Posted on 05/19/2005 11:05:47 AM PDT by .cnI redruM
On February 2, 2003, when seven-year-old Danielle van Dam disappeared from her family home in the middle of the night, every mothers nightmare was played out on national television for almost a month while authorities searched for the girl. When Danielles body was found at the end of that month, the police and prosecutors discovered a frightening story about a neighbor of Danielles who had computer files filled with child pornography and even a sickening cartoon video of the rape of a young girl.
According to a report by Robert Peters, president of Morality in Media, on the link between pornography and violent sex crimes, the prosecutor in the Danielle van Dam case said The video represented [the defendants] sexual fantasies and inspired the abduction, rape, and murder of Danielle. According to Raymond Pierce, a retired NYPD detective who worked on the sex-crimes squad for many years and is now a criminal-profiling consultant, about 80 percent of rapists and serial killers are heavy pornography users. I was a victim of an attempted rape by a disturbed man who turned out to be involved in pornography.
May is Victims of Pornography Month. Today Senator Sam Brownback (R., Kan.), Rep. Katherine Harris (R., Fla.), Rep. Joe Pitts (R., Pa.), and leaders from the values community will participate in a summit to explore the troubling connection between pornography and violence against women and children.
Florida attorney general Charlie Crist advises parents that we must never lose sight of the fact that sexual predators make the online world a dangerous place for innocent children. Parents must be ever-vigilant to make sure their children are not exposed to images and messages that would have been unthinkable just a generation ago. Crist warns that we cannot allow the Internet to be a pipeline for pornography aimed at children. But while parents can use available means to protect their children when they are in their own homes, there is a cultural climate surrounding our children that threatens them the way Danielle van Dam was threatened. Because of the availability of pornography online, there is no way of knowing what lurks in the hearts of our neighborhoods.
More needs to be done to evaluate the connection between violent predatory behavior and pornography, and to crack down on these violent predators. Police and law-enforcement officers across the country report brutal instances in which those addicted to pornography utilized its sadistic images on their female and child victims.
Just this past February, the New York Times reported a story about a teenage babysitter who had raped three young children he was watching in their homes. According to the Times, his pattern was to watch pornographic videos with the oldest of the children, a 12-year-old boy, and intimidate them all by torturing them with a knife and threats to their family members. Perhaps one of the most notorious serial killers, Ted Bundy, participated in an interview with Dr. James Dobson shortly before he was executed. In the interview, Bundy explained, Ive lived in prison for a long time now. And Ive met a lot of men who were motivated to commit violence like me. And without exception, every one of them was deeply involved in pornography without exception, without exception deeply influenced and consumed by an addiction to pornography.
Since 1956, the Supreme Court has made clear that the First Amendment does not protect obscene materials. If we know from the perpetrators themselves how obscenity contributes to violence against women and children, what can we do?
We need to fund more studies of the addiction to pornography and its effects on violent behavior. Parents can install filters on any computer used by children and keep the family computer in a central location, not in a child's bedroom or someplace where parents might not regularly see it. We need to demand tougher law enforcement on the state and federal level. The Bush administration is stepping up federal enforcement of obscenity laws. This is a good first step. Contact the U.S. attorney for your district and ask what they are doing to enforce the laws. We need tougher state penalties against both possession and distribution of child porn and passing any kind of pornographic material to kids. Experts indicate that pornography is often used by pedophiles to break down the resistance of child victims. Parents should check out their states penalties for child rape and make sure offenders are going to jail and staying there for these offenses. Florida, for example, just passed a tough new law after the tragedy involving Jessica Lunsford, whose killer was a recently released violent offender. We should pass legislation to address the threat to children on the Internet. This includes chat sites, websites, spam, and peer-to-peer networks. Peer-to-Peer networks are of particular concern because they are widely visited by kids and offer porn for free without any age verification.
As Rep. Katherine Harris has pointed out, "Pornography displays human beings as objects, obliterating the wall between an individual's sick fantasies and the compulsion to act upon them. Often, the monsters who hurt women and children start with this malignant desensitizer." We need to all work together to find better ways to protect women and children against this violence.
It does when you're trying to rationalize your own vices.
In order to get people who currently have insurance with other carriers to drop it in favor of Geico.
So, what does advertising have to do with porn? Are you saying that there are advertisements for porn out in the open?
You're just not making any sense. You're trying to prove a causal relationship between porn and sexual predators by using advertising?
Mark
How about, "I use porn and I'm normal--I swear!"
He He.
I should not laugh because we are all sinners and fall short of the glory of God.
Are you saying that pornography is art?
Oddly, I was just going to go and get some more work done.
Good luck...
bump for later
If watching or displaying pornography is socially acceptable behavior, walk down the street browsing a copy of some pornographic magazine and check out the reactions you will get. Try and give it to a child with their parent present and see what type of reaction you will get. Watch porn in broad daylight in your front yard.
Sex with my wife is legal too. It's also socially acceptable.
Doing it on the street rather than in the privacy of my own home is different. Doing it in broad daylight in my front yard would get me arrested, for sure. Doing it in front of your kid with both of you watching would probably make you both barf, since my wife and I are 59.
Your example doesn't hold water.
There are certain things that are acceptable behavior in the privacy of ones' own home, which taken to illogical extremes, cease to be acceptable. Looking at "dirty pictures" is one of them. IMHO. Sexual predation, on the other hand, is not acceptable. Period.
banned, as in: made illegal by government?
no.
shunned, as in avoided and castigated by a decorous society?
sure.
Please cite me a case where an automobile as been used in a crime and the car dealer was held accountable.
Gimme a break. Do you really believe a person who owns kiddie porn and a random person who drinks water have an equal chances of committing the rape of a 5 year old? You're an idiot, a sickie, or someone oblivious to the concept of statistical probabilities.
wouldn't hugh hefner and larry flynt be multiple offense predators by now?
I'm curious to know just how an inanimate object is immoral... But I've got to tell you that there are lots of liberals, some of my own family members included, who will insist that guns ARE immoral and evil in nature, and that anyone who owns or uses a gun (with the exception of police and military, who are forced to use them), is immoral, if not evil.
Mark
I guess you are admitting that media can influence people's behaviors.
Nah, they have never even exploited one person... **rolling eyes**
Nice strawman. Where did you get it?
Funny you should ask. I know Danielle's mother and the parents of other kids who have been raped and murdered. If those who advocate "protection" of this kind of pornography ever looked one of these parents in the eye and seen the awful, tortured pain that never goes away, the issue would be settled.
Unfortunately they never do look them in the eye when the parents come to testify in legisaltive committees. The liberals slink away and hide and then cast their pro-porn, pro-predator votes at the end of the day when committee business is being wrapped up.
It can't continue this way. There is going to be an uprising by parents and all sane people some day soon. Politically it won't be pretty. The time is coming.
Bad assumption, bad conclusion.
So if life imitates art, and a piece of suppossed art models a destructive form of behavior that we would never want to see indulged, should that piece of art be banned?
Child porn is not art, it is a crime. The rest is moot because of that.
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