|
|
|
|
|
by Kretinsky
986 days ago
|
|
PsychologyToday is a pro-porn outlet that likes to cherry pick badly designed studies. Anyone familiar with porn can only see that creating porn involves sexual violence in most cases. There is a wealth of litterature showing that watching violent porn will induce more violent sexual behaviors. See for instance the litterature review here: https://psyarxiv.com/cw24q/download/?format=pdf Also: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32081698/ "Lifetime pornography use was reported by most respondents. After adjusting for age, age at first porn exposure, and current relationship status, the associations between pornography use and sexual behaviors was statistically significant" In general, I find the idea quite simple that showing a behavior in an enticing form to someone will lead to an adoption of the behavior. Otherwise you ought to explain this to advertisers, I'm sure they'd be happy to save hundred of billions in tv ads in the US. |
|
Again, the same "violent video games cause violence" nonsense is being used here to justify your personal (but wrong) feelings about pornography.
>Otherwise you ought to explain this to advertisers, I'm sure they'd be happy to save hundred of billions in tv ads in the US.
Is this a reference to "sex sells"? Sorry but so far as we know, nobody ever raped someone because they saw a suggestive television commercial. But please go ahead and find some evidence of that.
>PsychologyToday is a pro-porn outlet that likes to cherry pick badly designed studies.
You can say that but your opinion doesn't make that statement true, and you yourself are cherry-picking one out of many other studies that contradict what you want to be true.
>Anyone familiar with porn can only see that creating porn involves sexual violence in most cases.
That's false, that's your opinion and it is quite divorced from reality. There are many studies showing quite the opposite of what you think is going on.
- While one study shows 88% of porn depicts violence against women, *five other studies estimate between 2% and 36%*.
- Studies on the amount of violence against women in porn vary widely because some count consensual BDSM as "violence" while others don't.
- If 2% of porn videos depict violence against women, it could be said that porn depicts less violence against women than TV cop shows.
Yes, I'm using this site again because your personal opinion of the site means absolutely nothing given you're using your feelings to assert a falsehood:
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/all-about-sex/201606...
"New research findings published in the journal Trauma, Violence & Abuse suggest there is no connection between pornography consumption and sexual violence"
https://www.utsa.edu/today/2020/08/story/pornography-sex-cri...
Since the availability of internet porn, rape rates have steadily declined over time.
https://bjs.ojp.gov/content/pub/pdf/fvsv9410.pdf
Women enjoy watching porn too, in case you're too puritan to realize that. Sure it's easy to find studies that agree with your world view, because other people use their feelings more than evidence too. You want to believe it's true, so you find others that have the same bias. But there's far more studies and evidence that porn does not cause sexual violence, and most porn produced isn't violent in nature although the classification of "violence" can mean different things to different people, and in your case it seems like any sexual act that is filmed would count as "violence".