicted as excited. If she were depicted as primarily hurt and humiliated, these men would instantly lose their interest and erections. If there is one nearly universal common denominator in heterosexual porn it is that the women in it are generally portrayed as easily, constantly and powerfully sexually aroused, driven wild by whatever men want to do with and to them. For most men, this fact is crucial to their arousal, not because they're looking for a rationalization for their violent impulses but because they are guilty about feeling strong, selfish and masculine; feel overly responsible for and worried about women; and secretly believe that women are unhappy and relentlessly dissatisfied with men and their own lives. In the service of masturbation, these portrayals of "women in heat" momentarily reassure men against their fears, relieve their burdens and offer them a freedom they find lacking in relationships with real women. The sexual fantasies expressed in pornography, as well as those of their own private invention, are arousing to men not because women are being hurt but because they're not.
Pornography is the visual enactment of a sexual fantasy. That's fantasy -- to be distinguished from reality. That's fantasy -- to be distinguished from an intention, wish or even attitude. A fantasy occurs in the imagination. The imagination is creative, capable of all sorts of tricks and distortions. Recently, for example, I had a daydream -- a fantasy -- that my brother had suddenly died. In the daydream, lots of people came to console me in my grief. Now, in reality I love my brother and don't have a shred of resentment toward him. What I did have at the time was a need for a certain kind of love and attention. The meaning of my daydream was not "you wish your brother was dead." The real meaning of my daydream was, "You're so guilty about wanting attention that you think the only way you can get it is if you suffer a terrible tragedy." The meaning of a fantasy is often the opposite of its plot; whatever the meaning, it's subjective and can't easily be inferred from its story line.
Over the last 10 years I've studied sexual fantasies. I've discovered that they have a fascinating but secret logic. Imagine this scenario: A guy grows up in a family in which he feels responsible for and guilty toward his mother, who he sees as unhappy and weak. He develops an implicit or default view of women as unhappy and weak like his mother. Unfortunately, it's difficult for him -- for anyone in this situation, for that matter -- to get really excited by a woman if he experiences her as unhappy and weak. That's just the way our minds work. We can't get maximally aroused if we're worried, guilty and responsible. Fortunately, our imaginations come to our rescue, and we construct some type of fantasy or preference in which this barrier is momentarily overcome. For example, this guy in question might be attracted to strong, dominant or tough women because their energy reassures him that he can't hurt them and doesn't have to feel responsible for them. Or he might like to be on the bottom during sex or even lightly restrained for the same reason. It's easy to see in these cases that if the scenario -- really, just another type of fantasy -- involves a strong and excited woman, his unconscious worries about women are temporarily negated and he can get aroused.
Lots of porn features strong women -- picture the dominatrix -- and the male viewer gets aroused for precisely this reason. But many other types of porn address these same issues but in a different way. For example, often the woman is portrayed as dominated, hurt or even degraded, but in the porno she's excited and eager. Men are doing these bad-looking things, but the women are enjoying them. Our psyches are amazing things, really. They interpret the depiction of a woman's arousal as signifying her health and happiness! And thus you find in almost all porn that women appear aroused. Their arousal subliminally says to the male viewer, "I'm not hurt ... I'm even happy!" In fact, were these male viewers confronted with a woman's real pain and fear, they would immediately extinguish their excitement. In other words, they know the difference between fantasy and reality. They don't primarily want to hurt woman. What they really want is to be strong, selfish or masculine in ways that excite women, not degrade them. Porn provides them with imaginary scenarios in which this wish is safely gratified.
This fact accounts for the absence of any reliable, repeatable studies that prove that exposure to pornography increases the likelihood that the men consuming it will act badly toward women. Among the reasons for this robust finding (or lack thereof) is that the men who were studied intuitively knew the difference between fantasy and reality, between the women on the screen and their girlfriends or wives. Add to this the fact that men, themselves, often don't understand what they're feeling or why, and you have a good understanding of why porn researchers who interview men to explore the effects of porn on male attitudes cannot come up with any convincing evidence that it poses a danger.
Now, Jensen is correct when he points out that there is a growing species of porn that is explicitly violent and that appears more extreme in its treatment of the women appearing in it. Know as gonzo or extreme porn, it features such things as gagging, double anal penetration, gangbangs, bukkake (in which a group of men masturbate on a woman), and face slapping. Again, despite their irrationality, the scripts almost always call for the woman to get aroused by and seek out such abuse behavior. One might fairly say that it's a sad commentary on the state of our culture and that of the male psyche that such depictions sell so well. But the reason that the commentary is so sad isn't because it reflects what men want to do to women. It's sad because men in our culture are so disconnected from themselves and women, and often feel so helpless in their efforts to make women happy, that they require these kinds of fantasies to get aroused, to masturbate, fantasies that temporarily reassure them that they're connected to women in the most selfish and aggressive way possible and that, in the end, the women are turned on and not hurt.
Now, there is a subtype of these pornos that feature -- that make explicit and central -- the woman's suffering, her fear, humiliation, helplessness or some combination thereof. Some men require the actual suffering of a woman to get turned on. Such men have almost always been victims themselves of frightening and traumatic abuse as children and develop such fear and hatred of women that the only safe way they can experience pleasure is through turning the tables on their "persecutors" and doing to women what they feel was once done to them. Out of this cauldron come rapists and other men who get sexually excited by the infliction of fear and pain on women. Were snuff films to actually exist, these would be their customers.
Jensen would have us believe that this category of men is huge and that its numbers are maintained and replenished by porn. I see no evidence of either of these assumptions. My research, clinical and otherwise, suggests that this type of man is rare -- dangerous, but rare. Second, there is no basis for claims that porn causes this type of sexual violence. All kinds of porn, including the gonzo variety, are found in various European countries, which have extremely low rates of sexual violence. Sexual violence has been seen in recent years in countries like Bosnia and Rwanda, where there is almost no porn. The fact that men can become sexually violent under extreme conditions is a fascinating and troubling fact, but I see no evidence that porn has ever been causally linked to such transformations. Instead, I think that other factors are much more important, including various types of deprivation, the creation of paranoid identity myths, messianic leaders and propaganda, economic competition, cultural scapegoating and ignorance. In the absence of evidence, to argue that such sexual violence, much less male violence in general (as Jensen suggests), is caused or even exacerbated by porn is simply to substitute our own fantasies for reality. Since men who watch porn don't make such a mistake, we shouldn't either.
Context, Please: Internet Porn and Sexual Degradation
By Vivian Dent
When I hear claims that "Porn's this" or "No, it's that," I often feel a similar incredulity as when Bush begins a sentence with, "The American people demand ..." Says who? When? Why?
What does it mean -- what can it possibly mean -- to discuss "pornography" or "men" or "women" or "sexuality" outside the environments where they exist? Porn today usually involves a solitary, online interaction between a man and sexual images. In this encapsulated world, porn's intensity builds steadily. More and more is available; it's accessible at any time for any length of time; and it portrays a wider and wider range of subjects, activities, and fantasies. I believe all of these changes have transformed what porn "is" and how it affects both men and women. And I'm concerned that we know far too little about the implications of these changes.
To introduce my ideas, I'll begin by listing some things about people, porn, sexuality, and the web that we might be able to agree on.
- People
- Men are very different one from another. So are women.
- People behave differently in different physical and emotional settings. When we feel secure, effective, loving, and lovable we have a different range than we do when we feel worthless, terrified, miserable, enraged, or hopeless.
- A lot of men use porn just to get off. It has a minimal, perhaps even beneficial, impact on the whole of their lives and relationships, including their sexual relationships.
- Some men get seriously addicted to porn, with all the damage and pain that severe addictions bring.
- Some men use porn as an inspiration for, or a weapon in, efforts to hurt or degrade real women, often enough their wives and girlfriends. [By the way, I know all this can apply to men with men, or to women with women for that matter, but I'll stick to heterosexual relationships for now and let others fill in the gaps.]
- Some women like porn. Some are indifferent to it. Some are disgusted, horrified, frightened, or humiliated by it.
- Some women really enjoy getting into the sexually edgy scenarios that porn can inspire.
- But some play along, wanting the relationship, or wanting to prove themselves strong enough, sexy enough, tough enough. A lot of these women end up feeling used, damaged, and degraded by their experiences.
- Under certain circumstances, which we think of as normal, men have sex with a willing partner.
- Sometimes both people come out of the encounter very, very satisfied.
- Sometimes one or both feel bad, even awful, before, during, or after -- even though the sex was consensual.
- Sometimes a man knows perfectly well that he's degrading or hurting his partner; and he gets off on that.
- Sometimes the damage is accidental, and he'd be horrified to know it happened.
- Under certain conditions, men have violent sex with unwilling partners.
- In wartime, men who would never have imagined themselves hurting a woman have become rapists.
- Sex lives at the intersection of love and aggression. Aggression infused into love and desire makes sex exciting. But violence and sadism can take over. Then sex becomes an expression of power, and part of its excitement is its capacity to dominate, humiliate, even destroy the other.
- The cultural switch that tips sexuality into violence can get thrown suddenly. Witness Rwanda, where lunatic broadcasts and a history of injustice turned citizens into mass murderers and rapists. Witness Abu Ghraib, where war, contempt, and an inexcusable lack of structure and training allowed young soldiers to become gleefully perverse torturers.
- The Web does not breed civility. People write things in emails they would never consider saying directly. Worse, under cover of anonymity, people insult, threaten, and genuinely menace other people's reputations and lives. Consider the posting of addresses of doctors who perform abortions, or the viciousness shown toward the parents of a teenage girl who snuck out with the family's Porsche, crashed, and died. Not everyone loses social sensitivity in the anonymity of the web. But it's a lot easier to let fly with ugly emotions online than in voice-to-voice or face-to-face encounters.
- Porn is available every instant of every day.
- It's inexhaustible; people are constantly posting new samples.
- It's lost its public context -- the long-outdated context of a movie theater, the more recent context of a store where you have to go in, show your face, and rent your videos. No one knows; no one sees. The only interaction is you, your mind, your body, a screen, and whatever you watch there.
- And, as it becomes more private, more and more porn is apparently becoming more degrading to the women involved.
Men and Porn
Women and Porn
Relationships and Sexuality
Sexuality without Relationship
Sexuality
The Internet
The Internet and Porn
So: increased degradation, decreased social influence, and increased amounts of time spent with only one's fantasies for company. I'm protesting any account of porn that refuses to take this context, very carefully, into account. In the accompanying article, Michael Bader talks about men in therapy who discover that their ostensible desire to see a woman in a gangbang has to do with their need to know that women can really enjoy men, masculinity, and sexuality. OK; I'll trust his clinical experience. But I think he's missing the point that these men aren't just watching pornography alone -- they're talking about it with their therapist, a man who sees them as good and loving and who's encouraging of their sexuality. That's a social context, and a strongly supportive one at that.
But I don't see that what Bader is saying necessarily applies to the legions of men who believe that the women they desire could never love or desire them, who feel demeaned, disrespected, alienated, and lost. A lot of men get angry when they feel like that; no surprise there. Does porn ever encourage any of these men to take their anger out on women? When, why, under what conditions? Again, I don't want to imply that I think those men are on their way to producing snuff flicks, or something equally absurd. I do want to say that the questions deserve real attention.
In the early 1970s, Zimbardo's famous prison experiment took a group of male undergraduates, screened them carefully for psychological stability, and then randomly assigned them the roles of prisoners or guards. The experiment was designed to last two weeks, but within six days, according to the Stanford Prison Experiment Web site, "The simulation became so real, and the guards became so abusive, that the experiment had to be shut down. ... Half the prisoners were released early due to severe emotional or cognitive reactions." None of the guards quit, however. And nothing in the extensive pre-experiment personality testing predicted which guards would become abusive. Zimbardo concluded, "Abusive guard behavior appears to have been triggered by features of the situation rather than by the personality of guards."
Bader claims that men watching pornography can reliably and consistently understand the difference between fantasy and reality. I have some doubts: People are not at their most grounded and realistic when it comes to sex. And, again, I believe context matters a lot, especially when cruel or degrading scenarios provoke intense excitement, both sexual and violent. On a concrete level, a lot of kids and some isolated guys do use porn as a kind of "how-to" manual for sexuality. Porn's getting more extreme could lead them into some very unfortunate blunders. Plus, there's a long and sorry history of men rationalizing the sexual abuse of women with the words, "She really wanted it;" "She was asking for it." Is there a risk, even if just for some men, even if just at some times, in reinforcing a fantasy that women really want to receive the cruelties some men imagine inflicting on them?
I also suspect there are psychological consequences to seeing repeated enactments of violent sexuality, of fantasies that until recently existed pretty much exclusively in our imaginations. Sex and violence share a slippery boundary. At Abu Ghraib, young soldiers' anger and fear became sexualized violence in very short order. How much do we really know about the tipping point where emotional pain turns to satisfy itself in sexual cruelty? Bader's right that "We can't get maximally aroused if we're worried, guilty and responsible," and that feeling confident of the other's pleasure offers one source of relief from these fears. But he neglects the fact that denying the humanity of the other can stifle guilt just as effectively -- at least for some people, at least in some circumstances, at least some of the time.
We've created a brave new world where porn is constantly available in steadily more intense forms, with few or no social controls limiting access. Whatever the truth about pornography 20 years ago -- and we don't seem to know much for sure -- "the situation," as Zimbardo puts it, has changed. And I think we need to pay attention.
Michael's Rebuttal to Vivian
Vivian speculates that there are conditions under which porn might trigger an increase in male sexual violence. These conditions include the privacy of the Internet, the increased availability of extremely degrading porn, and social conditions like Abu Ghraib and Zimbardo's prison experiment. Porn is getting worse and more ubiquitous and this is apparently provoking or reinforcing harmful male sexual behavior.
Unfortunately, there's simply no evidence for this claim. At the same time the availability and alleged misogyny of porn is increasing, the incidence of sexual violence is decreasing. Societies with more porn and Internet usage than ours have much lower rates of sexual violence. And, again, despite how extensively it has been studied, there is no research that shows that exposure to porn increases the aggressiveness or sexism of a man's interaction with women in his everyday life.
Now, I would agree with Vivian that a fair number of men -- and women, for that matter -- feel hostility toward each other. And some of them -- both sexes -- act this out in the bedroom. They might criticize each other's performance or attractiveness. A man might unconsciously but intentionally refuse to "read" his partner's cues about what she wants or enjoys, or he might detach the moment after he is satisfied. A woman might be consistently critical of a man's ability to satisfy her, or make him feel bad for wanting sex too often. In these cases, the hostility of one partner hurts the other one.
But the fact that people can hurt each other in their myriad transactions around sex, while tragic, doesn't bear on this debate at all. My primary point was not that men don't ever feel hostility toward women but that the fact that they get aroused by porn isn't evidence of it. Men don't have a primary wish to see or participate in a gangbang at all -- in fact, doing so would horrify them. They desire pleasure and connection, like all of us do, but the conditions under which they can safely experience this involve somehow counteracting their worry and guilt about women, a condition that is satisfied in these imaginary porn scenarios. My point was that you cannot infer, as Jensen does, that a porn script reflects what the male viewer actually wants to do to women. The unconscious mind makes use of the porn script in ways that an outside social observer can't possible divine.
