Your Partner Just Told You They Struggle with Porn. Now What? Article
Your partner just told you that they struggle with porn, and your world feels like it’s ending. But is it? Here’s a helpful guide for you.
Your partner just told you that they struggle with porn, and your world feels like it’s ending. But is it? Here’s a helpful guide for you.
The Netflix documentary “Money Shot: The Pornhub Story” highlights how the popular porn tube site Pornhub reportedly hosted child sexual exploitation material and nonconsensual content.
Louisiana passed the first porn age verification law, requiring any website containing 33.3% or more porn material to verify the users’ age.
The sheer volume of porn featuring violence and objectification of its subjects fuels a toxic mentality that normalizes abuse.
Porn is easier to find than a good restaurant for date night, and it’ll never reject a consumer like a real person would. But why do people even log on in the first place?
We are not here to battle with the porn industry and try to “take them down.” Our purpose is to promote real love and healthy relationships.
Does today’s mainstream porn portray mainly sensual but explicit sex, or is extreme content common? How common is sexual violence, really?
In this episode of Consider Before Consuming, Dr. John Foubert paints a clear picture of the research on porn and sexual violence, bystander intervention, and objectification.
R. Kelly was sentenced for child sex crime charges for making now-infamous videotapes decades ago of himself sexually abusing his then-14-year-old goddaughter.
“[Porn can] give an unrealistic view of sex and our bodies, make us self-conscious, and question why our bodies are not developed like what we see online.”