fatfuckingweeb176:
antiporn-activist:
fatfuckingweeb176:
aclockwork-nightmare:
antiporn-activist:
“Countless studies have since shown that exposure to pornography desensitizes men to violence against women, often shaping their sexuality in such a way that they become unable to experience arousal without some element of dominance or violence. The evidence has been so damning that, at times, universities have refused to allow further research on the topic. When a study shows detrimental effects that cannot be reversed, ethics boards will often refuse similar studies to go on. This has happened repeatedly with research on the effects of pornography.”
–Maya Shlayen, Whose Porn, Whose Feminism
Wasn’t it found that this was all made up by somebody who basically wanted a reason to try and get porn banned so they did a botched “experiment”?
Also they do realize that porn has actually caused the rate of rapings to go down significantly, right?
Sources required.
https://www.springer.com/about+springer/media/springer+select?SGWID=0-11001-6-1042321-0
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Effects_of_pornography
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/11/101130111326.htm
In plenty of studies, it’s been shown that the rate of rapings do not increase when pornography is legalized in a country, and in plenty of instances, it can help prevent new rapings from occurring.
FYI, nobody but you calls the incidence of rape “rapings.” It’s fucking creepy and not a real word.
I’m on mobile and can’t access my vast backlog of research, but here are two to get you started.
https://fightthenewdrug.org/the-disturbing-link-between-porn-and-sex-crimes/
The Concerning Connection Between Sex Crimes And Porn
The “Denmark Experiment"
Pornography proponents love to discount the rape-porn connection by referencing the “Denmark Experiment.“ In 1969 Denmark’s government lifted pornography restrictions. Studies in the early ‘70s by Berl Kutchinski of the University of Copenhagen claimed that easy access to pornography had reduced sex crimes by providing a “safety valve for potential offenders.”
In 1977, in the International Journal of Criminology&Penology, 5, p. 129, John H. Court published a research paper titled Pornography & Sex Crimes. In this report Court indicated that the Copenhagen police had committed a gross error and now had released new rape statistics which were considerably higher than the figures originally reported. In the words of Court: “… The trend since 1969 indicates that there has been a new level higher than anything in the previous decade.“
As expected, porn advocates have remained quiet about the results of similar studies in Sweden, Great Britain, New Zealand and Australia. In another of his works, Criminal Neglect: Why Sex Offenders Go Free (Toronto: Doubleday, p.141), John Court comments on the studies in these countries, stating:
“… As the constraints on the availability of pornography were lifted … the rates of rape in those countries increased. For example, in two Australian states between 1964 and 1977, when South Australia liberalized its laws on pornography and Queensland maintained its conservative policy … over the thirteen-year period, the number of rapes in Queensland remained at the same low level while South Australia’s showed a “six-fold increase.”