In a sense, this brings me to another point of agreement with Vivian. It isn't clear at all what the causes or effects are of the growing incidence of rougher and more extreme scenarios in porn today. Is the essential psychology of porn the same but merely taking more dramatic forms or is this trend something qualitatively new? There does seem to be a tendency in our sexual imaginations to seek out deeper and deeper taboos to challenge or violate, provided it's safe to do so. I see no evidence that such potential for escalation in a world of fantasy poses a threat to women in the real world, but I'd be foolish to deny that it could do so in the future in ways unknown to us now. And I have been impressed with the ways that the anonymity and ubiquity of Internet sex invites certain men to retreat from social and family life. The content of porn is less important here than the private ways that it is constantly available. Perhaps, in the end, the problem lies with a society in which men are disconnected and unable to find comfort in ways other than masturbation.
Vivian's Rebuttal to Michael
When Michael Bader describes sexual cruelties in his response to my article, he moves directly from criminal assaults to the petty cruelties of everyday life. He skips over the area where porn concerns me most deeply -- its potential to encourage the dehumanizing of women in consensual, or quasi-consensual, sexual encounters. We know that boyfriends, ex-boyfriends, and men that women had thought or wished were boyfriends are posting explicit content without the woman's consent. What else is going on in or because of our new online world that hurts women, diminishes their agency, transforms their sexual pleasure into fodder for their humiliation?
Porn doesn't just provide relief from inhibiting fantasy; it serves up inspiration for sexual games. A lot of people, men and women, enact scenarios derived from porn. A lot of people also push the limits of their sexual experiences. Depictions of violence or degradation -- particularly when the woman seems to be loving it -- encourage the fantasy, in men and women so inclined, that the games can get meaner without damage being done. A "real" woman would feel excited, not humiliated, frightened or hurt. And having porn so constantly and immediately available makes the gap between wish and action that much narrower. I'm not talking mutually enjoyable kinkiness here; I'm talking about situations where porn can nudge a man toward taking his pleasure at a woman's expense, whether in ignorance or with full intent.
Michael's argument rests heavily on a lack of conclusive evidence linking pornography with mistreatment of women. Yet in studies of groups, individual differences easily cancel each other out. According to a recent New York article, we can't even prove that exercise promotes weight loss. It seems that a fair number of people work out, get hungrier, and eat more, gaining weight in the process. This finding doesn't negate the experience of all those folks who got more active and dropped a few pounds, however. They're built differently -- or they're living in contexts that successfully encourage their efforts.
Perversity -- by which I mean getting aroused by degrading or dehumanizing another person -- exists. Sadism -- sexual sadism -- exists. People make tragic and terrible sexual mistakes. (Read On Chesil Beach if you have any doubts.) Michael's experience, as a clinician and I assume as a man, has led him to appreciate how greatly a man's love and desire for a woman can be underappreciated. Mine, as a fellow clinician and as a woman, has led me to recognize how very badly things can go wrong, and how devastating it can be when they do.
I'm sure that Michael and I agree that none of us is born taking pleasure in another's pain and degradation. Yet in certain contexts, people -- even people who under different circumstances are loving and concerned -- get very excited in just this way. I believe that the current solitary, nonstop, and increasingly vicious realm of pornography can foster just this kind of excitement. And so I believe we owe it to ourselves, as men, women and a society, to take it seriously.
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Posted by: hurricane hugo on Nov 7, 2007 12:39 AM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
plur
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Posted by: matti on Nov 7, 2007 1:09 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Before the -I'm certain- giant debate begins on this topic, I would just like to quickly point out what may-well-be a mortal flaw in your "debate" construct, namely:
The number of rebuttals is not equal, AND the rebuttals are formulated in such a way as to give One Side the "Last Word"
Bader's Initial Statement is an Inititial Statement.
Dent's Initial Statement is a Rebuttal. (She reponds directly to Bader's Statement, whereas he is responding to the Alternet Article, Jensen's book, and His Own Experience)
This then, when each is given one official "Rebuttal", gives Dent, In Fact, TWO.
Also with the format chosen her second Rebuttal becomes, In Fact, THE LAST WORD.
While I believe the two participants in this "debate" where striving for fairness and compromise, within the constraints of their opinions and expertise, I think I am safe in predicting that the format chosen will muddy the "discussion" on this forum with -completely logical and reasonable - arguments for "prejudice" on the part of Alternet's Editors and the counter-arguments to these assertions.
I am of the opinion that what will likely follow could have, largely, been avoided, by presenting this debate in a more Equitable Format, such as:
1) An Initial Statement from both Participants, unaware of the others Position, and based merely on their experience and observations, Jensen's Book, and the Previous "AlterArticle".
2) One or more Rebuttals from each Participant to the other's Initial Statement and/or subsequent Rebuttals, limited only by Allowable Length of the Article.
3) A Concluding Statement from both Participants, like the Initial, composed with No Knowledge of the exact Substance of the other's Work. Preventing a "Trial" situation where the Defense's "Closing Argument" is In Fact a LAST WORD REBUTTAL.
For the benefit of the (I hope) many (but I suspect few) who still actually read Internets Argumenting Posts in their Entirety:
I would like to conclude by saying that It is my Sincere Hope that my criticism of Format Details will in no way deter Alternet from continuing to pursue this Format Generally.
I think that Intelligent Debate between Informed People can be an effective way for the uninformed to be introduced to a subject as long as the uninformed retain confidence in the guidance of their own Hearts and Natural Senses, and that essential Human Skepticism that compliments this confidence.
Whatever the backlash, I Strongly Encourage Alternet to embrace a "debate" Format for future articles on this subject and the More Immediate and Substantive ones that sometimes pop-up on these pages.
With the caveat that future "debates" are more Equitable -along the lines of what I've outlined- and therefore capable of casting of their quotation mark "crutches" and becoming True Debates.
Winter is coming, try to embrace its Importance.
-matti
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Posted by: Frankstank on Nov 7, 2007 2:05 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
1) All religions divide people: between saints and sinners, good and bad, evil and good. Porn unites people: it is an open door that allows most people (and by this I don't mean people who do obviously bad things like harm others, or force them to do things against their will), to find their kink.
2) For every feminist writer who argues porn exploits women, I say this: no more than any business exploits women who are their staff. In fact, most women in porn are paid better than your average maid or banana picker out there.
3) Pornumanity: porn is a world where fat and black is good, where fat, black women get off with skinny, white hunks, where nerdy, old guys get off with honeys in their 20s. Where being old is called mature, and women who were once written off as washed up are called MILFS.
4) Pornstory: porn is the most dynamic narrative of our times out there. Its stories and fetishes reflect our communal prejudices, insecurities, fears, loves, fantasies: If Shakespeare were alive today, I am pretty sure he would have worked in porn for a period of time. He would have loved its possibilities.
5) Pornoptimism: porn is always there for you when life lets you down. Most friends are not in this bruttal world. Porn does not judge you.
6) PornUN: porn crosses borders at a furious pace. It finds beauty and commonality in all races and ethnicities. It sees a common bond between people that even transcends what the UN does. In a world where nation states and narrow-minded people stoke distrust of the 'other', porn steps in to show us we are all the same.
7) Economy: porn is a HUGE industry and already outstrips Hollywood. Overlooked, however, is how much it contributes to broader wealth creation. Throughout history the sex economy has fueled the mainstream economy. Most of London's beautiful buildings were built on the profits of brothals. In the developing world, many a poor young woman has funded an education and business from it. Without porn and the sex industry, few economies would function.
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» RE: Porn is the most progressive force for humanity today
Posted by: richholland
» I agree fully with you
Posted by: Frankstank
» OK, so what does "forced" mean?
Posted by: hagwind
» Utterly fruitless line of argument
Posted by: Frankstank
» RE: Utterly fruitless line of argument
Posted by: hagwind
» What exactly are you advocating?
Posted by: war_on_tara
» RE: What exactly are you advocating?
Posted by: hagwind
» RE: What exactly are you advocating?
Posted by: daniel1982
» RE: OK, so what does "forced" mean?
Posted by: screwjack2000
» RE: If it feels good do it, has just gone too far
Posted by: mindportal1
» Come on. Porn ADDICTION is a problem...
Posted by: war_on_tara
» RE: Come on. Porn ADDICTION is a problem...
Posted by: screwjack2000
» Welcome to Queen Victoria's AlterNet
Posted by: war_on_tara
» RE: Porn is the most progressive force for humanity WISE UP
Posted by: Squarehead
» RE: Porn is For Profit, and For Profit is Always Abusive
Posted by: edgar_michel
» Interesting question...
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: Interesting question...
Posted by: goldmarx
» RE: Interesting question...
Posted by: edgar_michel
» RE: Interesting question...
Posted by: edgar_michel
» RE: Interesting question...
Posted by: goldmarx
» RE: Interesting question...
Posted by: planet doomed
» RE: Porn is For Profit, and For Profit is Always Abusive
Posted by: jpjmarti
» RE: Porn is the most progressive force for humanity today
Posted by: planet doomed
» RE: Porn is the most progressive force for humanity today
Posted by: planet doomed
» RE: Porn is the most progressive force for humanity today
Posted by: YogiBear
» RE: Porn is the most progressive force for objectifying women today
Posted by: planet doomed
» Hear no evil
Posted by: YogiBear
Comments are closed-
Posted by: True2Blue on Nov 7, 2007 3:51 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's very simple. Show some evidence, not just opinion or speculation, that the vast majority of porn has changed over the years (other than better production quality).
You don't have any. So these "debates" are pointless.
Seriously, if Alternet continues to run articles like this as it's lead, I'm going to drop it as my Home Page.
Sheesh.
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» RE: This is getting painful.
Posted by: just john
» Yep.. people who hate porn keep saying it...
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: Yep.. people who hate porn keep saying it...
Posted by: planet doomed
» WOMAN-HATER!
Posted by: Q30
» alright.. as rabid as some folks are on here...
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: WOMAN-HATER!
Posted by: screwjack2000
» Heh, glad someone has a sense of humor
Posted by: Q30
» RE: Heh, glad someone has a sense of humor
Posted by: True2Blue
» RE: WOMAN-HATER!
Posted by: LMNOP
» You assumed wrong.
Posted by: Cathyblj
» RE: You assumed wrong.
Posted by: Q30
» RE: You assumed wrong.
Posted by: planet doomed
» RE: You assumed wrong.
Posted by: planet doomed
» RE: You assumed wrong...Nice to know
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: You assumed wrong...Nice to know
Posted by: planet doomed
» RE: You assumed wrong...Nice to know
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» Dear Q30
Posted by: gellero
» RE: WOMAN-HATER!
Posted by: Xynyx
» RE: WOMAN-HATER!
Posted by: Landbaron
» RE: This is getting painful.
Posted by: planet doomed
» RE: This is getting painful.
Posted by: True2Blue
» I looked at your "proof"
Posted by: LMNOP
» BRILLIANT
Posted by: gellero
» OKOKOK
Posted by: gellero
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Reverend Bookburn on Nov 7, 2007 4:20 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Ted Bundy argument has been discredited for decades. Yes, a serial killer watched it, and maybe a psychopath could respond to films (as well as chocolate milk or walking in the park) as he did. But everyone I know who likes adult entertainment is never inspired for violence or any kind of negativity. For non-psychopaths or religious cultists, eroticism causes arousal and possibly new forms of harmless play.
Rev. Bookburn, Radio Volta, ReverendBookburn.com
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» WHY DO YOU HATE WOMEN?!?!?!
Posted by: Q30
» Your sarcasm is getting old.
Posted by: Cathyblj
» RE: This Is Getting To Be Like Reefer Madness
Posted by: clvngodess
» RE: This Is Getting To Be Like Reefer Madness
Posted by: screwjack2000
Comments are closed-
Posted by: just john on Nov 7, 2007 4:41 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I mean, we haven't gotten to the first paragraph and already somebody's equated all porn with "the intersection of violence and sexual fantasy."
And I don't think it's the credited authors themselves doing this.
So could you please name the headline/blurb writer? THAT's the person I want to yell at.
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» (And who has time to proofread when there's outrage to be expressed??)
Posted by: just john
» Traditionally in newspapers & magazines, an editor does that
Posted by: war_on_tara
» RE: Traditionally in newspapers & magazines, an editor does that
Posted by: just john
» RE: Traditionally in newspapers & magazines, an editor does that
Posted by: Joshua Holland
» RE: Traditionally in newspapers & magazines, an editor does that
Posted by: just john
Comments are closed-
Posted by: PJT on Nov 7, 2007 5:05 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
» In your perfect future world ...
Posted by: just john
» Huh?
Posted by: hagwind
» RE: Huh?
Posted by: just john
» RE: Huh?
Posted by: hagwind
» RE: Huh?
Posted by: just john
» RE: Huh?
Posted by: screwjack2000
» RE: Huh?
Posted by: just john
» RE: Huh?
Posted by: John Sawyer
» RE: Huh?
Posted by: LMNOP
» RE: Civilization?
Posted by: existen
» RE: Assumptions
Posted by: oregoncharles
» RE: Assumptions
Posted by: LMNOP
» RE: Assumptions - the answer is insecurity and jealousy
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: Civilization? Get rid of RELIGION
Posted by: TheNamelessCity
» RE: Civilization?
Posted by: Livemike
» RE: Civilization?
Posted by: J_Mo
» RE: Civilization?
Posted by: maktan1
Comments are closed-
Posted by: theomode on Nov 7, 2007 6:02 AM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
» RE: Narrow Book, Limited Discussion
Posted by: adam63
Comments are closed-
Posted by: PJAW on Nov 7, 2007 6:05 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hey, I was just kidding. If you're a Republican Congressman, don't call me, I don't really have an erection.
Interesting article, by the way. I gained a couple of insights from both the participants in the discussion and didn't really see them as being in stark disagreement. But I liked the idea put forth by the poster who suggested a more traditional debate format for this type of discussion. Each party presents a view prior to seeing anything from the other, then gets a couple opportunites for response or rebuttal.
Now, for a really good time, call 657-229-5859. Ask for Christie.
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» RE: Can someone help me?
Posted by: LMNOP
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Q30 on Nov 7, 2007 6:08 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Me: Okay, how?
A: Pornography causes violence!
Me: Yeah, okay, how?
A: It causes violence!
Me: Yeah but... (long pause)... HOW?? How? How? Understand the question? How does it-
A: It causes violence!
Me: But you still haven't explained-
A: It causes violence!
Me: You're completely bonkers. You keep chanting that slogan, never bothering to prove-
A: How can you not take violence against women seriously?!!
Me: No, I take it seriously, but you never present any empirical proof that pornography causes-
A: WHY DO YOU HATE WOMEN!?!
Me: I don't. I-
A: MISOGYNIST!
Etc.
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» Me: Yawn. Straw men make lousy sparring partners.
Posted by: hagwind
» Then by all means...
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: Then by all means...
Posted by: planet doomed
» RE: Then by all means...
Posted by: planet doomed
» That's right, hagwind
Posted by: Q30
» Where the hell did I say that I think pornography causes violence?
Posted by: hagwind
» Thanks for the laugh, honey
Posted by: Q30
» Actually, Hagwind...
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: Actually, Hagwind...
Posted by: Q30
» While we're at it, Joshua . . .
