arthwollipot
Limerick Purist
If you haven't noticed, I have very deliberately not answered your dumb and irrelevant question. That's not going to change depending on the number of times you ask it.You haven't answered that.
If you haven't noticed, I have very deliberately not answered your dumb and irrelevant question. That's not going to change depending on the number of times you ask it.You haven't answered that.
Zero explanation as to why it is dumb. Self-ID is a big thing now is it not - where the supremacy of the individual challenges objective metrics? You either think age self-ID should be a right or you don't. The former would legalise paedophilia. I assume your #3,850 would be a defence of such a right?If you haven't noticed, I have very deliberately not answered your dumb and irrelevant question. That's not going to change depending on the number of times you ask it.
No, that is completely wrong. 100% wrong. As wrong as the wrongest thing.Zero explanation as to why it is dumb. Self-ID is a big thing now is it not - where the supremacy of the individual challenges objective metrics?
No. No, and once again, no.You either think age self-ID should be a right or you don't. The former would legalise paedophilia. I assume your #3,850 would be a defence of such a right?
No, this is 100% completely and utterly wrong in every possible way.Barely-legal porn (which deliberately employs underage props etc) can be seen as a normalisation of what age self-ID would lead to.
Though still no explanationNo, that is completely wrong. 100% wrong. As wrong as the wrongest thing.
I asked if you thought such rights should be granted. You still haven't answered.No. No, and once again, no.
You do not have a "right" to identify as a different age. You also do not have a "right" to identify as an attack helicopter. These arguments are blatantly and maliciously disingenuous attempts to demonise and stigmatise transgenderism.
There. I said it.
I never said they did identify as underage. What we know is that adults are getting off on what looks like a child in porn...and you aren't the authority on what a consumer believes about what they are watching.No, this is 100% completely and utterly wrong in every possible way.
Look. People who are into age-play and infantilism don't identify as the age they portray, any more than an actor identifies as the role they are playing in a film, method acting notwithstanding. They don't believe they are babies. They adopt babyhood as a fetish. It's not the same as the analogy you are desperately trying to avoid making but which everybody can see through because it's so incredibly transparent, transgenderism. And as such it belongs in the Thread That Must Not Be Named. ◊◊◊◊ off there if you want to continue making stupid, malicious, and toxic arguments. You'll be in good company.
Legal adults who portray "barely legal" characters (aka completely legal adult characters) in porn films do not identify as underage. They do not believe that they are underage. Nobody believes they are underage, least of all their audience.
I will not respond to any more arguments about your so-called "age identification". They do not belong in this thread, or for that matter in polite discourse among civilised adults. And for the record, the final published version of this post is a whole lot more polite than the first draft was. This one only has one F-bomb. Yes, I know, it's downright un-Australian.
You can't self-identify when what you are identifying as is an objective measurement. Age is an objective measurement. The number of days since you were born is not an identity.Though still no explanation
I have. Several times now. Here it is again: No.I asked if you thought such rights should be granted. You still haven't answered.
I use the Reasonable Person Standard.I never said they did identify as underage. What we know is that adults are getting off on what looks like a child in porn...and you aren't the authority on what a consumer believes about what they are watching.
Not sure that he gets what sex is about. That people do it for fun and to bond with others. It's almost never about procreation. It is adult play.No, that is completely wrong. 100% wrong. As wrong as the wrongest thing.
No. No, and once again, no.
You do not have a "right" to identify as a different age. You also do not have a "right" to identify as an attack helicopter. These arguments are blatantly and maliciously disingenuous attempts to demonise and stigmatise transgenderism.
There. I said it.
No, this is 100% completely and utterly wrong in every possible way.
Look. People who are into age-play and infantilism don't identify as the age they portray, any more than an actor identifies as the role they are playing in a film, method acting notwithstanding. They don't believe they are babies. They adopt babyhood as a fetish. It's not the same as the analogy you are desperately trying to avoid making but which everybody can see through because it's so incredibly transparent, transgenderism. And as such it belongs in the Thread That Must Not Be Named. ◊◊◊◊ off there if you want to continue making stupid, malicious, and toxic arguments. You'll be in good company.
