It's illegal to show children porn which assumes that such material is damaging. You don't seem to agree with that.
That's not the situation, though. Who is "showing children porn" in the scenario I described? Nobody. Are you adjusting your claim from "anyone watching or uploading porn is contributing to this harm" to add "if it is being shown to children"?
Most online porn today is off the scale extreme compared to 1960s porn so I'm not sure why it's even being discussed.
You made a very broad claim. I posited a question about a scenario that falls within the bounds of what you claimed. You must either adjust your claim to exclude that scenario or explain how your claim does fit that scenario. It either fits or it doesn't. In or out.
Either way, children are acting out what they see as demonstrated by the quote I cited.
This doesn't seem relevant to the question I asked. No children are in the situation I'm asking you to apply your claim to.
Your non-response was weeks back, so it would be right to get back on that wouldn't it?
Not really. You're the one making claims, it is up to you to defend them...if you can. This is your pony show, and your ponies are not performing well. The audience is not impressed.
The right thing to do would be to cite other experts who contradict their findings which you haven't done.
Citing declaration from the people I have carries more weight than a single poster on a internet forum - unless of course you are an expert. Are you?
For the nth time, declarations are not proof. Citing authority is not proof (even if the authority is actually pertinent, and qualified). You have made a claim that "severe harm to children" is a result of "anyone watching or uploading porn". I have cited a situation of watching porn that does not appear to harm any children. You do not seem to be able to explain how children can be harmed in this situation. That disproves your claim.
Let's make it easy:
Hypothesis: X leads to Y.
W is a subset of X.
W occurs. Y does not occur.
Therefore: X does not always lead to Y.
Either you must prove that Y does occur from W, prove that W is not a subset of X, or adjust the hypothesis to exclude at least W from leading to Y. There aren't any other possibilities I'm seeing there. One of those things must necessarily be true. Am I wrong?
You'd need some expert evidence for that wouldn't you?
Your pettish tone is in fact a point against your being a chatbot. See how that works? I make a claim (not really, it was floating a theory), I encounter a point that seems to suggest otherwise, I weigh that point and realize that my claim is less likely to be true than I thought it was. So I withdraw it.