Posted by: hagwind
» RE: While we're at it, Joshua . . .
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» As an impartial observer...
Posted by: war_on_tara
» RE: While we're at it, Joshua . . .
Posted by: Gisele
» RE: While we're at it, Joshua . . .
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: While we're at it, Joshua . . .
Posted by: oregoncharles
» RE: Addiction?
Posted by: oregoncharles
» RE: Where the hell did I say that I think pornography causes violence?
Posted by: daniel1982
» RE: THE DEBATE SO FAR:
Posted by: AMERICAN VETERAN
» RE: THE DEBATE SO FAR:
Posted by: LMNOP
Comments are closed-
Posted by: abemko on Nov 7, 2007 6:27 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just as a child struggles for real love and only after an enormous efflrt gives up and settles for at least fairness, so adult males and females really struggle for love and closeness and settle for sex and pornography because the real thing feels so impossible.
Passion is a far more powerful emotional experience than lust. Passion requires the presence of mind and body. Lust just requires the body. Passion requires connection. Lust requires contact.
And yes, this is a very traumatized society. America is a deeply fundamentalist religious society filled with the fear of evil and hell, focused on punishment as a tool of the righteous to punish transgressions. The trauma is obvious, just listen to the debate on torture or the sad scene of a Senator sitting in a bathroom and tapping his foot in the hope of finding love, yes love, in the only form he understands and has settled for - annonymous sex in a bathroom stall. Generally, just pick up the newpaper: cluster bombs, landmines, terrorists, war, genocide, economic collapse, school house shotings, sex slavery.
It does not have to happen to you, you just need to see it throught the eyes of others. I mean, how many people are still nervous about swimiming in the ocean having seen Jaws decades ago?
An pornography does cause harm. It is the mirror of society to men and women as to who they are and how relationships should look. I remember carefully studying Penthouse in college in a sad effort to understand how to sexually satisfy a woman and being concerned whether my penis was big enough and I could cum enough times. Instead of taking time to love myself and share love with, in my case, any of the numerous girls I admired, I settled for believing that I needed to be a big swinging dick with a good body in a trendy outfit fragranced with Old Spice and spinning a good line to get into a girls panties. Even as I write this, I shutter at the caricature., because that is what this is, a caricature of a human being.
What did I really want? I wanted to be Romeo, inbued with passion, fierce courage in my heart facing the real danger from the Capulats to whisper poetry from my heart to the love of my life. Instead I settled for sitting in the bathroom with my dick in my hands. And when I did end up in bed with a woman, I noticed her pussy, not her presence (pornographic fantasy running in my mind) and then wondered why she was not too excited despite my following all the Penthouse rules for hot sex.
Did pornography hurt me and the girl I was with - it sure did because it set us up to act out a lie. We were not ourselves, we were roles out of Cosmopolitan and Playboy.
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» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: screwjack2000
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: wolvirene
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: screwjack2000
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: wolvirene
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: screwjack2000
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: abemko
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: screwjack2000
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help - There is a point in there though
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: Knot_Rich
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: wolvirene
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: screwjack2000
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: phatkhat
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: screwjack2000
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: kwms
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: wolvirene
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: soft2u47
» Pornography: It's a job, someone's got to do it
Posted by: frantaylor
» Well put, abemko!
Posted by: Cathyblj
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: AMERICAN VETERAN
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: planet doomed
Comments are closed-
Posted by: hagwind on Nov 7, 2007 6:30 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Most of us who post to AlterNet are critical of the various mass media, from Fox News to the New York Times, from Disney to corporate publishing to Madison Avenue. Pornography is part of the mass media -- why do so many people's critical faculties go right out the window as soon as pornography is involved? By treating pornography as unique and entire-of-itself, we're missing some significant connections and questions that might help us understand the whole thing better. If we agree, for instance, that the imaginations of both adults and children can be affected by non-stop commercial images, can we at least consider the possibility that habitual use of pornography affects the imaginations of its users? If we subject working conditions in other industries to critical scrutiny, can we let the porn industry off the hook? Is it OK if people need war movies or car-chase scenes to turn them on but not OK if they need whatever we're calling "pornography" these days?
So many liberals and leftists, especially those of the male persuasion, seem willing to compartmentalize sex and sexuality -- especially male sexuality -- and exempt it from critical inquiry. Their biggest beef with feminism seems to be, in essence, that feminism doesn't exempt sexuality, including male sexuality, from critical inquiry. When anyone wants to take any subject off the table, whether that subject is God, evolution, the market economy, or the school principal's alcohol problem, I get suspicious. I think most of you do too. So why does male sexuality so often get a bye?
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» Well....
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» Hmm.. so no one wants discussion of male sexuality beyond discussion of porn?
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: To be fair, it would be off topic.
Posted by: oregoncharles
» I gave you a five, hagwind, because porn IS big business and big business doesn't care
Posted by: Suzon
» Interesting... & note the comparisons to "Reefer Madness"
Posted by: war_on_tara
» RE: Why can't we treat pornography like other mass media?
Posted by: soft2u47
» RE: Why can't we treat pornography like other mass media?
Posted by: hagwind
» Wrong wrong wrong. Dear god.
Posted by: Q30
Comments are closed-
Posted by: JoshuaLudd on Nov 7, 2007 6:38 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now.. when was the last time Alternet asked under ANY circumstances whether women could separate fantasy from reality???
Someone please explain to me how men could just stop being able to separate fantasy from reality, given the fiction saturation of our movie, tv, and video game drenched culture just because people on screen are naked and having sex.
Just more of the same old sexist crap we get with every single one of these articles on pornography here at Alternet.
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» RE: What sexist tripe
Posted by: Wessex
» I can only assume that those of you who rated my post...
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: What sexist tripe
Posted by: planet doomed
» RE: What sexist tripe
Posted by: mjglow
Comments are closed-
Posted by: yellow on Nov 7, 2007 6:53 AM
Current rating: 1 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Is this post sexist??
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» the woman in the photo looks like me a little
Posted by: Suzon
» I just thought I would point it out. Is that so wrong?
Posted by: yellow
Comments are closed-
Posted by: goldmarx on Nov 7, 2007 6:53 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How does he know that what she says is not true?
Once again, a MAN claiming to know that women don't know what they're talking about!
Neither of the participants take the views of current sex workers seriously, as if they're arm chair intellectuals who think they get to decide the fate of the world. Now that's a fantasy!
By the way, gonzo is not 'misogynist' or 'extreme' porn. Gonzo is about the performers opnely acknowledging the presence of the viewer, period. Sex films without a plot are called WALL-TO-WALL, not gonzo!
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» RE: Master Bader vs Nina Hartley
Posted by: Phenix
» RE: Master Bader vs Nina Hartley
Posted by: goldmarx
Comments are closed-
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Nov 7, 2007 7:10 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: THE SEARCH FOR DEEP MEANING ...
Posted by: UnEasyOne
Comments are closed-
Posted by: blondesprite on Nov 7, 2007 7:14 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What is and is not Porn or how it does or does not affect us, is a topic for those days when one concludes he or she is totally helpless at changing the status quo or more important headlines of the day, i.e. our criminal presidential conspiracy.
It is a distraction (in true jester fashion) topic that too often compels one to experience an emotional and judgemental response.
Emotionally and judgementally charged responses, supposedly and presumably, re-connect us to human tragedies in ways that inspire us to change.
Porn, and by default, sex therefore becomes the preferred topic of the day.
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Comments are closed-
Posted by: fdgsr on Nov 7, 2007 7:27 AM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sex is like that. Men who see the masculine role as dominant and the feminine role as submissive, find satisfaction in sexual encounters with submissive women. Women who submit with pleasure to the dominant sexual advances becomes the expected outcome. On the down side of this is the man whose gentle and accomodating nature takes pleasure in a cooperative sex role in which neither partner is abusive or cruel only to find that his partner is passively cruel and humiliating. He accomodates her cruelty and passive aggression by faked acceptance until he views it as normal.
Evolution will sort out the benefits from the hazards. There should be no misunderstanding of the female role of the black widow spider who attracts a male by responding to a rythmic tapping until the moment of copulation and then the smaller male rarely succeeds in his escape when the female reverts to a hungry spider needing a meal. After all, after copulation the individual male is no longer needed by God or Spiders. But, it is necessary for some of the offspring of each mating to be males, to be lured into sexual unions, fleeing and then eaten by the new widow and mother of his children. This is cruel from a human viewpoint, but not from a successful evolution viewpoint. What a way to die! It beats old age and arthritis, loss of sexuality, and an old woman for a room mate. How wonderful that the male black widow spider gets to play a very interesting game, have the pleasure of the dominant role of a small male and a huge female submitting willingly and pasionately, followed by a valiant attempt to escape certain death in a flight for his life, and the final thoes of agony ended by an injection of anaesthetic venom that renders the male a morsel of food to help the mate pass on his heritage to his offspring.
Men have to use video games, race cars, football, bowling, pornography and pay checks to achieve the same biological result. Let us assume that the black widow male is satisfied with his role and wonder why the human male is not fully satisfied with his role. It is because the one is a spider and the other is a human.
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» RE: It takes all kinds EXCEPT THE AGED, APPARENTLY
Posted by: maribelle
» RE: It takes all kinds
Posted by: YogiBear
Comments are closed-
Posted by: WitchyNy on Nov 7, 2007 7:32 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Anyone know of a true progressive alternative news website?
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» RE: THIS is your lead article?
Posted by: blondesprite
» RE: THIS is your lead article?
Posted by: VZEQICVA
» RE: THIS is your lead article?
Posted by: steven w
» RE: THIS is your lead article? Try Crooks & Liars
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: THIS is your lead article?
Posted by: oregoncharles
Comments are closed-
Posted by: screwjack2000 on Nov 7, 2007 7:38 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
http://www.disastercenter.com/crime/uscrime.htm
I know there are many factors, but by the logic of some on here this should not be the case.
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» RE: I think We Can All Agree
Posted by: screwjack2000
» RE: I think We Can All Agree
Posted by: VZEQICVA
» RE: I think We Can All Agree
Posted by: screwjack2000
Comments are closed-
Posted by: ginmar on Nov 7, 2007 7:58 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
" and offer them a freedom they find lacking in relationships with real women."
Those damned women, demanding to be treated like human beings!
"or example, this guy in question might be attracted to strong, dominant or tough women because their energy reassures him that he can't hurt them and doesn't have to feel responsible for them."
Sounds like these guys want to hurt women without consequences---i.e., those jail-producing injuries are just so inconvenient.
"For example, often the woman is portrayed as dominated, hurt, or even degraded but in the porno she's excited and eager. "
Bingo! These guys want women to look happy about being abused. How is that not abusive?
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» "These guys want ..."
Posted by: just john
» RE: "These guys want ..."
Posted by: ginmar
» RE: "These guys want ..."
Posted by: Phenix
» RE: Define abuse...
Posted by: oregoncharles
Comments are closed-
Posted by: war_on_tara on Nov 7, 2007 8:01 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I've treated dozens of guys who might get aroused by such [extreme] scenarios who don't hate women at all. They have decent and loving relationships with women. And most important, they are able to distinguish between a fantasy and reality, something that Jensen seems both unwilling and unable to do.What turns them on in porn scenarios depends crucially on the fact that the woman is depicted as excited. If she were depicted as primarily hurt and humiliated, these men would instantly lose their interest and erections...
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» And, contrary to what some might want you to believe...
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
Comments are closed-
Posted by: magistre on Nov 7, 2007 8:02 AM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
watching porn: Turning off all mental "safeguards" and opening up the limits of the subconscious (imagination). In other words: This is just a vehicle for brain-washing. I'm sure this is a concept that will quickly be "slapped" with the label "Crack-pot" or "conspiracy nut" but just because you're paranoid doesn't mean someone isn't out to get you.
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» RE: Cart before the Horse
Posted by: screwjack2000
» magistre made a good point. When you watch porn, you watch whatever someone else has
Posted by: Suzon
» RE: magistre made a good point. When you watch porn, you watch whatever someone else has
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: magistre made a good point. When you watch porn, you watch whatever someone else has
Posted by: screwjack2000
» Commodification of imagination, not sex
Posted by: war_on_tara
» RE: Commodification of imagination, not sex
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» The "hunger" metaphor
Posted by: war_on_tara
» "monkey see, monkey do" is, like what, common sense?
Posted by: Suzon
» RE: The "hunger" metaphor
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: The "hunger" metaphor - I ain't rich
Posted by: UnEasyOne
Comments are closed-
Posted by: steven w on Nov 7, 2007 8:16 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
» Those damned women!
Posted by: ginmar
» RE: Those damned women!
Posted by: steven w
» RE: Those damned women!
Posted by: steven w
» Ginmar you are a POS
Posted by: Phenix
» RE: Why Ginmar is so damn angry
Posted by: Cathyblj
» RE: Those damned women!
Posted by: molliev
» RE: Those damned women!
Posted by: hagwind
» RE: Those damned women! Wrong molliev!
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: Sorry,
Posted by: oregoncharles
» Best response here - and cuts to the root of the problem
Posted by: Frankstank
» I knew it would come to this.
Posted by: Cathyblj
» RE: I knew it would come to this.
Posted by: steven w
» RE: I knew it would come to this.
Posted by: Gisele
Comments are closed-
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Nov 7, 2007 8:22 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]
» RE: WAY OFF TOPIC - THANK YOU MR. KUCINICH & FRIENDS
Posted by: steven w
Comments are closed-
Posted by: greenman on Nov 7, 2007 8:53 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Greenman
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» what a fool you are
Posted by: frantaylor
» So.. what is the harm?
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Ipsi Dixit on Nov 7, 2007 9:05 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
He, like most others who talk on this topic always assume that adult pornography is the only 'legitimate' kind and , whether you like it or not, (and like abortion) it's here to stay; it's just what 'civilized', human-rights loving democracies allow (unlike their non-western counterparts). Yet when you talk of child pornography they suddenly get all defensive and avoid it like the plague.
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» Well, you see... children are minors and thusly cannot consent to sex acts or sign contracts.
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» wrong wrong wrong
Posted by: frantaylor
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Posted by: justacomment on Nov 7, 2007 9:25 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's not about whether porn is healthy for adults, it's the fact that it is accessible to youth and they learn from it what is considered normal. That's why the more violent the worse, and the more people support porn the more our civilization will fall due to it. Those youth are the future and if they can't see a movie and know that those guys are doing something to that woman and that worman is someones daughter, sister, mother and that it is in deed wrong, then they will grow up with the misconception of these things.
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» another misguided moralizer
Posted by: frantaylor
» RE: What isn't pinted out
Posted by: YogiBear
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Posted by: counterpoint on Nov 7, 2007 9:28 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm a mammal (and so are you). I was raised on tits (and most likely, so were you). I have great affinity for tits, but since I've been married for ages, I've only been allowed to look at other women's bosoms from a distance. Along comes the internet, also known as the Convenient Conveyor Belt of Bosoms (CCBB).
Once in a while I sneak away to secretly open pages such as kindgirls, only to exclaim (under my breath): "Thanks for sharing!" And I mean it.
Sure, it's one pretty harmless facet of pornography only, but please: let me keep it, if you will. I really really like it.