Legal adults who portray "barely legal" characters (aka completely legal adult characters) in porn films do not identify as underage. They do not believe that they are underage. Nobody believes they are underage, least of all their audience.
I will not respond to any more arguments about your so-called "age identification". They do not belong in this thread, or for that matter in polite discourse among civilised adults. And for the record, the final published version of this post is a whole lot more polite than the first draft was. This one only has one F-bomb. Yes, I know, it's downright un-Australian.
That is the fist time you answered that specific question.I have. Several times now. Here it is again: No.
Though you would and have disputed such assertions as:Interesting article about what's happening in the porn industry. Probably NSFW, but it's the Guardian so how NSFW can it be?
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‘We’re sick of the OnlyFans model’: Stella Barey’s porn site lets gen Z sex workers have a life
The 28-year-old’s platform, Hidden, offers a Tumblr-like sensibility in an industry roiled by slop and lets adult content creators earn without burning outwww.theguardian.com
I don't think he'd disagree. The mood in that part of the article is that young people are tired of the tiktoks etc shoving jiggly things in their faces whether they want it or not. Almost everyone in this thread has not only agreed but lamented that algorithmically shoveling things at people in the hope of farming engagement, is obnoxious at best and dangerous to people's health at worst.
I read 'they'd like it to be harder to access' to mean 'please get it off my feed' and not 'please get it off the internet.'
Have you? Have you ever accidentally stumbled on porn on any platform? I haven't. I have to go looking for it. I have to know what I want, and I have to search for it, even on Twitter and Reddit.
And, for what it is worth, Darat's post was liked by The Common Potato, dirtywick and Helen.Even when using the likes of Google and Duckduckgo searches for research in this very thread, so was using terms like age of consent, what age can you make porn, affects of pornography I never once was offered up a porn site, at least on the first page of search results. I've asked before for evidence that kids (or anyone else) can "accidentally" stumble across pornography.
It use to. happen. Twenty years ago.
Nothing new there. I encountered pornographic magazines, and pornographic playing cards before the age of 10. And that was in the 1960s.Though you would and have disputed such assertions as:
By age 13, most US teens have already encountered pornography, often by accident. Gen Z is the first cohort to grow up with porn not just available but ambient, algorithmically unavoidable.
In fact I found that particular statement so oddly specific that I am absolutely convinced that the article's author used the exact same source that you did, about which I have already expressed my reservations.Though you would and have disputed such assertions as:
By age 13, most US teens have already encountered pornography, often by accident. Gen Z is the first cohort to grow up with porn not just available but ambient, algorithmically unavoidable.
That Guardian article statement is based on commonsensemedia.org research, which is essentially saying the same thing as the childrenscommissioner.gov.uk research already cited. The conclusion that porn is ambient & algorithmically unavoidable is well supported.In fact I found that particular statement so oddly specific that I am absolutely convinced that the article's author used the exact same source that you did, about which I have already expressed my reservations.
Credible research that these two reports are way off is what? Your research isn't credible - you're not a child.Yes. I've told you my problems with the childrenscommissioner.gov.uk report. Parroting it does not make any source more credible to me.
Neither are you. However, I have had children, and I know that children will lie if they are motivated by shame and guilt, and that is the huge flaw in the study.Credible research that these two reports are way off is what? Your research isn't credible - you're not a child.
Exactly. Hell, even some adults will.Neither are you. However, I have had children, and I know that children will lie if they are motivated by shame and guilt, and that is the huge flaw in the study.
Have you seen pornography on the internet?
Yes, miss.
How did you find it?
By accident, miss, definitely by accident. I absolutely didn't go looking for it myself, miss! It just popped up there. I was so surprised.