Posted on 12/11/2018 12:17:57 PM PST by Kaslin
Media figures are treating two new porn bans as complete opposites. But they should be celebrating both for the same reason.
On Dec. 3, Tumblr declared that it would ban porn and other adult content beginning Dec. 17. The decision closely followed headlines announcing Starbucks will block pornography and illegal content from its Wi-Fi starting in 2019. But while media commentators applauded the coffee chain, many of them condemned the blogging platform. Theyre wrong.
To begin with, Tumblr and Starbucks came to their conclusions under different circumstances. Tumblr had faced consequences for child pornography leaking onto its site, reported CBS News, while Starbucks came under renewed pressure from Internet-safety group Enough Is Enough, according to NPR.
And Starbucks decision was more than good enough for the media.
Bad news for creeps, warned Washington Post reporter Maura Judkis, pervs have only until the end of 2018 to get their jollies in public while sipping on a grande juniper latte.
Watching porn in public, by the way, not only makes bystanders deeply uncomfortable which may be why some people do it to begin with but its also considered sexual harassment in certain settings, she concluded.
The A.V. Club mocked, Sorry pervs, you can no longer watch porn at Starbucks, while Jezebel senior staff writer Maria Sherman added, If youre the type to visit Pornhub during business hours, maybe you lack boundaries.
But while there was a consensus against accessing porn in public places, media figures bashed Tumblr for prohibiting it from its site. Among other reasons, writers from The Washington Post to HuffPost complained that Tumblrs sexual content fostered a community for those of various sexual identities and even empowered women.
RIP Tumblr porn. You made me who I am, mourned one opinion headline for The Washington Post, while another, by a reporter at the newspaper, stated, Before Tumblr announced plan to ban adult content, it was a safe space for exploring identity.
In a New York Times opinion piece, Googles former communications head, Jessica Powell, pointed to the voices of women and the L.G.B.T.Q. community who say this change will destroy a safe space for self-expression, discovery and connection.
Tumblr Should Not Ban Porn, Slate kept its message short and simple. If the point is to make the internet safer, dont zero out one of the safer, more mainstream places online to enjoy porn, wrote technology writer April Glaser of the needless layer of demonization to something thats perfectly normal.
HuffPost published, Tumblr Porn Allowed Women To Be Sexual Architects Instead Of Objects. Now Its Gone. Or, rather, Tumblr allowed women to be both sexual architects and objects.
Senior womens reporter Emma Gray urged that Women and other marginalized individuals are often tacitly and overtly taught that their desires do not matter, or worse, should be a source of shame. Tumblrs new move, she added, shuts down one more space where that stigma was being challenged.
That stigma was challenged by explicit scenes like this one Gray describes in the first paragraph of her article.
That clip she added, loops over and over and over again with the explicit, hot image.
Community, female empowerment, and sexuality are important. But if they are anchored on women or men objectified as sexual beings, they lose the beauty and wholeness they are ordered towards.
As author Christopher West described in his writing on St. John Paul IIs Theology of the Body, the problem with pornography is not that it shows too much, but that it shows too little. Porn and explicit images veil the human person, concealing them from being totally loved in favor of a disposable culture.
Then there are the studies that should, at the very least, be cause for concern. National Center on Sexual Exploitation (NCOSE) calls pornography a National Public Health Crisis. The center cites studies that it says show pornography being linked to increased sexual violence, negative body image, pressure to perform pornographic acts, and hijacking of the brains reward system.
And, surprisingly, left-wing feminists agree. In a 2017 talk at NCOSE, author and media figure Julie Bindel urged that porn, and the violence in it, prompts violence in the sex trade because men want to live out fiction in reality.
The porn ban on Starbucks Wi-Fi and Tumblrs site are different situations. But the reason the media should be applauding both is the same: Porn warps communities and distorts female empowerment by failing to acknowledge their total human dignity and intrinsic value.
Wait. I thought a sexualized culture of extreme permissiveness empowered women?
Ya know, slut-shaming, get Trump out of my Vagina, and all that stuff?
Hold Muh Porn!
How dare they stop their hero, Stormy from making a living! Don’t they know that Avenatti stole all her Gofundme money?
Dang! Where am I gonna get my free wi-fi porn now?......................
Thought their line was that being a porn whore was empowering.
Or is that still a line they throw at convenience?
https://www.pcmag.com/news/365330/new-facebook-policy-sparks-fears-of-sex-talk-crackdown
it’s not just Tumblr, apparently FB is looking into banning any chat of sex, including slang terms.
My place.
First they shut down Craigslist personals, and now THIS!....................
Is the porn loving element of FR still active?
Wait. I thought a sexualized culture of extreme permissiveness empowered women?
~~~
Claiming that porn objecfies women only counts when the primary consumer of the porn is determined to be straight, white, men. If it’s women objectfying women, or men, or if it’s LGPints&Quarts objectifying each other, it’s okay too, because that’s free expression and priviledged sexuality.
Just like most anything else these days, the object is not freedom, but instead some sort of counter-balancing or over-compensation of equity in liberties toward targeted identity groups. Part of feeling empowered is the application of power, or in other words, getting to dole out rights.
The point of this is to put the filtering infrastructure in place.
Once it’s in place and everybody’s accepted that as a fact of life, they’ll change the filter conditions to include things like Free Republic, Breitbart, InfoWars, etc.
I may have seen this script play out once or fifty times before. Notice who the proponents of this are - the same folks who have been doing their damn best to make sure no conservative has a voice.
Behaviors that are undesirable/unpopular but not criminal are the canary in the coal mine. Anyone with a plan against you is going to test it on an easy target like that first.
oh, you went there.
It was probably a lot of women who wanted to look at smut on Tumblr because they didn’t want the stigma of actually visiting a “porn” website.
Ironic, as the Starbuck logo absolutely is stylized porn.
C'mon... We all thought about it.
hahaha!
bkmk
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