The British sitcom "Coupling" had a great episode on the subject where Steve is confronted about his porn habit, here goes:
Jill: [about the film "Lesbian Spank Inferno"] How could you possibly enjoy a film like that?
Steve: Oh, because it's got naked women in it! Look, I like naked women! I'm a bloke! I'm supposed to like them! We're born like that. We like naked women as soon as we're pulled out of one. Halfway down the birth canal we're already enjoying the view. Look, it's the four pillars of the male heterosexual psyche. We like: naked women, stockings, lesbians, and Sean Connery best as James Bond. Because that is what being a bloke is. And if you don't like it, darling, join a film collective.
Look, I want to spend the rest of my life with the woman at the end of the table here. But that does not stop me wanting to see several thousand more naked bottoms before I die. Because that's what being a bloke is. When Man invented fire, he didn't say "Hey, let's cook!" He said: "Great! Now we can see naked bottoms in the dark!" As soon as Caxton invented the printing press we were using it to make pictures of - hey! - naked bottoms. We've turned the Internet into an enormous international database of... naked bottoms. So, you see, the story of male achievement through the ages - feeble though it may have been - has been the story of our struggle to get a better look at your bottoms.
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» RE: when I see beautiful bosoms I think: thanks for sharing
Posted by: screwjack2000
» RE: when I see beautiful bosoms I think: thanks for sharing
Posted by: Gisele
» thanks for sharing
Posted by: YogiBear
» RE: when I see beautiful bosoms I think: thanks for sharing
Posted by: yogendra2
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Posted by: pszcz1 on Nov 7, 2007 9:29 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Considering things like REAL war, torture, sexual abuse, and human degradation actually HAPPENING in the world, let us grant that the existence of porn some temporary importance for the sake of discussion.
The quantity and scope of porn is so huge, how can you even cut it down into a category? And what about sites that have male degradation? Should we say, blame society for brainwashing these men into liking it? Should we take that issue seriously? Or what about gay porn? Does that not encourage men to be violent against other men?
Perhaps we should feel threatened that any form of entertainment including television, music, books, or movies, might seriously affect the way we behave. Why not? People cannot effectively discriminate between fantasy and reality, right?
Maybe we can blame war movies on the War in Iraq, and porn movies for Abu Ghraib. Cast thou blame on Shakespeare for any upcoming tragedy in your life.
As if these mediums were actually causes of our behaviour and not results. God knows religion doesn't advocate any forms of discrimination or violence...
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» Playboy used to print anti-war articles
Posted by: counterpoint
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Posted by: justic2776 on Nov 7, 2007 9:33 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It views porn in one very narrow view and it is clinical, medical, where a disease catagorization seems inevitable. Not, that I am saying that the medical view of imagination and sex can not gleen some valuable insights but, we are talking about something that is well not limited to the institution of medicine. And it is from my stand point that the medical field goes to far in treating the symptoms as the cause.
We are talking about something that is not the cause of violence. Watching violent porn doesn't cause violence. Anymore than drug use causes violence, which by the way is a bias that began with prejudice, and elitism. The resulting violence seen in correlation to society is a matter of regulation.
No one in the article begins to tackle that this violence is running parallel to increased sex in marketing, or that sex has been socially oppressed up to this century , or how about the frustration of role shifts in this decade (women lib in society is a fairly new concept).
I didn't see the arguement that this is in essence a revolution of the private into the commercial or even the acceptance of social sexuality. I almost clap the whole ordeal as it sparks a movement in evolution. Where there will no longer be mothers shunned as sinful if they orgasm and children no longer will be condemned into fear for mentioning their "privates". But, see fear still prevades this issue, it echos in the arguement.
What I personally see through the pushing of all the taboos is the primal desire to be free from all the christian, puritan contraints that claim life is a sin, sex is a sin, lust is a sin, the flesh is a sin, condeming all life to suffering and long languished hopes of redeaming oneself through death.
Yes- sex is/has become the new face of the cathedral. I witnessed it personally while visiting some strip clubs. A place that has taken on the new sunday morning worship. And it is backed by a longing, a need to be reunited to the feminine. America has been far to lopsided, male oriented, male dominated, and the price has been the inner harmony and balance of the male psyche. He wastes away in confusion, lonliness, and despair because he knows that half of him is lacking. What he seeks in those private moments with his computer screen is the new myth that will reunite him in some way to the other half of his inner self. It is a clumsy ordeal because what he embarks himself in is a unknown realm where there is no clear and certain knowledge. He is taking the journey alone, yet communally. And passion/ love has no boundries and this scares those not willing to face up to this fact.
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Posted by: counterpoint on Nov 7, 2007 9:43 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have conflicting images in my head about India, for one the Kamasutra, and the lustful imagery adorning temple walls, but for another the crackdown on female dancers in some conservative states (to wit: fully clad dancers, not prostitutes or 'cocktail waitresses).
If anyone can comment to give a perspective from a non Western culture I'd appreciate it.
(You're free to call me naive idiot, along with an explanation why).
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» RE: can anyone comment on sexuality in India?
Posted by: screwjack2000
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Posted by: edgar_michel on Nov 7, 2007 9:48 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I would ask this, if porn were legalized across the board as long as all porn were offered without profit motive, in other words no one made a living off porn, would porn continue to exist? Would Hugh Hefner have any incentive to continue "Playboy" if he had to offer it at a nominal fee that only covered the cost of printing and video processing, and the Playboy mansion was only a regular residential home? If the answer is no, then I would suggest that porn is not a natural process of life, but rather a process brought into existence by the creation of and concentration of money. Porn then is no more liberal than the oil industry which makes obscene profits off a captive population while poluting the communities it serves.
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» RE: What About Warmth and Community?
Posted by: screwjack2000
» RE: What About Warmth and Community?
Posted by: edgar_michel
» RE: What About Warmth and Community? Prudery created the porn.
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: What About Warmth and Community? Prudery created the porn.
Posted by: edgar_michel
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Posted by: Democratic Socialist on Nov 7, 2007 9:49 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Instead of having to depend on women for sexual fulfillment, many men these days have effectively taken control of their sexual lives and have cut women out of the equation altogether even though they are heterosexual - it's terribly sad, but so many men in modern times have 'opted out' of closeness, relationships, and real sex in favor of pornography. This is horrible, because it only increases the feelings of neglect that so many women feel and the powerlessness that many men feel. Porn is in some ways misogynistic in that it has taken away the ancient 'wild card' of sex out of the hands of women, further disempowering them in since throughout time and in most cultures women still controlled access to sex for the most part. I KNOW for a fact that many women aren't very happy about this, and as I said I think many single (and attached) modern Western women feel quite neglected these days since so many guys no longer choose to flirt, chase, court, woo, or even care but instead prefer to take the easy route and just masturbate in front of a screen. Before porn became so commonplace men and women were basically FORCED to form relationships and bonds in order to satisfy their yearnings and urges (both sexual and non-sexual) -- now we have a world (in the West, anyhow) where relations between the sexes have been muddled, neglected, and confused because people can now satisfy these urges by using a screen instead of having to actually interact with another human.
Finally, I think people should do all that they can to do away with commercial/big-business porn since it is the most exploitative of women. Websites like YouPorn.com are totally free and you can upload your own amateur videos if you choose. If you are going to use porn at least make it REALITY based in that it involves real people and real couples like so much of the stuff on YouPorn instead of this plastic California-style porn that has put many of these false and degrading images in to our head about sexuality. Good news on this front: 'traditional' porn sales are in rapid decline, spurred on in the most part by websites like YouPorn and the internet in general. So stop PAYING people to destroy relationships between men and women - if you are going to use porn at least get it for free!
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» Modern nonsense
Posted by: frantaylor
» RE: Modern porn: real men ignoring real women
Posted by: mikelz
» RE: Modern porn: real men ignoring real women
Posted by: edgar_michel
» Thanks for telling us about youporn.com - it's great
Posted by: mikelz
» RE: Modern porn: real men ignoring real women... I disagree
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: Modern porn: real men ignoring real women... I disagree
Posted by: edgar_michel
» RE: Modern porn: real men ignoring real women
Posted by: MartianBachelor
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Posted by: aberdeen on Nov 7, 2007 9:55 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is also true regarding men, where shallow-minded females posing as "feminists" on the tv talk show circuit, regularly treat men as "boy-toys" to play with and then, discard at will. As if, our children don't have enough problems already, without adding to the broken-home pile of selfish indifference.
I've long believed Hugh Hefner to be among the most conservative and shallow-minded of Americans, as his magazine has repeatedly held up only the skinniest and most shallow-minded among our society's females, for men to pursue. Playboy, which is rarely even considered pornography anymore, represents a very narrow-minded lifestyle, where men supposedly have to own the most expensive cars, purchase the most expensive meals, select the right expensive wine for the right occassion, wear uncomfortable expensive clothes and, etc. Playboy has long represented an extremely narrow-minded and conservative lifestyle, which few men can live up to and, even fewer can afford.
If one can accept that beauty is vain, as a rather experienced man named Solomon claimed to be true, then the "playing field" of available partners becomes greatly enhanced. One is inarguably correct in stating that including every woman (or man) in the field of availability, represents a far more liberal view than chasing only one tenth of one one hundreth of one percent of the available population, which is what most forms of pornography typically represent.
Pornography, by definition, is conservative, shallow-minded and just plain ignorant. Solomon, who would probably look down his Semitic nose with disdain at someone as ignorantly non-selective as Hefner, no doubt has the last laugh.
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» Well, lets face it... you're taking a very conservative, shallow-minded view...
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» warning! fake argument
Posted by: frantaylor
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Posted by: screwjack2000 on Nov 7, 2007 9:58 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But carry on by all means.
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Posted by: alternetrose on Nov 7, 2007 10:10 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Dennis Kucinich should also be a story today for his deligence to force this Administration to be accountable for crimes, and for upholding the Constitution and protecting American citizens, yet, here, on Alternet, we find nudity a more facinating and a "hotter" topic to discuss. If this were back when Clinton was brought up for Impeachment, for his personal flaws, and pornographic activity with a consenting adult, I have no doubt that story would have been all over Alternet!
Sorry folks, but I see this as sicko citizens in a sicko nation!
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» RE: 125 comments and counting
Posted by: screwjack2000
» not really
Posted by: frantaylor
» RE: not really
Posted by: matti
» RE: not really
Posted by: frantaylor
» RE: 125 comments and counting
Posted by: VZEQICVA
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Posted by: mikelz on Nov 7, 2007 10:38 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: Ambrose Pare on Nov 7, 2007 10:41 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I agree with the previous poster, there are far more important issues which need discussion.
Is porn really harmful? That has to be the most petty and shallow minded question of the year compared to the whole whack of other problems we have.
The US dollar is going to be used as toilet paper soon, everyone’s getting poor as hell, the countries bankrupt, about to start WW3, and the total loss of civil liberties.
Some people banging on video tape doesn’t seem so scary when you put it next to reality.
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Posted by: thelostsailor on Nov 7, 2007 10:50 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think here's yet another porn article on Alternet, in part, because Alternet knows sex sells too and they'll be plenty of hits on this article huh?
The details and trends in the porn industry sounds like news to be covered in Hustler or something.
But it is truly amazing how excited and passionate people are about defending their porn or chastising any users....
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» details and trends...
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
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Posted by: Jimbo33 on Nov 7, 2007 11:00 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The results were:
--This presidential Commission reported (Pornography, 1970), no such relationship of pornography leading to rape or sexual assault could be demonstrated as applicable for adults or juveniles. This Commission , chaired by William B. Lockhart, past President of the Association of American Law Schools, sponsored various surveys and research studies and concluded: "In sum, empirical research designed to clarify the question has found no evidence to date that exposure to explicit sexual materials plays a significant role in the causation of delinquent or criminal behavior among youth or adults. The Commission cannot conclude that exposure to erotic materials is a factor in the causation of sex crime or sex delinquency (pp. 27)."2 Indeed, the Commission concluded that pornography has a sex education effect that can be beneficial.--
And then came ultra-conservative Reagan who wanted to ban pornography too:
--When President Ronald Reagen entered the White House, to placate his conservative constituency, he rejected the findings of the President Johnson Commission and, in 1984, appointed a commission to be headed by his Attorney General.3 In 1986 the findings of this United States' Attorney General's Commission were released (Meese, 1986). This commission found, in contrast with the previous Presidential Commission, that: "substantial exposure to sexually violent materials . . . bears a causal relationship to antisocial acts of sexual violence and, for some subgroups, possibly to unlawful acts of sexual violence (pp. 326) [emphasis mine]." In distinction to the Presidential Commission, however, this Attorney General's Commission was politically, not scientifically, constituted.4
This "Meese" Commission was primarily composed of nonscientists who did no research of their own and commissioned none. It solicited testimony mainly from specific parties and organizations which it anticipated would be sympathetic to its goals while ignoring testimony from those it suspected would be disagreeable. Many critics took this Meese Commission to task for the bias of their work; e.g., Lab (1987), Lynn (1986) and Nobile & Nadler (1986).--
Source
This a typical example of how sexually repressed people can't accept that pornography is something good just because sex is for them something very dirty and evil.
Let's not forget that countries where pornography is banned are at the top when it comes to human right violations, especially against women like in Islamic countries, China, Iran and so on.
But what is wrong about people having sex on TV?
Why do most people have no problem with brutality on TV? Action movies where the "hero" kills several people with a cool smile on the face, horror movies where people are cut off arms, legs and heads.
Well, you don't even have to watch movies. What a about professional boxing? Why is watching two men (or women) who beat each other till they bleed and ruin their health good mainstream entertainment and not pornography?
The sex paranoia and hypocrisy of society caused by religion and other anti-sex ideologies have caused a completely distracted view of reality regarding sexuality.
Freud himself warned of this oppression.
The result are "harmless" people like toilet boy Larry Craig and Ted Haggert and really dangerous people like Foley and other pedophiles, say nothing of rapists and serial killers who come mainly from conservative anti-sex environment.
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» RE: sex on TV vs. brutality on TV
Posted by: owlbear1
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Posted by: Iconoclast421 on Nov 7, 2007 11:02 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No. Exercise promotes weight loss. Period. There is no "if" "and" or "but" about it. If someone works out then eats more and gains weight, it happens because they ate more. Not because they exercised!
That's just one example of why I have less faith in Vivian's ability to distinguish proper cause and effect.
Anyway, I agree with most of what was said by both of them. There is something that they did not address though. The problem that I have with porn is that it violates what I believe to be one of the basic laws of human nature: orgasms are meant to be shared! In metaphysical terms, I think that every time an orgasm isnt shared with a partner, it tears at the fabric of society.
Obviously there are a lot of things in our "modern" society that are more "privatized" than they once were. City vs suburban lifestyle. The autombile vs mass transit. The TV vs the theatre. The tv dinner vs the dining room table. The neighborhood park vs the trampoline in the backyard. It's a million things, isnt it? All tearing away at the fabric of society. I think porn springs forth from the same mindset that leads a person to purchase a trampoline rather than go to the park.
It is community life that feeds a person's fantasies. Even people in healthy relationships benefit from the exposure to other potential mates. Loss of a sense of community results in the shunting of those energies into other things. Namely porn. But that doesnt make porn the root of the problem. It's more like a symptom. (Again we get into cause and effect.) I wish people would examine the root problem that leads to increased prevalence of porn, as well as debt bubbles, malnutrition, jobs being sent over seas, toys with lead paint, ETC. I'm not too concerned with the notion that women might be degraded by porn. We're all degraded by all those things. Even if women were totally 100% worshipped in porn, I doubt much would change.
