From BBC US & Canada
High Angle View of Temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints Salt Lake City, Utah. Picture taken January 27, 2012. Reuters
Close to 63% of Utah's population is Mormon
The US state of Utah has become the first to declare pornography a public health risk in a move its governor says is to "protect our families and our young people".
The bill does not ban pornography in the mainly Mormon state.
However, it calls for greater "efforts to prevent pornography exposure and addiction".
One group representing the adult entertainment industry attacked what it called "an old-fashioned morals bill".
Pornography, the bill says, "perpetuates a sexually toxic environment" and "is contributing to the hypersexualisation of teens, and even prepubescent children, in our society".
Access to pornography by pre-pubescent boys is, in my opinion, one of the driving forces in today's 'culture of rape' that permeates our schools and universities.
Further steps must be taken to change "education, prevention, research, and policy change at the community and societal level" against what it calls an epidemic, but it does not suggest how changes should be implemented.
The bill was signed by Republican Governor Gary Herbert, who said the volume of pornography in society was "staggering".
One 2009 study by Harvard Business School said that Utah was the state with the highest percentage of online porn subscribers in the US.
Some studies have, however, indicated that porn may not be addictive.
Gee, I wonder who funded those studies?
'Avoid stigmatism'
The bill was supported by the anti-porn campaign group Fight the New Drug. Reports have pointed out the group's founders are all members of the conservative Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, or the Mormon Church.
Close to 63% of the state's residents are Mormon, but Fight the New Drug's leaders have denied working on behalf of the Mormon Church.
The Free Speech Coalition, a porn industry association, called for more dialogue.
"We should live in a society where sexuality is spoken about openly, and discussed in nuanced and educated ways, and not stigmatised," said Mike Stabile, a spokesman for the group.
That sounds reasonable! But that's not pornography.
"We all should work together to prevent non-adults from accessing adult material."
Indeed we should, but with today's technology, that is probably impossible without the complete elimination of pornography, and the odds of that happening are somewhere between Zero and None. As the world plunges headlong into the cesspool of immorality, it's unlikely that the attitude of Utah's state government will catch-on in other states.
High Angle View of Temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints Salt Lake City, Utah. Picture taken January 27, 2012. Reuters
Close to 63% of Utah's population is Mormon
The US state of Utah has become the first to declare pornography a public health risk in a move its governor says is to "protect our families and our young people".
The bill does not ban pornography in the mainly Mormon state.
However, it calls for greater "efforts to prevent pornography exposure and addiction".
One group representing the adult entertainment industry attacked what it called "an old-fashioned morals bill".
Pornography, the bill says, "perpetuates a sexually toxic environment" and "is contributing to the hypersexualisation of teens, and even prepubescent children, in our society".
Access to pornography by pre-pubescent boys is, in my opinion, one of the driving forces in today's 'culture of rape' that permeates our schools and universities.
Further steps must be taken to change "education, prevention, research, and policy change at the community and societal level" against what it calls an epidemic, but it does not suggest how changes should be implemented.
The bill was signed by Republican Governor Gary Herbert, who said the volume of pornography in society was "staggering".
One 2009 study by Harvard Business School said that Utah was the state with the highest percentage of online porn subscribers in the US.
Some studies have, however, indicated that porn may not be addictive.
Gee, I wonder who funded those studies?
'Avoid stigmatism'
The bill was supported by the anti-porn campaign group Fight the New Drug. Reports have pointed out the group's founders are all members of the conservative Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, or the Mormon Church.
Close to 63% of the state's residents are Mormon, but Fight the New Drug's leaders have denied working on behalf of the Mormon Church.
The Free Speech Coalition, a porn industry association, called for more dialogue.
"We should live in a society where sexuality is spoken about openly, and discussed in nuanced and educated ways, and not stigmatised," said Mike Stabile, a spokesman for the group.
That sounds reasonable! But that's not pornography.
"We all should work together to prevent non-adults from accessing adult material."
Indeed we should, but with today's technology, that is probably impossible without the complete elimination of pornography, and the odds of that happening are somewhere between Zero and None. As the world plunges headlong into the cesspool of immorality, it's unlikely that the attitude of Utah's state government will catch-on in other states.
No comments:
Post a Comment