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Bladewire 01-07-2019 09:26 AM

Conservative College Men Protest for Porn Censorship Nationwide
 
So guys who voted for Mr "grab them by the pussy" that fuck's pornstars bareback and pays them off to keep them quiet, are now protesting porn :1orglaugh:1orglaugh

Anyone else here see the hypocrisy?

Conservative College Men Protest for Porn Censorship Nationwide

Conservative college men at a handful of campuses across the country are calling for a ban on pornography. The campaign, launched by students at Notre Dame in October, has since spread to Harvard University, Princeton University and University of Pennsylvania, reports Inside Higher Ed.

Their goal, Nortre Dame senior Jim Martinson explained to the Daily Beast, is to ban porn from campus WiFi by installing filters similar to once recently implemented by Starbucks, McDonalds and Panera. It’s also fairly pointless, though, given that students can easily stream porn from their phones by using data or access porn via a private WiFi network. Martinson is the lead writer of a letter imploring the university to implement the ban. He told the Daily Beast in December that he’s since heard from at least 40 students who want to campaign for an anti-porn filter at their own campuses.

While conservatives have been leading anti-porn movements for decades, Inside Higher Ed notes that unlike past anti-porn crusaders, who have claimed porn is immoral, college men are adopting the language of feminists, focusing on abuse against women. “Pornography is the new sex education, providing a disturbing script about what men find sexually appealing and what women should do to please them. Notre Dame’s sincere efforts to educate students about consent and other aspects of healthy sexuality are pitifully weak in light of the fact that by the time students arrive on campus, many have been addictively watching pornography for years,” Martinson wrote in his letter. “Porn is not acting. The overwhelming majority of contemporary pornography is literally filmed violence against women — violence somehow rendered invisible by the context.”

Research on the relationship of porn and violence against women is mixed: Increased viewing of pornography can contribute to negative attitudes towards women, but there isn’t a cause-and-effect relationship between watching porn and committing sexual assault. Researchers have found that aggressive men interpret porn differently from non-aggressive men, and there are “reliable associations between frequent pornography use and sexually aggressive behaviors” for men who consume “violent pornography and/or for men at high risk for sexual aggression.” That doesn’t mean the problem is porn—the problem is aggressive men.

While mainstream porn is certainly overrun by men who exploit women (both on and off the screen)—and so much of it is unethical—some feminists are challenging that by creating ethical porn that focuses on the pleasure of women and values consent. Martinson’s campaign may be couched in the language of a progressive activist, but the argument is the same as his conservative predecessors. Harvard senior Will Long, who launched an anti-porn campaign inspired by Martinson’s, told Inside Higher Ed that porn “is really the ultimate example of abstracting away a person, someone’s daughter, into an object of gratification.” Interesting, a lesson on objectification from a man who describes a human being only as “someone’s daughter.”

While the campaign has generated buzz, it hasn’t moved the school’s policy. Notre Dame spokesman Paul J. Browne told Inside Higher Ed that, while, “We recognize that pornography is exploitative and not a victimless crime,” students are expected to “self-filter” the sites they visit.

Feminist writer and sex educator Jaclyn Friedman, whose book Unscrewed asserts that women live in an era of empty sexual empowerment, told Philly.com that the campaign is “wrongheaded.”

“If social conservatives on college campuses want to do something on sexual violence, they should start by allowing survivors to lead the conversation,” Friedman said. “There are very few [survivors] who are calling for a porn Wi-Fi ban.”

AdultKing 01-07-2019 09:37 AM

While many people may not like porn, porn is always described as the outlier bastion in the fight against all kinds of censorship. If you get rid of porn, what's next?

Interesting read.

ghjghj 01-07-2019 09:39 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AdultKing (Post 22392263)
If you get rid of porn, what's next?

Pornographers

Matt 26z 01-07-2019 09:50 AM

There are two conservative factions.

There's what you could call the orthodox conservatives that we haven't heard much from since the Bush era. And there's the neo conservatives (alt-right) that are fiscally conservative but liberal on certain social matters.

The old school conservatives held their nose when voting for Trump. So don't bring him into this.