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» RE: "orgasms are meant to be shared!"
Posted by: Landbaron
» Dude. LIFE is a race. The one who dies with the most orgasms wins.
Posted by: aka_bozo
» RE: Dude. LIFE is a race. The one who dies with the most orgasms wins.
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: Vivian makes a perfect example
Posted by: screwjack2000
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Posted by: Landbaron on Nov 7, 2007 11:46 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: ead the whole article, it's worth it!
Posted by: VZEQICVA
» RE: ead the whole article, it's worth it!
Posted by: Landbaron
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Posted by: vangogh69 on Nov 7, 2007 12:14 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To my knowledge, two government studies have been done showing there to be no link between pornography and violence/harm (under LBJ and Nixon I believe). Materials/porn is called "obscene," a word the Supreme Court can't sanely define and we're so fucked up as a society that we censor the genitals on the Abu Ghraib photos, not the torture...something's amiss.
Seems like these puritanical "porn warnings" seem to coincide with times of economic inequality, warfare, social-economic insecurity, racism, and a step backwards. Anyway, less worrying about who's getting dp'ed and more about who's gonna keep us out of Iran.
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» RE: deplorable, debased, and degrading human exploits
Posted by: aka_bozo
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Posted by: steven w on Nov 7, 2007 12:55 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: PeaceLove on Nov 7, 2007 1:00 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A lot of men use porn just to get off. It has a minimal, perhaps even beneficial, impact on the whole of their lives and relationships, including their sexual relationships.
Could she minimize the potential benefits any more strongly? I suspect many men would say porn has a huge beneficial impact on their sexual lives and relationships. But if Dent admitted this, then the next two points might be seen as serious but relatively minor side effects, rather than overwhelming problems to offset the “minor” benefits.
Some men use porn as an inspiration for, or a weapon in, efforts to hurt or degrade real women.
Maybe, maybe not. But as used here, this totally unsupported allegation is offered up as a truism.
Some women like porn. Some are indifferent to it. Some are disgusted, horrified, frightened, or humiliated by it.
Again, could she minimize the benefits any more? Don’t some women love porn? Dent is contrasting the minor word “like” with strong negative words “disgusted,” “horrified,” “frightened,” and “humiliated.” That’s a very biased statement.
Under certain conditions, men have violent sex with unwilling partners.
In wartime, men who would never have imagined themselves hurting a woman have become rapists.
Both true, but totally unrelated to porn. Obviously, this is a “guilt by association” argument; We’re talking about porn, and men sometimes use sexual violence against women, therefore porn is in some way guilty. It’s George Bush-level pseudo-logic.
Sex lives at the intersection of love and aggression.
Wha, wha, what? Jeez, what a sad outlook she has. I’m happy to say that sex, for me at least, does not live at the intersection of love and aggression. Nice try, though.
The Web does not breed civility.
Another broad statement, supported with a few highly biased examples. I personally disagree. I think the Web is the most important tool for mass democracy, communication, and global brotherhood ever invented and it is making all of us, individuals and societies, more civilized.
And, of course, the big-ticket argument, also totally unsupported:
And, as it becomes more private, more and more porn is apparently becoming more degrading to the women involved.
Studies? Facts? Science? Apparently not.
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» RE: Civility?
Posted by: jim_altman
» RE: Civility?
Posted by: YogiBear
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Posted by: squinty on Nov 7, 2007 1:03 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Nevermind porno. how about just commercial advertising?
2 imperative themes of advertising:
1) create demand where there was none. Your life is incomplete, you should be unhappy, you are missing our product or service.
2) You must be picky. no 2 products are of similar quality. you can only be satisfied with the best. you must have only the best widget.
(Tim Hansel pointed these out).
This leads to much happiness? and porno even more so?
You're doing a life bid in your own skull, how do you get along with your cell mate?
if you're happy, great. and harm ye none, do what ye will, i reckon.
peace
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Posted by: aka_bozo on Nov 7, 2007 1:24 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As a member of the “semi-autistics”, I know from personal experience, that porn is the ONLY way most of our members have of obtaining a female (of their dreams). Because, why would an “individual of restricted emotions” even WANT a real female around? Oh sure, in our fantasies we’d pretend we’d like a real one, but - real females, like real humans in general, have all that emotional “baggage” that you’ve got to deal with. More importantly, the behavior of real-females – and other humans in general, calls into question the MOST fundament truth of OUR universe; which is that the universe revolves around US. Other humans have this mistaken idea that the universe revolves around THEM. Who needs that? Porn is far easier, and MORE natural (and environmentally sustaining) for the those of us who are “individuals of restricted emotionalism”.
Before you complain about this comment, I’d like to point out the WE - the “individuals of restricted emotionalism” - are now an officially recognized liberal “guilt organization” (the IRE) and, as such, we are beyond criticism – except obliquely. So, watch what you say, or we – and other liberals (leftists, socialists, progressives, whatEVER) will be outraged, OUTRAGED!!!!
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» RE: The USUAL bias against people with IRE.
Posted by: DeAnander
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Posted by: rqqt on Nov 7, 2007 2:06 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And I got over 100 Gigabytes of porn, and let me tell you - I ain't addicted
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» LOLOLOLOL!!!
Posted by: aka_bozo
» You socialist (liberals, leftists, progressives, whatEVER) have absolutely......
Posted by: aka_bozo
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Posted by: edgar_michel on Nov 7, 2007 2:16 PM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: Faced with Being Snuffed Out All We think About is Sex
Posted by: aka_bozo
» RE: Faced with Being Snuffed Out All We think About is Sex ... No sex - no us
Posted by: UnEasyOne
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Posted by: herbal on Nov 7, 2007 2:30 PM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: Anal sex - Isn't it a fact that ...
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: Anal sex - Isn't it a fact that ...
Posted by: herbal
» RE: Anal sex
Posted by: yogendra2
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Posted by: JohnU on Nov 7, 2007 2:40 PM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
On the other hand, when I lived in Sweden in 1970, the same theaters that showed Disney in the afternoon showed porn at night. Children going to see Bambi got look at stills from orgy and even bestiality films. As far as I know, this did not cause the disintegration of civil society in Sweden.
John
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» RE: disintegration of civil society in Sweden
Posted by: aka_bozo
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Posted by: h2281n on Nov 7, 2007 2:44 PM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Bader claims that despite the proliferation of pornography, the incidence of sexual violence is decreasing, but what is his evidence for this? In the UK, in the decade up to 2006 the number of reported rapes increased steadily year on year. Perhaps he is using convictions or arrests for rape as a measure of sexual violence, but these measures can be unreliable. As indicated above, research has shown that consumers of pornography have less sympathy for rape victims and are more likely to believe rape myths, and consequently it is to be expected that in societies where pornography proliferates, the police will be less likely to make arrests and the courts less likely to convict when a rape is reported.
Bader also says that "societies with more porn and Internet usage than ours have much lower rates of sexual violence". So what? What is important is whether in a particular society pornography results in an increase in levels of sexual aggression or not. The science seems to indicate that it does, in which case something should be done about it.
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» RE: pushing the limits.
Posted by: aka_bozo
» RE: No evidence of harm?... Scientists?
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: No evidence of harm?... Scientists?
Posted by: True2Blue
» RE: No evidence of harm?... Scientists?
Posted by: h2281n
» RE: No evidence of harm?... Scientists?
Posted by: True2Blue
» RE: No evidence of harm?... Scientists?
Posted by: h2281n
» Male behavior.
Posted by: aka_bozo
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Posted by: sofla100 on Nov 7, 2007 3:24 PM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: barb123 on Nov 7, 2007 3:32 PM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: What Matters is the health of the actors - acting out childhood needs & porn degrades male potential
Posted by: goldmarx
» RE: What Matters is the health of the actors - acting out childhood needs & porn degrades male potential
Posted by: barb123
» RE: What Matters is the health of the actors - acting out childhood needs & porn degrades male potential
Posted by: goldmarx
» RE: What Matters is the health of the actors - acting out childhood needs & porn degrades male poten
Posted by: DerekD
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Posted by: DaBear on Nov 7, 2007 4:05 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Git the pitchur?
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Posted by: sofla100 on Nov 7, 2007 5:00 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» heal the cycle of abuse and self-hate that begins it all
Posted by: barb123
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Posted by: KiwiBR on Nov 7, 2007 5:12 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We are genetically programmed to get stimulated by any person we find attractive. Yes there are people out there that take it too far and get obsessive but again that goes for many things, not just porn as others have pointed out.
Saying is porn bad or wrong or harmful is like saying people are bad, wrong or harmful. Yes some people are A-holes others a wonderful but you can't class people as bad.
I wish you people would stop trying to make this issue out like it's black or white. Human sexuality is far broader than a simple question "is porn harmful"
To illustrate how intertwined this issue is you only have to ask you self a few questions about breasts ….no seriously.
Why do women have boobs?
To feed their off spring I hear you shout!
Well yes but no... if that was the case then when a woman wasn't with off spring their boobs would disappear like every other mammal on the planet.
Other male mammals stay away from lactating females (unless in a pair bonding) as they know there is no chance.
As everyone knows humans don't have a mating period either.
Sexuality is a huge part of the human condition which is why porn is such and issue.
To me porn is just a genre. There can be good movies, bad movies and disturbing movies. Porn is just movies and each title should stand or fall on it's own merit.
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Posted by: dirls on Nov 7, 2007 5:16 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Exerpt from a piece I wrote for This I Believe:
"For the past twelve years my daughter has been in the sex industry. A stripper. I feel untrue to say exotic dancer. There is nothing exotic about it, or empowering, or as some claim, a creative expression. Nor the culture that she is emercered in that continues to stifle her emotional and spiritual growth creating layers of calluses that suffocate the sweetness that was once her essence."
Sexual freedom is wonderful in private with a trusting Loving partner. Exploitation of others harms more than our culture. It ruins lives.
Broken-Hearted
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Posted by: DeAnander on Nov 7, 2007 7:13 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
from altetnet's own side bar this very day
you telling me this behaviour just came up spontaneously out of their own heads, with no reference to the ubiquity of porn, and particularly mean and cruel porn, in the society at large? yeah right. or that the ubiquity of porn is not a reflection of the same gender violence and gender anxiety that underlies the assault on that girl? yeah right. and US foreign policy has nothing to do with oil.
this is hardly an isolated case. rapists (and other colonialist invaders) have taken trophy photos and films for a long time. just like lynch mobs often took pics and handed them out later as postcards -- which perfectly respectable white Americans used to collect, by the way. what is porn if it isn't a "fake" trophy picture (but how fake is it really? how much of what's traded across the internet comes from sources like the above story)?
anyway
both of alternet's debating partners are so far off in liberal gender-blind lala land that neither can face up to the most basic fact of social power: this is a patriarchal culture. men as a class have power over women as a class. men routinely get away with hurting and humiliating women. hang out at a women's shelfer for a week and get a dose of reality: men hit women who don't obey. men threaten women who don't kowtow. men kill women who assert their right to be human. men rape women who won't "put out" on demand. men threaten the kids if wifey won't "put out" on demand. not rarely, once in a blue moon, not some crazy guy, but pretty darned often and regular joes that you live next door to.
misogynist porn is just one way in which men-as-a-class celebrate and brag about how they get away with hurting, using, and then mocking women-as-a-class. the male porn viewer, no matter how lousy his life, can at least recite the orthodox prayer: "I thank thee o Lord, that I was not born a woman!" that must be comforting, to know that no matter how humiliating your job is, no matter how you hate the boss. at least you don't have to literally suck his dick or let him sodomise you -- popular vulgar metaphors notwithstanding. nice being a boy, eh? of course this doesn't prevent you from having individual truces, individual friendships or even affection for individual women -- hey, "some of my best friends are..." -- but it's still structured power. what percentage of our elected reps are female? what percentage of CEOs? what percentage of religious leaders? what percentage of pundits and tenured professors? what percentage of bylines in major dailies ahd serious journals? what percentage of superstar bloggers? "equality" is a nice idea, but it's not yet our zip code.
-- continued --
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» RE: trophy pictures (1)
Posted by: schnak
» Misogynistic
Posted by: gellero
» PS: that's not an argument in defense of porn
Posted by: Coleman
» the most basic fact of social power
Posted by: MartianBachelor
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Posted by: DeAnander on Nov 7, 2007 7:15 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the images of porn are images of women serving men, enacting male fantasies, servicing male bodies, obediently enacting the patriarchal sexual obsession with penises and penetration and dominance and ejaculation, size and stiffness and hardness and cruelty, pretending to enjoy activities which have just about zilch to do with any female erogenous zone. they are imho the gender equivalent of all those movies where the Black actors get to play waiters and shoeshine boys, and are required to flash great big s**t-eating grins and look like shinin' Massa's shoes is just the best fun they ever had. but behind the all-grinning all-laughing all-dancing minstrel show, in the background, whether explicitly shown or not, was always the noose and the burning cross; and behind the fake manic grins of porn stars "loving it" is the emergency ward, the battered women's shelter, the $5/trick back alley, the raised fist and I'll-kill-you-if-you-tell-anyone and who-would-believe-you-anyway and she-was-asking-for-it.
it is that reminder of the emergency room and the back alley that is handed out when men (right or left) use photoshop pastiches from porn sources to ridicule female public figures they dislike... like leaving a noose tied to a schoolyard tree. just a reminder: this is what you are, this is what we used to do to you, this is what we still can do to you and get away with it, know your place.
substitute "Black man" or "Asian man" or any person of colour into these porn scenarios, show me a white guy sitting up half the night salivating and masturbating over them (a buncha white guys ejaculating into a black guy's face while he grins and shucks and jives? how "harmless" would that look to you good liberals?), and then tell me that whiteboy doesn't have some serious issues with racism, xenophobia, etc. but Presto, put a woman into the appalling scenario, and so long as the director tells her she won't get paid unless she smiles, that makes it all OK, the male viewer is *really* getting off on how much fun she's supposed to be having, and it's plausible that he should imagine that she really is. how wishful does your thinking have to be, to believe that?
as excuses go, that's right up there with My Dog Ate It.
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» You're completely bonkers.
Posted by: Q30
» Actually...
Posted by: Coleman
» Yeah, keep blaming White people and The Patriarchy (TM)...
Posted by: Democratic Socialist
» Whoa, gross!
Posted by: Coleman
Comments are closed-
Posted by: DeAnander on Nov 7, 2007 7:21 PM
Current rating: 1 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
so I take it you're opposed to gun registration laws, arms control treaties, EPA bans on toxic chemicals, the Kyoto Accords, the Geneva Conventions, international bans on landmines, etc? I mean, if passing laws against lucrative but socially erosive behaviour is just futile, why stop with porn? why not just go the full Ronnie (Reagan), deregulate everything and let god sort it out?
