How Porn Fuels Incel Culture and Sexual Violence Article
A new study shows porn may be doing more than distorting sex—it’s feeding loneliness, resentment, and misogyny in incel spaces. Here’s how fantasy becomes fuel for violence.
A new study shows porn may be doing more than distorting sex—it’s feeding loneliness, resentment, and misogyny in incel spaces. Here’s how fantasy becomes fuel for violence.
Whether you’ve been with this movement five minutes or five years, here are ten things you need to know about Fight the New Drug as an organization.
The porn industry says they empower women, yet are constantly degrading and exploiting them. The research speaks for itself.
Porn has been normalized for a while, but now—more than ever—porn culture in high schools is impacting students’ relationships with others and themselves.
At Fight the New Drug we’ve spent 16+ years raising our voice on the harms of porn. But now, we’re in danger of being silenced—and we’re asking you to stand with us.
The momentary thrill of being noticed by your crush is definitely overshadowed by the many risks of sexting—ending up in court is only one of them.
There is plenty of room for change in the porn industry, but even if extensive improvements did take place, research still shows the harms of porn itself and its deep connection to sex trafficking.
Porn has the potential to completely rewire what we find arousing, and what we desire and expect from sexual intimacy in real life.
Not all porn features violence, but even non-violent porn is associated with negative effects like increased sexual aggression.
The porn industry fuels the demand for exploitation, trafficking, objectification, sexualized racism, sexual violence, and child abuse. Here’s how.
This study falls in line with what so many others are saying about porn—it promotes rape, and it sells anything but healthy consent practices.
When you choose to fight wholeheartedly for love, it becomes clear how damaging porn is to healthy relationships and healthy perceptions of love.