That's BArnado's, by the way.
The fact that something appears to be not completely illegal is not the same as it being normalised.
The fact that something appears to be not completely illegal is not the same as it being normalised.
The UK government's Online Safety Bill took advice from Bernardo's who said:
Along with other charities, Bernardo’s has played a role in making sure that the Act is fit for purpose.
Bernardo's cite bodies such as 'The Police Foundation' and 'The British Journal of Criminology' in their evidence.
Your evidence that that such material isn't normalized is what? Are you denying that mainstream porn sites are awash with it?
Reports from the likes of Barnardo's, the Police Foundation, the British Journal of Criminology, the legislation that has been passed over the last couple of decades .
That's BArnado's, by the way.
The fact that something appears to be not completely illegal is not the same as it being normalised.
That has no bearing on anything I've said. Porn is bad when there's bad things in it; when those things are not present, it's not bad. "Bad porn is more common than not-bad porn" may well be true but it doesn't change the definitions.
That 'may' is doing a lot of heavy lifting.Ta.
It's legal and rife on the net driven by consumers who are clicking. What more needs to be said?
Barnardo's:
Depictions of sexual activity which may relate to children are extremely prevalent online. In 2019, 39 billion searches were made on Pornhub, with one of the most frequent search terms being ‘teen’. In 2021, ‘step mom’ was the 7th most searched term on Pornhub worldwide.
That is normalization.
Reports from the likes of Barnardo's, the Police Foundation, the British Journal of Criminology, the legislation that has been passed over the last couple of decades .
That 'may' is doing a lot of heavy lifting.
Online pornography platforms host videos depicting sexual activity with actors or characters who look like children: petite, young-looking performers made to look underage through props such as stuffed toys, lollipops and school uniforms and sexual activity between family members, particularly step-families. Although not strictly illegal, this is extremely harmful, sexualising children and driving the demand for ‘real’ child sexual abuse material.
Leaving aside the issue of a rather expansive definition of sexualizing children (putting a stuffed animal in the hands of a clearly adult porn actress doesn't actually make them look like a child), this conclusion is not in any way demonstrated. It looks to me much akin to the whole "video games cause violence" claims that ambulance-chasing lawyers pushed for a quick buck but which fell apart upon scrutiny.
I don't know what could better illustrate the normalization of such material than your defence of it.
Remember, we are talking about material that, under UK law, is illegal when distributed via a DVD or Blu Ray.
Please cite some evidence from experts; your post is mere opinion.
• The Government’s Equalities Office, found that there was ‘substantial evidence of an association’ between the use of pornography and harmful attitudes and behaviours towards women and girls.
• Pornographic content which suggests sexual activity with children is extremely harmful
• According to the Centre to End All Sexual Exploitation (CEASE), online pornography which depicts sexual activity with performers pretending to be children normalises children as objects of sexual desire and drives the demand for ‘real’ child sexual abuse material.
Except I'm not really defending it. I'm criticizing this weird absolutist approach you have. You seem to think that if something is bad, it must be the worst, and saying it's not the worst means you're saying it's not bad. It's the same sort of approach that leads people to call political opponents Nazis.
I've seen this claimed, but I haven't seen the relevant laws cited, so sorry for not really believing you.
Your "experts" are mostly just expressing their own opinion.
Correlation isn't causation. I would expect people who already have "harmful attitudes" to be interested in pornography, but that doesn't mean the pornography caused those attitudes.
Not demonstrated, and their definition is overly broad.
Are you familiar with the Southern Poverty Law Center? Once upon a time, they did a real service in combating racist organizations. But now? Now they're a grift. They accuse people of racism and extremism for the most trivial of reasons, and often falsely. Why? Because they have a financial interest in portraying the problems they claim to combat as being far worse than those problems actually are.
I have no confidence in the honesty and integrity of your sources, because they all have the same sort of financial interest in exaggerating their claims. And that's what you're relying on, not objective and verifiable evidence.
I asked for expert evidence that Barnardo's et al are wrong. You didn't provide any.
This is going nowhere.
In #559 you said:
Sexual assault is both normalized and trivialized, as you stated.....
Why do you readily accept that as true?
You need to sharpen your reading comprehension skills. That sentence is taken from my description of a hypothetical scenario.
I don't accept the normalization and trivialization of sexual assault as true...
Submissions from Everyone's invited would suggest that sexual assault is on a par. From their website:
"Sexual abuse online and harassment 'normalised' in schools - 9 out of 10 girls had received unsolicited images and been subject to sexist name calling (Ofsted report, June 2021).