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» RE: the old "prohibition doesn't work" mantra
Posted by: goldmarx
» RE: the old "prohibition doesn't work" mantra
Posted by: pgw
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Posted by: jim_altman on Nov 7, 2007 8:18 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» Psychobabel BS
Posted by: gellero
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Posted by: Urgelt on Nov 7, 2007 9:48 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sometimes, like Michael Chertoff, I listen to my gut. I know it's unscientific, but I think we all do it to some extent. My gut tells me that pornography has a potential to shape attitudes and real world behavior in some individuals. But I think our life experiences are far larger influences.
Example: a boy sees his father beating on his mother, and himself is beaten. Result: a man who is unable to express himself sexually in a healthy way with women. I don't care what porn he may view or not view, he's going to have a problem.
Alternative example: a boy thrives in an emotionally nurturing family where both parents treat each other, and him, with love and respect. Result: a man who expects and exchanges emotional intimacy and support from a caring partner. He may see pornography as stimulating, but it's not going to change what he wants from a relationship.
The bottom line for me is that I don't think pornography is a huge influence on social behavior. It probably is a secondary influence, though, affecting some who view it. The big question for me is the trade-off between permitting that influence and denying it: which is better for society?
Proponents of censorship tend to look only at pornography and its potential influences. They don't look at the other side of the coin: what social effects result when government is granted the power to determine what you can read or see, and what you can't?
Authoritarianism is anathema to liberty. It's an utterly opposed idea. I think we should be very, very cautious about censoring anything - because it grants to government powers that are easily extended and abused, and that's a very, very dangerous thing.
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Posted by: barb123 on Nov 7, 2007 10:28 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: apophenia_monkey on Nov 7, 2007 10:34 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: drmeow on Nov 7, 2007 11:11 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: gellero on Nov 7, 2007 11:12 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
To Grow Up is to Admit Defeat !!
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Posted by: bluebirdella on Nov 7, 2007 11:20 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: symptom or cause?
Posted by: argyle
» here's how
Posted by: bluebirdella
» Oh really?
Posted by: pgw
» Yes, really
Posted by: bluebirdella
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Posted by: argyle on Nov 8, 2007 4:34 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
we will give women what they desire to see them naked
we will give them more to take pictures
And even if we make the most amazing love to her,
spending hours delving only into the vigorous satisfaction of her every earthly desire while taking exactly what we want,
we will later whack it to the pictures
we are men, honestly, why do you think they have to have laws governing age, consent, acceptable places etc? It's because it is a biological urge that is occasionally more powerful than our conscious control over ourselves. It must therefore be controlled by another more powerful urge, fear of physical deprivation through imprisonment and possibly death. The ONLY way you get men not to have sex with 16 and 17 year old young women is through threatening them with serious jail time, and some still do it. The error in this entire line of reasoning is the assumption that this is even a debate. Sex trumps reason every time. It was selected, designed, fell down from the heavenly spheres or whatever you want, to be that way. It is that way so that we may exist. Good, bad, like, dislike come later. You can't stop porn, but if you end poverty you take away the reason many women "have" to do it.
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» Poverty?????
Posted by: gellero
» RE: Poverty?????
Posted by: aka_bozo
» dont give men such a bad name
Posted by: barb123
» RE: just be honest with yourself
Posted by: aka_bozo
» RE: just be honest with yourself
Posted by: barb123
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Posted by: barb123 on Nov 8, 2007 8:16 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: yellow on Nov 8, 2007 8:42 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: It is sad that a Porn article gets nearly 300 comments in no time while those on the economy get 3!!
Posted by: planet doomed
» "Many women are heterosexual so they like sex..." This IS a most interesting assertion, indeed!!
Posted by: yellow
» Yellow, you are SO HOT when you are mad!
Posted by: aka_bozo
» 300 comments
Posted by: YogiBear
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Posted by: planet doomed on Nov 8, 2007 9:17 AM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» The answers to ALL your questions.
Posted by: aka_bozo
» RE: The answers to ALL your questions.
Posted by: LMNOP
» RE: The answers to ALL your questions.
Posted by: aka_bozo
» RE: Are men necessary? ....yep you need us to point out your mistakes
Posted by: KiwiBR
» RE: Are men necessary? I know this is gonna break your heart
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» This is ALSO a correct response.
Posted by: aka_bozo
» RE: This is ALSO a correct response.
Posted by: KiwiBR
» RE: This is ALSO a correct response.
Posted by: aka_bozo
» RE: This is ALSO a correct response.
Posted by: KiwiBR
» RE: This is ALSO a correct response.
Posted by: planet doomed
» "the world would be better off without men."
Posted by: YogiBear
» Planet Doomed, why not go into a rant about the "male left" and how they're pigs too.
Posted by: yellow
» RE: Planet Doomed, why not go into a rant about the "male left" and how they're pigs too.
Posted by: planet doomed
» RE: Planet Doomed, why not go into a rant about the "male left" and how they're pigs too.
Posted by: planet doomed
» RE: Are men necessary?
Posted by: Joe
» And the answer is...
Posted by: MartianBachelor
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Posted by: Southern Gal on Nov 8, 2007 2:02 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: Bed buddies
Posted by: aka_bozo
» RE: Bed buddies
Posted by: KiwiBR
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Posted by: drblack on Nov 8, 2007 2:28 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Any activity that a person devotes an extreme amount of time to can be bad for that person.
Personally I like actually having sex with a woman who I know, but different strokes for other folks.
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Posted by: grangersmith on Nov 9, 2007 12:18 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: This Subject, awkward tabu? Say, granger
Posted by: UnEasyOne
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Posted by: bomec on Nov 9, 2007 2:55 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Do visual depictions of violence, whether sexual or non-sexual, cause the viewer of such to go out and do what is depicted? Only in a mindless drone.
I am gay and have always loved gay porn. I loathe the S and M variety and don't watch it, although even in that "rough" type of sexual activity, there is seldom abject violence. Fisting is simply so repulsive and physically abusive I will not watch it for even a second. So you see, I do have a mind and can choose what I watch. Parents need to monitor what their kids watch and not allow great bunches of free computer time when their offspring can be click happy. I don't want the government monitoring my viewing behavior, either at the movie house or at my computer. Parents still can largely control what goes on under their own roofs, if they but will. I have no kids, so leave me strictly alone!
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Posted by: bluebirdella on Nov 9, 2007 7:36 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: here's how
Posted by: YogiBear
» RE: here's how
Posted by: bomec
» Are adults less astute than kids
Posted by: aka_bozo
» RE: Are adults less astute than kids
Posted by: bomec
» this was about the actors
Posted by: bluebirdella
» RE: this was about the actors
Posted by: YogiBear
» that's not the point
Posted by: bluebirdella
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Posted by: chief of okeefe on Nov 10, 2007 1:37 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So porn is keeping families together, at least mine.
My humblest thank you to all the pretty young women who give of their bodies in order to save our families!!
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» They are jealous..
Posted by: messedup
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Posted by: Landbaron on Nov 10, 2007 2:52 PM
Current rating: 1 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: talkville on Nov 11, 2007 3:04 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For example, I'm currently watching a fairly long porn Movie. I'll probably fall Asleep before it ends, because it's in Real Time (wonders of modern technology!). It's about this Character named Uncle Sam who, at the moment, has this other Character (Female mostly) named Iraq bent over and occupied and penetrated. Uncle does not want to Withdraw and Iraq is still scratching, screaming, struggling... But earlier on in this Movie, Uncle stated unequivocably that he'd only stop after She submitted and did what She's told, Permanently. She's a Rich Gal and has lots of Property that Uncle wants to Manage, with or without her Consent.
The Erotic, the Primal, Intensity of this Movie is Electrifying, Exciting, sometimes Boring, but each Scene brings new Twists. Maybe the Movie will win some Award or another in some Academy, I don't know. It's a pretty long Movie, kinda like Warhol's Sleeping Man. As I said, I'll probably be in my Big Sleep by the time it's Credits start rolling across the Screen. As Porn, it seems Excellently Suited to some of those more Daring Imaginations. Puts Debbie and her Antics to shame.
From the Minds of the Producers to the Bodies of a whole lot of Actors, what a Performance and high expression of the Haute Couture of the Barbarians! A Block Buster and Bunker Buster full of Action and Special Effects. I'll leave Accolades to Posterity.
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Posted by: cbmtrx on Nov 11, 2007 5:17 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Has AlterNet just changed the play?
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Posted by: Landbaron on Nov 11, 2007 2:47 PM
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» RE: Porn snuff films
Posted by: maktan1
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Posted by: John Sawyer on Nov 12, 2007 7:55 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm surprised, at this late stage in the pornography debate, that there are still people who doubt (or at least wonder) whether violent porn has any negative effects on people who watch it. Anybody with any sense knows it does, whether or not it ever results in an actual physically violent act against anyone. The attitudes it instills affect how men behave towards women in all kinds of ways, but ways men may not completely notice, since it's like a fish in water: they don't always notice the water, and can't all the time, since it's all around them and would be too distracting to focus on, but the effects are still there. And like a fish in water can easily notice the water when they need to, for the same reason--it's all around it--if a viewer of violent porn takes the time to notice, they can see the effects it's having on them and their relationships.
For viewers of violent porn who deny it has negative effects, just look at what's really going on your mind. If you want to get locked into that and take it as normal, or acceptable, well you've been successfully suckered. If you think violent porn is OK and don't think you've been suckered, then you've narrowed your range down to a self-serving, virtual reality, kind of autistic level.
And if you're spending a bunch of effort and time trying to counter the effects of violent porn within your mind, why watch it to begin with? You already know it's bad, since you're fighting off its effects on you. Watch some non-violent porn instead.
But one person's idea about what constitutes a violent porn scene, doesn’t match everyone else's. The article cites scenes in which ten men ejaculate on a woman's face, implying that this is an example of a violent scene. This isn't necessarily violent. There are versions of this scene that range all the way from completely nonviolent, in which the woman (usually through acting, but not entirely always an act) appears to enjoy it, or at least seems to like having the men enjoy it, and isn't being "man-handled" at all, all the way to face-slapping, neck-choking versions, and probably worse. The first version is not violent, unless you believe the woman is automatically being dominated, whether or not she's entirely acting. I don't automatically buy that.
A form of violence that doesn't always appear to be violence, but still is, is the distortion of their demeanor when the women appear to be on speed, to crank up their apparent arousal level, which from what I gather isn't unusual in some porn videos. Under those conditions, even if they're not being slapped, etc., the violence being done is to the sanity of the whole production, their silly behavior, etc. You can sometimes see it by the worried, tired looks on their faces, not always edited out. Nobody really wins when that happens, except maybe the bank accounts of the producers. Lots of nonviolent, non-speed-fueled productions make plenty of money, maybe more.
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Posted by: scl85 on Nov 17, 2007 7:53 AM
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Posted by: Rychediel on Dec 5, 2007 11:37 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When is to much enough?When your done getting off?
Q:Any of you enjoy watching a three year old give a B.J.?
Q:Or how sexy a seven year olds petite tits look like?
Q:How much does it turn you on to watch a twelve year old struggle and cry,as shes wishing she would just die,rather then perform or pose naked in front of a camera ,that will soon be posted on the net?
Q:Do any of you bang your sister,and diddle your incestual fantasies,wishing your
step-daughters would wear shorter skirts with out underwear,then sit on your bald laps?
Q:How many mothers out there wish your daughters would go away because your husbands
want them more then they want you?
Q:Is what I've just said turning you on?
A:The media,And society's inability to recognize,(and this is no feminist)I shouldnt have to defend that,aside from being a women.The fact that accusation would arise is an understatement.....
ANYWAYS:The media,And society's inability to recognize,that eventually the facts out way
the "opinion".Its all about sex,because it is! And if men didnt get a hard time for harrassing women, they WOULD do it even more or untill there D_*!s fell off.%Percentages are obviouse.It is getting to be to to much,an issue consistently arises and maybe women are speaking up because THEY ARE tired of constantly worrying about protecting there bodies and souls and that of their children.Constantly,constantly,constantly, need I fail to mention the things that
get shrugged off and ignored for what ever reason.Don't men care about protecting there
mothers and daughters,sisters,wifes,brothers ect... anymore?I hear so much defence about
protecting that ever so sacred orgasm!What about the piece of mind of our children,the
security they deserve from all of us.Cutting out a little porn wouldnt hurt.Children are the most suseptable victims out of all of us.And they are being exploited everywhere.{ Come on,I am crying right now as I write!}We cant exspect the problems that arise from this debate to just go away,as much as some of you
would like to just go masterbate then to deal with it.
Ask your children what they think we
should do about this issue Watch how uncomfortable they get and you might all get clever enough to resolve this!
Children First
Please!
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Posted by: hurricane hugo on Nov 7, 2007 12:39 AM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
plur
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» RE: over/under
Posted by: matti
» ALTERNET IS TROLLING YOU!! PORN STORIES == AD REVENUE
Posted by: goatse
» RE: ALTERNET IS TROLLING YOU!! PORN STORIES == AD REVENUE
Posted by: just john
» PRAISE BOB
Posted by: vox persona
» RE: Why do they (Islamo-Fascists) hate us?
Posted by: mindportal1
Comments are closed-
Posted by: matti on Nov 7, 2007 1:09 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Before the -I'm certain- giant debate begins on this topic, I would just like to quickly point out what may-well-be a mortal flaw in your "debate" construct, namely:
The number of rebuttals is not equal, AND the rebuttals are formulated in such a way as to give One Side the "Last Word"
Bader's Initial Statement is an Inititial Statement.
Dent's Initial Statement is a Rebuttal. (She reponds directly to Bader's Statement, whereas he is responding to the Alternet Article, Jensen's book, and His Own Experience)
This then, when each is given one official "Rebuttal", gives Dent, In Fact, TWO.
Also with the format chosen her second Rebuttal becomes, In Fact, THE LAST WORD.
While I believe the two participants in this "debate" where striving for fairness and compromise, within the constraints of their opinions and expertise, I think I am safe in predicting that the format chosen will muddy the "discussion" on this forum with -completely logical and reasonable - arguments for "prejudice" on the part of Alternet's Editors and the counter-arguments to these assertions.
I am of the opinion that what will likely follow could have, largely, been avoided, by presenting this debate in a more Equitable Format, such as:
1) An Initial Statement from both Participants, unaware of the others Position, and based merely on their experience and observations, Jensen's Book, and the Previous "AlterArticle".
2) One or more Rebuttals from each Participant to the other's Initial Statement and/or subsequent Rebuttals, limited only by Allowable Length of the Article.
3) A Concluding Statement from both Participants, like the Initial, composed with No Knowledge of the exact Substance of the other's Work. Preventing a "Trial" situation where the Defense's "Closing Argument" is In Fact a LAST WORD REBUTTAL.
For the benefit of the (I hope) many (but I suspect few) who still actually read Internets Argumenting Posts in their Entirety:
I would like to conclude by saying that It is my Sincere Hope that my criticism of Format Details will in no way deter Alternet from continuing to pursue this Format Generally.
I think that Intelligent Debate between Informed People can be an effective way for the uninformed to be introduced to a subject as long as the uninformed retain confidence in the guidance of their own Hearts and Natural Senses, and that essential Human Skepticism that compliments this confidence.
Whatever the backlash, I Strongly Encourage Alternet to embrace a "debate" Format for future articles on this subject and the More Immediate and Substantive ones that sometimes pop-up on these pages.
With the caveat that future "debates" are more Equitable -along the lines of what I've outlined- and therefore capable of casting of their quotation mark "crutches" and becoming True Debates.
