Is porn immoral? That doesn’t matter: It’s a public health crisis.
The science is now beyond dispute.
Washington Post | 8 April 2016
Last month, the Republican-led Utah House of Representatives became the first legislative body in the United States to pass a resolution
declaring pornography “a public health hazard leading to a broad
spectrum of individual and public health impacts and societal harms.”
The liberal backlash criticized the measure as an antiquated bit of
conservative moralizing, with the Daily Beast calling it “hypocritical” and “short-sighted.” “The science just isn’t there,” wrote Rewire, an online journal dedicated to dispelling “falsehoods and misinformation.”
The thing is, no matter what you think of pornography (whether it’s harmful or harmless fantasy), the science is there.
After 40 years of peer-reviewed research, scholars can say with
confidence that porn is an industrial product that shapes how we think
about gender, sexuality, relationships, intimacy, sexual violence and
gender equality — for the worse. By taking a health-focused view of porn
and recognizing its radiating impact not only on consumers but also on
society at large, Utah’s resolution simply reflects the latest research.
The statistics on today’s porn use are staggering. A Huffington Post headline
announced in 2013 that “Porn Sites Get More Visitors Each Month Than
Netflix, Amazon and Twitter Combined,” and one of the largest free porn
sites in the world, YouPorn, streamed six times the bandwidth of Hulu in 2013. Pornhub, another major free porn site, boasted that in 2015 it
received 21.2 billion visits and “streamed 75GB of data a second, which
translates to enough porn to fill the storage in around 175 million
16GB iPhones.”
Extensive scientific research reveals that
exposure to and consumption of porn threaten the social, emotional and
physical health of individuals, families and communities, and highlights
the degree to which porn is a public health crisis rather than a
private matter. But just as the tobacco industry argued for decades that
there was no proof of a connection between smoking and lung cancer, so,
too, has the porn industry, with the help of a well-oiled public relations machine, denied the existence of empirical research on the impact of its products.
Using
a wide range of methodologies, researchers from a number of disciplines
have shown that viewing pornography is associated with damaging
outcomes. In a study of U.S. college men,
researchers found that 83 percent reported seeing mainstream
pornography, and that those who did were more likely to say they would
commit rape or sexual assault (if they knew they wouldn’t be caught)
than men who hadn’t seen porn in the past 12 months. The same study
found that porn consumers were less likely to intervene if they observed
a sexual assault taking place. In a study of young teens
throughout the southeastern United States, 66 percent of boys reported
porn consumption in the past year; this early porn exposure was
correlated with perpetration of sexual harassment two years later. A recent meta-analysis of 22 studies
between 1978 and 2014 from seven different countries concluded that
pornography consumption is associated with an increased likelihood of
committing acts of verbal or physical sexual aggression, regardless of
age. A 2010 meta-analysis
of several studies found “an overall significant positive association
between pornography use and attitudes supporting violence against
women.”
A 2012 study of college-aged women
with male partners who used porn concluded that the young women
suffered diminished self-esteem, relationship quality and sexual
satisfaction correlated with their partners’ porn use. Meanwhile, a2004 study
found that exposure to filmed sexual content profoundly hastens
adolescents’ initiation of sexual behavior: “The size of the adjusted
intercourse effect was such that youths in the 90th percentile of TV sex
viewing had a predicted probability of intercourse initiation [in the
subsequent year] that was approximately double that of youths in the
10th percentile,” the study’s authors wrote. All of these studies were
published in peer-reviewed journals.
In a content analysis
of best-selling and most-rented porn films, researchers found that 88
percent of analyzed scenes contained physical aggression: generally
spanking, gagging, choking or slapping. Verbal aggression occurred in 49
percent of the scenes, most often in the form of calling a woman
“bitch” and “slut.” Men perpetrated 70 percent of the aggressive acts,
while women were the targets 94 percent of the time. It is difficult to
account for all of the “gonzo” and amateur porn available online, but
there is reason to believe that the rented and purchased porn in the
analysis largely reflects the content of free porn sites. As researcher Shira Tarrant points out,
“The tube sites are aggregators of a bunch of different links and
clips, and they are very often pirated or stolen.” So porn that was
produced for sale is proffered for free.
The performers who make
up the porn industry are also at risk, in ways that affect them as well
as members of the broader public. Aside from frequent claims of sexual violence and harassment, film sets are often flush with sexually transmitted infections. In a 2012 study
that examined 168 sex industry performers (67 percent were female and
33 percent were male), 28 percent were suffering from one of 96
infections. Even more troubling, according to the authors, was that the
porn industry’s protocols significantly underdiagnosed infections: 95
percent of mouth and throat infections, and 91 percent of rectal
infections, were asymptomatic, which, the authors argue, made them more
likely to be passed on to partners both in and out of the sex industry.
Since members of the industry have protested proposed safety measures requiring the use of condoms and other prophylactics, legislating to protect these performers has proven challenging.
Beyond
the porn industry, legislators have begun to respond to yet another
genre of pornography quickly proliferating on the Web: “revenge porn,”
whose perpetrators post and disseminate sexually explicit photos of
their victims (often their former girlfriends) online without their
consent. Unsurprisingly, revenge porn has been linked to several suicides and has been used to blackmail and sexually exploit minors.
As
the evidence piles up, a coalition of academics, health professionals,
educators, feminist activists and caregivers has decided that they can
no longer allow the porn industry to hijack the physical and emotional
well-being of our culture. This means understanding that porn is
everyone’s problem. Culture Reframed, an organization I founded and
currently chair, is pioneering a strategy to address porn as the public
health crisis of the digital age. We are developing educational programs
for parents, youth and a range of professionals that aim to help shift
the culture from one that normalizes a pornographic, oppression-based
sexuality to one that values and promotes a sexuality rooted in healthy
intimacy, mutual care and respect.
Parents and educators at every
level need to know that if porn is not discussed in a research-based,
age-appropriate sexual health curriculum, its effects will surely show
up as sexual harassment, dating violence and inadvertent “child
pornography” on students’ phones. Pornography can cause lifelong
problems if young people are not taught to distinguish between
exploitative porn sex and healthy, safe sex. As the research shows, porn
is not merely a moral nuisance and subject for culture-war debates.
It’s a threat to our public health.
Gail Dines is a professor of sociology at Wheelock College in Boston and
author of "Pornland: How Porn has Hijacked our Sexuality."
Ummm, how about gay marriage...they are a public health hazard...especially for those who don't want to cater to them in business.
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