Would Porn Be Harmful if it Didn’t Have Habit-Forming Potential? Article
Let’s pretend for a moment that porn doesn’t have compulsion-forming potential. Would there still be risks and harms? Would it still be unhealthy?
Let’s pretend for a moment that porn doesn’t have compulsion-forming potential. Would there still be risks and harms? Would it still be unhealthy?
We invite you to consider the facts before consuming porn. If you have a brain or relationships, and want to live in a healthy society, this podcast is for you.
Here are a few examples of reliable sources to get you started the next time you need to fact-check a trafficking-related theory or story you see online.
If the consumer knew for an absolute certainty that this pornography was made free of exploitation, would watching it still be harmful?
We must talk about the way violent materials depicting the abuse of women and girls are becoming the norm. Actually not the norm, the goal.
OnlyFans claims to have age verification systems in place to prevent any form of CSAM from being uploaded to the site, but time and time again, these systems have reportedly been proven to be very inadequate.
A settlement has been reached in the lawsuit filed on behalf of 50 women who sued Pornhub’s parent company for hosting videos produced by porn company GirlsDoPorn.
The world’s largest porn company is being sued by abuse and trafficking survivors. Here’s what their cases are about and what the lawsuit means.
Decades of studies from academic institutions have demonstrated tangible impacts of porn consumption for individuals, relationships, and society. Let’s review the facts.
The problematic sexual choices people make and the unwanted sexual fantasies they pursue are not random. They are a direct reflection of the parts of their story that remain unaddressed. Here are 3 key predictors of pornography use you can heal to stop the demand.
“I was threatened by agents that attempted to rape me. I was taken advantage of from men offering me scenes after I had sex with them—only to never get the contract.”
When Deanna Lynn turned 18, her friends and the pimp they introduced her to would sell her to other couples “to help [the couples] connect.” This was her introduction to the commercial sex industry.