Winter is coming, try to embrace its Importance.
-matti
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» I second that
Posted by: brunowe
» I agree too
Posted by: Phenix
» RE: Interesting but flawed
Posted by: planet doomed
» Objectivity can be Fun
Posted by: matti
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Frankstank on Nov 7, 2007 2:05 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
1) All religions divide people: between saints and sinners, good and bad, evil and good. Porn unites people: it is an open door that allows most people (and by this I don't mean people who do obviously bad things like harm others, or force them to do things against their will), to find their kink.
2) For every feminist writer who argues porn exploits women, I say this: no more than any business exploits women who are their staff. In fact, most women in porn are paid better than your average maid or banana picker out there.
3) Pornumanity: porn is a world where fat and black is good, where fat, black women get off with skinny, white hunks, where nerdy, old guys get off with honeys in their 20s. Where being old is called mature, and women who were once written off as washed up are called MILFS.
4) Pornstory: porn is the most dynamic narrative of our times out there. Its stories and fetishes reflect our communal prejudices, insecurities, fears, loves, fantasies: If Shakespeare were alive today, I am pretty sure he would have worked in porn for a period of time. He would have loved its possibilities.
5) Pornoptimism: porn is always there for you when life lets you down. Most friends are not in this bruttal world. Porn does not judge you.
6) PornUN: porn crosses borders at a furious pace. It finds beauty and commonality in all races and ethnicities. It sees a common bond between people that even transcends what the UN does. In a world where nation states and narrow-minded people stoke distrust of the 'other', porn steps in to show us we are all the same.
7) Economy: porn is a HUGE industry and already outstrips Hollywood. Overlooked, however, is how much it contributes to broader wealth creation. Throughout history the sex economy has fueled the mainstream economy. Most of London's beautiful buildings were built on the profits of brothals. In the developing world, many a poor young woman has funded an education and business from it. Without porn and the sex industry, few economies would function.
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» RE: Porn is the most progressive force for humanity today
Posted by: richholland
» I agree fully with you
Posted by: Frankstank
» OK, so what does "forced" mean?
Posted by: hagwind
» Utterly fruitless line of argument
Posted by: Frankstank
» RE: Utterly fruitless line of argument
Posted by: hagwind
» What exactly are you advocating?
Posted by: war_on_tara
» RE: What exactly are you advocating?
Posted by: hagwind
» RE: What exactly are you advocating?
Posted by: daniel1982
» RE: OK, so what does "forced" mean?
Posted by: screwjack2000
» RE: If it feels good do it, has just gone too far
Posted by: mindportal1
» Come on. Porn ADDICTION is a problem...
Posted by: war_on_tara
» RE: Come on. Porn ADDICTION is a problem...
Posted by: screwjack2000
» Welcome to Queen Victoria's AlterNet
Posted by: war_on_tara
» RE: Porn is the most progressive force for humanity WISE UP
Posted by: Squarehead
» RE: Porn is For Profit, and For Profit is Always Abusive
Posted by: edgar_michel
» Interesting question...
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: Interesting question...
Posted by: goldmarx
» RE: Interesting question...
Posted by: edgar_michel
» RE: Interesting question...
Posted by: edgar_michel
» RE: Interesting question...
Posted by: goldmarx
» RE: Interesting question...
Posted by: planet doomed
» RE: Porn is For Profit, and For Profit is Always Abusive
Posted by: jpjmarti
» RE: Porn is the most progressive force for humanity today
Posted by: planet doomed
» RE: Porn is the most progressive force for humanity today
Posted by: planet doomed
» RE: Porn is the most progressive force for humanity today
Posted by: YogiBear
» RE: Porn is the most progressive force for objectifying women today
Posted by: planet doomed
» Hear no evil
Posted by: YogiBear
Comments are closed-
Posted by: True2Blue on Nov 7, 2007 3:51 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's very simple. Show some evidence, not just opinion or speculation, that the vast majority of porn has changed over the years (other than better production quality).
You don't have any. So these "debates" are pointless.
Seriously, if Alternet continues to run articles like this as it's lead, I'm going to drop it as my Home Page.
Sheesh.
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» RE: This is getting painful.
Posted by: just john
» Yep.. people who hate porn keep saying it...
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: Yep.. people who hate porn keep saying it...
Posted by: planet doomed
» WOMAN-HATER!
Posted by: Q30
» alright.. as rabid as some folks are on here...
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: WOMAN-HATER!
Posted by: screwjack2000
» Heh, glad someone has a sense of humor
Posted by: Q30
» RE: Heh, glad someone has a sense of humor
Posted by: True2Blue
» RE: WOMAN-HATER!
Posted by: LMNOP
» You assumed wrong.
Posted by: Cathyblj
» RE: You assumed wrong.
Posted by: Q30
» RE: You assumed wrong.
Posted by: planet doomed
» RE: You assumed wrong.
Posted by: planet doomed
» RE: You assumed wrong...Nice to know
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: You assumed wrong...Nice to know
Posted by: planet doomed
» RE: You assumed wrong...Nice to know
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» Dear Q30
Posted by: gellero
» RE: WOMAN-HATER!
Posted by: Xynyx
» RE: WOMAN-HATER!
Posted by: Landbaron
» RE: This is getting painful.
Posted by: planet doomed
» RE: This is getting painful.
Posted by: True2Blue
» I looked at your "proof"
Posted by: LMNOP
» BRILLIANT
Posted by: gellero
» OKOKOK
Posted by: gellero
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Reverend Bookburn on Nov 7, 2007 4:20 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Ted Bundy argument has been discredited for decades. Yes, a serial killer watched it, and maybe a psychopath could respond to films (as well as chocolate milk or walking in the park) as he did. But everyone I know who likes adult entertainment is never inspired for violence or any kind of negativity. For non-psychopaths or religious cultists, eroticism causes arousal and possibly new forms of harmless play.
Rev. Bookburn, Radio Volta, ReverendBookburn.com
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» WHY DO YOU HATE WOMEN?!?!?!
Posted by: Q30
» Your sarcasm is getting old.
Posted by: Cathyblj
» RE: This Is Getting To Be Like Reefer Madness
Posted by: clvngodess
» RE: This Is Getting To Be Like Reefer Madness
Posted by: screwjack2000
Comments are closed-
Posted by: just john on Nov 7, 2007 4:41 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I mean, we haven't gotten to the first paragraph and already somebody's equated all porn with "the intersection of violence and sexual fantasy."
And I don't think it's the credited authors themselves doing this.
So could you please name the headline/blurb writer? THAT's the person I want to yell at.
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» (And who has time to proofread when there's outrage to be expressed??)
Posted by: just john
» Traditionally in newspapers & magazines, an editor does that
Posted by: war_on_tara
» RE: Traditionally in newspapers & magazines, an editor does that
Posted by: just john
» RE: Traditionally in newspapers & magazines, an editor does that
Posted by: Joshua Holland
» RE: Traditionally in newspapers & magazines, an editor does that
Posted by: just john
Comments are closed-
Posted by: PJT on Nov 7, 2007 5:05 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» In your perfect future world ...
Posted by: just john
» Huh?
Posted by: hagwind
» RE: Huh?
Posted by: just john
» RE: Huh?
Posted by: hagwind
» RE: Huh?
Posted by: just john
» RE: Huh?
Posted by: screwjack2000
» RE: Huh?
Posted by: just john
» RE: Huh?
Posted by: John Sawyer
» RE: Huh?
Posted by: LMNOP
» RE: Civilization?
Posted by: existen
» RE: Assumptions
Posted by: oregoncharles
» RE: Assumptions
Posted by: LMNOP
» RE: Assumptions - the answer is insecurity and jealousy
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: Civilization? Get rid of RELIGION
Posted by: TheNamelessCity
» RE: Civilization?
Posted by: Livemike
» RE: Civilization?
Posted by: J_Mo
» RE: Civilization?
Posted by: maktan1
Comments are closed-
Posted by: theomode on Nov 7, 2007 6:02 AM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: Narrow Book, Limited Discussion
Posted by: adam63
Comments are closed-
Posted by: PJAW on Nov 7, 2007 6:05 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hey, I was just kidding. If you're a Republican Congressman, don't call me, I don't really have an erection.
Interesting article, by the way. I gained a couple of insights from both the participants in the discussion and didn't really see them as being in stark disagreement. But I liked the idea put forth by the poster who suggested a more traditional debate format for this type of discussion. Each party presents a view prior to seeing anything from the other, then gets a couple opportunites for response or rebuttal.
Now, for a really good time, call 657-229-5859. Ask for Christie.
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» RE: Can someone help me?
Posted by: LMNOP
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Q30 on Nov 7, 2007 6:08 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Me: Okay, how?
A: Pornography causes violence!
Me: Yeah, okay, how?
A: It causes violence!
Me: Yeah but... (long pause)... HOW?? How? How? Understand the question? How does it-
A: It causes violence!
Me: But you still haven't explained-
A: It causes violence!
Me: You're completely bonkers. You keep chanting that slogan, never bothering to prove-
A: How can you not take violence against women seriously?!!
Me: No, I take it seriously, but you never present any empirical proof that pornography causes-
A: WHY DO YOU HATE WOMEN!?!
Me: I don't. I-
A: MISOGYNIST!
Etc.
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» Me: Yawn. Straw men make lousy sparring partners.
Posted by: hagwind
» Then by all means...
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: Then by all means...
Posted by: planet doomed
» RE: Then by all means...
Posted by: planet doomed
» That's right, hagwind
Posted by: Q30
» Where the hell did I say that I think pornography causes violence?
Posted by: hagwind
» Thanks for the laugh, honey
Posted by: Q30
» Actually, Hagwind...
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: Actually, Hagwind...
Posted by: Q30
» While we're at it, Joshua . . .
Posted by: hagwind
» RE: While we're at it, Joshua . . .
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» As an impartial observer...
Posted by: war_on_tara
» RE: While we're at it, Joshua . . .
Posted by: Gisele
» RE: While we're at it, Joshua . . .
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: While we're at it, Joshua . . .
Posted by: oregoncharles
» RE: Addiction?
Posted by: oregoncharles
» RE: Where the hell did I say that I think pornography causes violence?
Posted by: daniel1982
» RE: THE DEBATE SO FAR:
Posted by: AMERICAN VETERAN
» RE: THE DEBATE SO FAR:
Posted by: LMNOP
Comments are closed-
Posted by: abemko on Nov 7, 2007 6:27 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just as a child struggles for real love and only after an enormous efflrt gives up and settles for at least fairness, so adult males and females really struggle for love and closeness and settle for sex and pornography because the real thing feels so impossible.
Passion is a far more powerful emotional experience than lust. Passion requires the presence of mind and body. Lust just requires the body. Passion requires connection. Lust requires contact.
And yes, this is a very traumatized society. America is a deeply fundamentalist religious society filled with the fear of evil and hell, focused on punishment as a tool of the righteous to punish transgressions. The trauma is obvious, just listen to the debate on torture or the sad scene of a Senator sitting in a bathroom and tapping his foot in the hope of finding love, yes love, in the only form he understands and has settled for - annonymous sex in a bathroom stall. Generally, just pick up the newpaper: cluster bombs, landmines, terrorists, war, genocide, economic collapse, school house shotings, sex slavery.
It does not have to happen to you, you just need to see it throught the eyes of others. I mean, how many people are still nervous about swimiming in the ocean having seen Jaws decades ago?
An pornography does cause harm. It is the mirror of society to men and women as to who they are and how relationships should look. I remember carefully studying Penthouse in college in a sad effort to understand how to sexually satisfy a woman and being concerned whether my penis was big enough and I could cum enough times. Instead of taking time to love myself and share love with, in my case, any of the numerous girls I admired, I settled for believing that I needed to be a big swinging dick with a good body in a trendy outfit fragranced with Old Spice and spinning a good line to get into a girls panties. Even as I write this, I shutter at the caricature., because that is what this is, a caricature of a human being.
What did I really want? I wanted to be Romeo, inbued with passion, fierce courage in my heart facing the real danger from the Capulats to whisper poetry from my heart to the love of my life. Instead I settled for sitting in the bathroom with my dick in my hands. And when I did end up in bed with a woman, I noticed her pussy, not her presence (pornographic fantasy running in my mind) and then wondered why she was not too excited despite my following all the Penthouse rules for hot sex.
Did pornography hurt me and the girl I was with - it sure did because it set us up to act out a lie. We were not ourselves, we were roles out of Cosmopolitan and Playboy.
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» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: screwjack2000
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: wolvirene
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: screwjack2000
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: wolvirene
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: screwjack2000
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: abemko
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: screwjack2000
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help - There is a point in there though
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: Knot_Rich
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: wolvirene
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: screwjack2000
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: phatkhat
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: screwjack2000
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: kwms
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: wolvirene
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: soft2u47
» Pornography: It's a job, someone's got to do it
Posted by: frantaylor
» Well put, abemko!
Posted by: Cathyblj
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: AMERICAN VETERAN
» RE: Pornography: A Cry for Help
Posted by: planet doomed
Comments are closed-
Posted by: hagwind on Nov 7, 2007 6:30 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Most of us who post to AlterNet are critical of the various mass media, from Fox News to the New York Times, from Disney to corporate publishing to Madison Avenue. Pornography is part of the mass media -- why do so many people's critical faculties go right out the window as soon as pornography is involved? By treating pornography as unique and entire-of-itself, we're missing some significant connections and questions that might help us understand the whole thing better. If we agree, for instance, that the imaginations of both adults and children can be affected by non-stop commercial images, can we at least consider the possibility that habitual use of pornography affects the imaginations of its users? If we subject working conditions in other industries to critical scrutiny, can we let the porn industry off the hook? Is it OK if people need war movies or car-chase scenes to turn them on but not OK if they need whatever we're calling "pornography" these days?
So many liberals and leftists, especially those of the male persuasion, seem willing to compartmentalize sex and sexuality -- especially male sexuality -- and exempt it from critical inquiry. Their biggest beef with feminism seems to be, in essence, that feminism doesn't exempt sexuality, including male sexuality, from critical inquiry. When anyone wants to take any subject off the table, whether that subject is God, evolution, the market economy, or the school principal's alcohol problem, I get suspicious. I think most of you do too. So why does male sexuality so often get a bye?
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» Well....
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» Hmm.. so no one wants discussion of male sexuality beyond discussion of porn?
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: To be fair, it would be off topic.
Posted by: oregoncharles
» I gave you a five, hagwind, because porn IS big business and big business doesn't care
Posted by: Suzon
» Interesting... & note the comparisons to "Reefer Madness"
Posted by: war_on_tara
» RE: Why can't we treat pornography like other mass media?
Posted by: soft2u47
» RE: Why can't we treat pornography like other mass media?
Posted by: hagwind
» Wrong wrong wrong. Dear god.
Posted by: Q30
Comments are closed-
Posted by: JoshuaLudd on Nov 7, 2007 6:38 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now.. when was the last time Alternet asked under ANY circumstances whether women could separate fantasy from reality???
Someone please explain to me how men could just stop being able to separate fantasy from reality, given the fiction saturation of our movie, tv, and video game drenched culture just because people on screen are naked and having sex.
Just more of the same old sexist crap we get with every single one of these articles on pornography here at Alternet.
