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The Social Costs of Pornography

Pornography is tearing apart the fabric of our society. You may think this is an overstatement. After reading, “The Social Costs of Pornography” by the Witherspoon Institute, I think it may be an understatement.

In 2008, the Witherspoon Institute sponsored the first multidisciplinary exploration of the social costs of pornography. Scholars from various fields including philosophy, psychology, and medicine were included in the forum. Every major shade of religious belief was represented, including Christianity, Judaism, Islam, agnosticism, and atheism. And both the left and right in American politics were present. They all agreed that there is a substantial multidimensional, empirical record of the harms pornography brings to society. Obviously, such agreement is rare.

Today’s pornography is different from any in the past in three ways. (1) Accessibility.  The Internet has made porn ubiquitous. (2) Quality. Today’s porn is much more hardcore. (3) Consumption. Porn consumption has increased radically with the advent of the Internet. 69% of men and 10% of women report viewing pornography more than once a month. 87% of men admit using it in the past year. The researchers conclude, “In sum, there is evidence that more people—children, adolescents, and adults—are consuming pornography—sporadically, inadvertently, or chronically—than every before” (15).

How does pornography actually harm people? The researchers list a plethora of ways. Each of these points is supported with empirical evidence in the report. Keep in mind that these are objective facts about pornographic consumption, not my subjective opinions.

·      Those who view pornography overestimate how frequently certain sexual acts are actually practiced, which increases one’s willingness to do unconscionable things (18).

·      Porn viewers physically map their brains based on the images they see. Pornographic consumption re-maps the physical structure of the brain (19).

·      Many men who view porn lose the ability to relate to or be close to women (20).

·      Porn viewers become de-sensitized to the barrage of imagery, and as a result, child pornography and violent pornographic images often lose their ability to shock and disgust (20).

·      Women often report distress and harm when discovering that their husbands view porn. They typically feel betrayal, loss, mistrust, devastation, and anger as a result of their partner’s behavior.

·      Porn users have an increased likelihood of divorce and family break-up (23-24).

·      Those who had an extramarital affair were three times more likely to have used Internet pornography than those who had not.

·      Porn leads men to place less value on marital fidelity and more value on casual sex (24).

·      Therapists report seeing fourteen- and fifteen-year-old boys addicted to porn (29).

·      An Italian study reported that boys who view porn were more likely to report having sexually harassed a peer or having forced someone to have sex (30).

·      Adolescent girls who report using pornography are more likely to report being victims of passive violence such as sexual harassment and rape (31).

·      Today’s consumption of pornography encourages sexual exploitation such as trafficking (33).

·      Adolescents who view pornography are more likely to view women as sexual objects (35).

·      Porn consumption raises the risk of sexually risky behavior (35).

·      Men who use pornography are less attractive to potential female partners (37).

·      Exposure to pornography decreases sexual satisfaction with one’s partner for both men and women (38).

·      Chronic pornography use is associated with depression and unhappiness (38).

·      Users often report disgust and shame at finding themselves stimulated by images that would have once repulsed (39).

What do we do? For starters, can you help spread the word about the dangers of pornography? Please consider getting a copy of the report, “The Social Costs of Pornography,” and study it. Talk to your friends about it. Share it with your family and church. Blog about it. Or forward this blog to as many people as you can. There needs to be a renewed conversation about how pornography is damaging this generation. We can no longer ignore the most dangerous health hazard to this generation. Our kids deserve better.

 

Comments

check out whitecollarsideshow.com they're are a super passionate husband wife team ministry that travel around the country sharing their incredible story with audiences all over. If they ever have a show near you go see it! It's extremely strange and uncomfortable but this topic should make you squirm. Make sure you watch the whole thing though, don't leave early!

So many, today, think this is no big deal, including Christians, but all it takes is one addict to change or destroy so many lives, and the after-effects ripple out endlessly... My ex-husband walked out on me and our two children after 13 years of marriage, and it was absolutely devastating to all of us. Though I could sense something was wrong and that we were growing apart, I wanted to be the good, submissive Christian wife and prove that I trusted the wonderful, Godly man I thought I knew. To make a long story shorter, I ignored the warning signs until I stumbled onto terrible images in our PC. What made it worse, when we went to our pastor, he told us,"It's no big thing. Lot's of men do that." Later, it came out that he has a pornography addiction as well... Within weeks, my marriage died with little more than a wimper, and my husband moved far away to be with another woman he met online. Now, he's in his third marriage, oblivious to the cost we've all paid and with little idea that, even to this day, ten years later, the consequences just never seem to end... Sadly, just after he left us, he admitted to having an addiction since childhood which I knew nothing about. After years of walking with God and being a wonderful, faithful husband and father, the monster escaped, again, when we got a computer and internet access for the first time. I've always wondered if our family would still be together if he had told the truth before the temptation overcame him... **Gentlemen, I beg you! If you're caught up in this, get honest with yourself and get help before you destroy those you love, PLEASE!!**

I can't even think of why this should be legal. Is there a single redeeming quality to pornography?

Several thoughts:

Firstly, I arrived at the playroom door to hear a neighbours 7yo calmly saying to my 5yo: "I'm going to cut your head off with a pen knife". This event started me toward becoming utterly convinced that there is a wholesale desensitization of kids going on. Porn is only one aspect; and wider society couldn't care less.

Secondly, unattended use of TV, computer games and the internet in private spaces is a problem. It allows youngsters latitude to go beyond age appropriate boundaries with resulting desensitization.

Thirdly, I use a service (OpenDNS) which screens out dodgy domain names my young sons might accidentally happen across. Other companies offer similar inexpensive services. Not a total solution but it helps.

Fourthly, outside of Christian enclaves we have a much harder argument to wrestle with. Take this for example: http://www.osnews.com/comments/25227

With boys heading towards their teens, I am sensing a priority need to assemble material ahead of the debates that will happen all too suddenly. So thank you for this article.

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About
Sean McDowell is a teacher, author, speaker, husband and father. He is an avid fan of college basketball, ping-pong, and his favorite superhero is the Amazing Spiderman.