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» RE: What sexist tripe
Posted by: Wessex
» I can only assume that those of you who rated my post...
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: What sexist tripe
Posted by: planet doomed
» RE: What sexist tripe
Posted by: mjglow
Comments are closed-
Posted by: yellow on Nov 7, 2007 6:53 AM
Current rating: 1 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Is this post sexist??
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» the woman in the photo looks like me a little
Posted by: Suzon
» I just thought I would point it out. Is that so wrong?
Posted by: yellow
Comments are closed-
Posted by: goldmarx on Nov 7, 2007 6:53 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How does he know that what she says is not true?
Once again, a MAN claiming to know that women don't know what they're talking about!
Neither of the participants take the views of current sex workers seriously, as if they're arm chair intellectuals who think they get to decide the fate of the world. Now that's a fantasy!
By the way, gonzo is not 'misogynist' or 'extreme' porn. Gonzo is about the performers opnely acknowledging the presence of the viewer, period. Sex films without a plot are called WALL-TO-WALL, not gonzo!
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» RE: Master Bader vs Nina Hartley
Posted by: Phenix
» RE: Master Bader vs Nina Hartley
Posted by: goldmarx
Comments are closed-
Posted by: VZEQICVA on Nov 7, 2007 7:10 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: THE SEARCH FOR DEEP MEANING ...
Posted by: UnEasyOne
Comments are closed-
Posted by: blondesprite on Nov 7, 2007 7:14 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What is and is not Porn or how it does or does not affect us, is a topic for those days when one concludes he or she is totally helpless at changing the status quo or more important headlines of the day, i.e. our criminal presidential conspiracy.
It is a distraction (in true jester fashion) topic that too often compels one to experience an emotional and judgemental response.
Emotionally and judgementally charged responses, supposedly and presumably, re-connect us to human tragedies in ways that inspire us to change.
Porn, and by default, sex therefore becomes the preferred topic of the day.
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Comments are closed-
Posted by: fdgsr on Nov 7, 2007 7:27 AM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sex is like that. Men who see the masculine role as dominant and the feminine role as submissive, find satisfaction in sexual encounters with submissive women. Women who submit with pleasure to the dominant sexual advances becomes the expected outcome. On the down side of this is the man whose gentle and accomodating nature takes pleasure in a cooperative sex role in which neither partner is abusive or cruel only to find that his partner is passively cruel and humiliating. He accomodates her cruelty and passive aggression by faked acceptance until he views it as normal.
Evolution will sort out the benefits from the hazards. There should be no misunderstanding of the female role of the black widow spider who attracts a male by responding to a rythmic tapping until the moment of copulation and then the smaller male rarely succeeds in his escape when the female reverts to a hungry spider needing a meal. After all, after copulation the individual male is no longer needed by God or Spiders. But, it is necessary for some of the offspring of each mating to be males, to be lured into sexual unions, fleeing and then eaten by the new widow and mother of his children. This is cruel from a human viewpoint, but not from a successful evolution viewpoint. What a way to die! It beats old age and arthritis, loss of sexuality, and an old woman for a room mate. How wonderful that the male black widow spider gets to play a very interesting game, have the pleasure of the dominant role of a small male and a huge female submitting willingly and pasionately, followed by a valiant attempt to escape certain death in a flight for his life, and the final thoes of agony ended by an injection of anaesthetic venom that renders the male a morsel of food to help the mate pass on his heritage to his offspring.
Men have to use video games, race cars, football, bowling, pornography and pay checks to achieve the same biological result. Let us assume that the black widow male is satisfied with his role and wonder why the human male is not fully satisfied with his role. It is because the one is a spider and the other is a human.
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» RE: It takes all kinds EXCEPT THE AGED, APPARENTLY
Posted by: maribelle
» RE: It takes all kinds
Posted by: YogiBear
Comments are closed-
Posted by: WitchyNy on Nov 7, 2007 7:32 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Anyone know of a true progressive alternative news website?
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» RE: THIS is your lead article?
Posted by: blondesprite
» RE: THIS is your lead article?
Posted by: VZEQICVA
» RE: THIS is your lead article?
Posted by: steven w
» RE: THIS is your lead article? Try Crooks & Liars
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: THIS is your lead article?
Posted by: oregoncharles
Comments are closed-
Posted by: screwjack2000 on Nov 7, 2007 7:38 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
http://www.disastercenter.com/crime/uscrime.htm
I know there are many factors, but by the logic of some on here this should not be the case.
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» RE: I think We Can All Agree
Posted by: screwjack2000
» RE: I think We Can All Agree
Posted by: VZEQICVA
» RE: I think We Can All Agree
Posted by: screwjack2000
Comments are closed-
Posted by: ginmar on Nov 7, 2007 7:58 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
" and offer them a freedom they find lacking in relationships with real women."
Those damned women, demanding to be treated like human beings!
"or example, this guy in question might be attracted to strong, dominant or tough women because their energy reassures him that he can't hurt them and doesn't have to feel responsible for them."
Sounds like these guys want to hurt women without consequences---i.e., those jail-producing injuries are just so inconvenient.
"For example, often the woman is portrayed as dominated, hurt, or even degraded but in the porno she's excited and eager. "
Bingo! These guys want women to look happy about being abused. How is that not abusive?
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» "These guys want ..."
Posted by: just john
» RE: "These guys want ..."
Posted by: ginmar
» RE: "These guys want ..."
Posted by: Phenix
» RE: Define abuse...
Posted by: oregoncharles
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Posted by: war_on_tara on Nov 7, 2007 8:01 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I've treated dozens of guys who might get aroused by such [extreme] scenarios who don't hate women at all. They have decent and loving relationships with women. And most important, they are able to distinguish between a fantasy and reality, something that Jensen seems both unwilling and unable to do.What turns them on in porn scenarios depends crucially on the fact that the woman is depicted as excited. If she were depicted as primarily hurt and humiliated, these men would instantly lose their interest and erections...
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» And, contrary to what some might want you to believe...
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
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Posted by: magistre on Nov 7, 2007 8:02 AM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
watching porn: Turning off all mental "safeguards" and opening up the limits of the subconscious (imagination). In other words: This is just a vehicle for brain-washing. I'm sure this is a concept that will quickly be "slapped" with the label "Crack-pot" or "conspiracy nut" but just because you're paranoid doesn't mean someone isn't out to get you.
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» RE: Cart before the Horse
Posted by: screwjack2000
» magistre made a good point. When you watch porn, you watch whatever someone else has
Posted by: Suzon
» RE: magistre made a good point. When you watch porn, you watch whatever someone else has
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: magistre made a good point. When you watch porn, you watch whatever someone else has
Posted by: screwjack2000
» Commodification of imagination, not sex
Posted by: war_on_tara
» RE: Commodification of imagination, not sex
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» The "hunger" metaphor
Posted by: war_on_tara
» "monkey see, monkey do" is, like what, common sense?
Posted by: Suzon
» RE: The "hunger" metaphor
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: The "hunger" metaphor - I ain't rich
Posted by: UnEasyOne
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Posted by: steven w on Nov 7, 2007 8:16 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» Those damned women!
Posted by: ginmar
» RE: Those damned women!
Posted by: steven w
» RE: Those damned women!
Posted by: steven w
» Ginmar you are a POS
Posted by: Phenix
» RE: Why Ginmar is so damn angry
Posted by: Cathyblj
» RE: Those damned women!
Posted by: molliev
» RE: Those damned women!
Posted by: hagwind
» RE: Those damned women! Wrong molliev!
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: Sorry,
Posted by: oregoncharles
» Best response here - and cuts to the root of the problem
Posted by: Frankstank
» I knew it would come to this.
Posted by: Cathyblj
» RE: I knew it would come to this.
Posted by: steven w
» RE: I knew it would come to this.
Posted by: Gisele
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Posted by: VZEQICVA on Nov 7, 2007 8:22 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: WAY OFF TOPIC - THANK YOU MR. KUCINICH & FRIENDS
Posted by: steven w
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Posted by: greenman on Nov 7, 2007 8:53 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Greenman
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» what a fool you are
Posted by: frantaylor
» So.. what is the harm?
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
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Posted by: Ipsi Dixit on Nov 7, 2007 9:05 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
He, like most others who talk on this topic always assume that adult pornography is the only 'legitimate' kind and , whether you like it or not, (and like abortion) it's here to stay; it's just what 'civilized', human-rights loving democracies allow (unlike their non-western counterparts). Yet when you talk of child pornography they suddenly get all defensive and avoid it like the plague.
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» Well, you see... children are minors and thusly cannot consent to sex acts or sign contracts.
Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» wrong wrong wrong
Posted by: frantaylor
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Posted by: justacomment on Nov 7, 2007 9:25 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's not about whether porn is healthy for adults, it's the fact that it is accessible to youth and they learn from it what is considered normal. That's why the more violent the worse, and the more people support porn the more our civilization will fall due to it. Those youth are the future and if they can't see a movie and know that those guys are doing something to that woman and that worman is someones daughter, sister, mother and that it is in deed wrong, then they will grow up with the misconception of these things.
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» another misguided moralizer
Posted by: frantaylor
» RE: What isn't pinted out
Posted by: YogiBear
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Posted by: counterpoint on Nov 7, 2007 9:28 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm a mammal (and so are you). I was raised on tits (and most likely, so were you). I have great affinity for tits, but since I've been married for ages, I've only been allowed to look at other women's bosoms from a distance. Along comes the internet, also known as the Convenient Conveyor Belt of Bosoms (CCBB).
Once in a while I sneak away to secretly open pages such as kindgirls, only to exclaim (under my breath): "Thanks for sharing!" And I mean it.
Sure, it's one pretty harmless facet of pornography only, but please: let me keep it, if you will. I really really like it.
The British sitcom "Coupling" had a great episode on the subject where Steve is confronted about his porn habit, here goes:
Jill: [about the film "Lesbian Spank Inferno"] How could you possibly enjoy a film like that?
Steve: Oh, because it's got naked women in it! Look, I like naked women! I'm a bloke! I'm supposed to like them! We're born like that. We like naked women as soon as we're pulled out of one. Halfway down the birth canal we're already enjoying the view. Look, it's the four pillars of the male heterosexual psyche. We like: naked women, stockings, lesbians, and Sean Connery best as James Bond. Because that is what being a bloke is. And if you don't like it, darling, join a film collective.
Look, I want to spend the rest of my life with the woman at the end of the table here. But that does not stop me wanting to see several thousand more naked bottoms before I die. Because that's what being a bloke is. When Man invented fire, he didn't say "Hey, let's cook!" He said: "Great! Now we can see naked bottoms in the dark!" As soon as Caxton invented the printing press we were using it to make pictures of - hey! - naked bottoms. We've turned the Internet into an enormous international database of... naked bottoms. So, you see, the story of male achievement through the ages - feeble though it may have been - has been the story of our struggle to get a better look at your bottoms.
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» RE: when I see beautiful bosoms I think: thanks for sharing
Posted by: screwjack2000
» RE: when I see beautiful bosoms I think: thanks for sharing
Posted by: Gisele
» thanks for sharing
Posted by: YogiBear
» RE: when I see beautiful bosoms I think: thanks for sharing
Posted by: yogendra2
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Posted by: pszcz1 on Nov 7, 2007 9:29 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Considering things like REAL war, torture, sexual abuse, and human degradation actually HAPPENING in the world, let us grant that the existence of porn some temporary importance for the sake of discussion.
The quantity and scope of porn is so huge, how can you even cut it down into a category? And what about sites that have male degradation? Should we say, blame society for brainwashing these men into liking it? Should we take that issue seriously? Or what about gay porn? Does that not encourage men to be violent against other men?
Perhaps we should feel threatened that any form of entertainment including television, music, books, or movies, might seriously affect the way we behave. Why not? People cannot effectively discriminate between fantasy and reality, right?
Maybe we can blame war movies on the War in Iraq, and porn movies for Abu Ghraib. Cast thou blame on Shakespeare for any upcoming tragedy in your life.
As if these mediums were actually causes of our behaviour and not results. God knows religion doesn't advocate any forms of discrimination or violence...
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» Playboy used to print anti-war articles
Posted by: counterpoint
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Posted by: justic2776 on Nov 7, 2007 9:33 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It views porn in one very narrow view and it is clinical, medical, where a disease catagorization seems inevitable. Not, that I am saying that the medical view of imagination and sex can not gleen some valuable insights but, we are talking about something that is well not limited to the institution of medicine. And it is from my stand point that the medical field goes to far in treating the symptoms as the cause.
We are talking about something that is not the cause of violence. Watching violent porn doesn't cause violence. Anymore than drug use causes violence, which by the way is a bias that began with prejudice, and elitism. The resulting violence seen in correlation to society is a matter of regulation.
No one in the article begins to tackle that this violence is running parallel to increased sex in marketing, or that sex has been socially oppressed up to this century , or how about the frustration of role shifts in this decade (women lib in society is a fairly new concept).
I didn't see the arguement that this is in essence a revolution of the private into the commercial or even the acceptance of social sexuality. I almost clap the whole ordeal as it sparks a movement in evolution. Where there will no longer be mothers shunned as sinful if they orgasm and children no longer will be condemned into fear for mentioning their "privates". But, see fear still prevades this issue, it echos in the arguement.
What I personally see through the pushing of all the taboos is the primal desire to be free from all the christian, puritan contraints that claim life is a sin, sex is a sin, lust is a sin, the flesh is a sin, condeming all life to suffering and long languished hopes of redeaming oneself through death.
Yes- sex is/has become the new face of the cathedral. I witnessed it personally while visiting some strip clubs. A place that has taken on the new sunday morning worship. And it is backed by a longing, a need to be reunited to the feminine. America has been far to lopsided, male oriented, male dominated, and the price has been the inner harmony and balance of the male psyche. He wastes away in confusion, lonliness, and despair because he knows that half of him is lacking. What he seeks in those private moments with his computer screen is the new myth that will reunite him in some way to the other half of his inner self. It is a clumsy ordeal because what he embarks himself in is a unknown realm where there is no clear and certain knowledge. He is taking the journey alone, yet communally. And passion/ love has no boundries and this scares those not willing to face up to this fact.
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Posted by: counterpoint on Nov 7, 2007 9:43 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have conflicting images in my head about India, for one the Kamasutra, and the lustful imagery adorning temple walls, but for another the crackdown on female dancers in some conservative states (to wit: fully clad dancers, not prostitutes or 'cocktail waitresses).
If anyone can comment to give a perspective from a non Western culture I'd appreciate it.
(You're free to call me naive idiot, along with an explanation why).
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» RE: can anyone comment on sexuality in India?
Posted by: screwjack2000
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Posted by: edgar_michel on Nov 7, 2007 9:48 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I would ask this, if porn were legalized across the board as long as all porn were offered without profit motive, in other words no one made a living off porn, would porn continue to exist? Would Hugh Hefner have any incentive to continue "Playboy" if he had to offer it at a nominal fee that only covered the cost of printing and video processing, and the Playboy mansion was only a regular residential home? If the answer is no, then I would suggest that porn is not a natural process of life, but rather a process brought into existence by the creation of and concentration of money. Porn then is no more liberal than the oil industry which makes obscene profits off a captive population while poluting the communities it serves.
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