RedFred 01-07-2019 09:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Matt 26z (Post 22392281)
There are two conservative factions.

There's what you could call the orthodox conservatives that we haven't heard much from since the Bush era. And there's the neo conservatives (alt-right) that are fiscally conservative but liberal on certain social matters.

The old school conservatives held their nose when voting for Trump. So don't bring him into this.


CjTheFish 01-07-2019 10:00 AM

Porn will never die.

Bladewire 01-07-2019 10:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RedFred (Post 22392292)

:1orglaugh:1orglaugh

TheSquealer 01-07-2019 11:01 AM

and the same idiots like you defend Muslims who have strict rules on how to deal with gays. Basically, they have 3 chances to change your mind and give you the chance to "be normal" and then you're toast.

But yeah... those damn Christians. They are much worse than those who throw gays off of rooftops or hang them in town squares... who you defend. The same people who believe anyone who is not Muslim is less than a second class citizen and gays are an abomination.

fucking idiot.

bronco67 01-07-2019 11:51 AM

There are men who like porn...and there are men who are liars.

pimpmaster9000 01-07-2019 12:06 PM

if somebody does not like porn this is no problem at all...this individual is free to fuck off and not watch...sheeeeeeet I do not like poetry...faggoty stuff IMO but I do not read it and no problem...

MaDalton 01-07-2019 12:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RedFred (Post 22392292)

https://thumbs.gfycat.com/EnviousEve...ot-max-1mb.gif

Rochard 01-07-2019 12:25 PM

I fail to understand how onservatives put a man like trump in office....

crockett 01-07-2019 01:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AdultKing (Post 22392263)
While many people may not like porn, porn is always described as the outlier bastion in the fight against all kinds of censorship. If you get rid of porn, what's next?

Interesting read.

Politics? You want that banned dont yea?


https://media.giphy.com/media/26AHvF...aSf6/giphy.gif

Acepimp 01-07-2019 08:38 PM

FAKE NEWS. No one is trying to "ban porn nationwide." They would prefer that it be blocked on campus wi-fi.

Of course, who wants a bunch of porn surfers hogging all the bandwidth??

Nice fake news thread title, BladeLiar :thumbsup

Bladewire 01-07-2019 08:42 PM

TheSqueeler aka Matt 26z aka ghjghj aka Drax aka Diomed aka helix aka Acepimp aka Onwebcam aka Phoenix aka aimike aka Hawkeye etc. etc. etc.

Acepimp 01-07-2019 08:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rochard (Post 22392387)
I fail to understand how onservatives put a man like trump in office....

That's because you fail to see any of Hillary's hundreds of scandals. Not everyone is crazy about Trump. The goal was to block her.

Acepimp 01-07-2019 08:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bladewire (Post 22392712)
TheSqueeler aka Matt 26z aka ghjghj aka Drax aka Diomed aka helix aka Acepimp aka Onwebcam aka Phoenix aka aimike aka Hawkeye etc. etc. etc.

GFY Rule #10: False accusations against a person or company. If you plan on calling someone a scammer, liar, cheat, or anything else, have your proof in order and post it with your claim. False accusations will be grounds for immediate banning.

Sarn 01-08-2019 07:05 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bladewire (Post 22392246)
So guys who voted for Mr "grab them by the pussy" that fuck's pornstars bareback and pays them off to keep them quiet, are now protesting porn :1orglaugh:1orglaugh

Anyone else here see the hypocrisy?

Conservative College Men Protest for Porn Censorship Nationwide

hold him back :1orglaugh

Grapesoda 01-08-2019 07:46 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bladewire (Post 22392246)
So guys who voted for Mr "grab them by the pussy" that fuck's pornstars bareback and pays them off to keep them quiet, are now protesting porn :1orglaugh:1orglaugh

Anyone else here see the hypocrisy?

Conservative College Men Protest for Porn Censorship Nationwide

Conservative college men at a handful of campuses across the country are calling for a ban on pornography. The campaign, launched by students at Notre Dame in October, has since spread to Harvard University, Princeton University and University of Pennsylvania, reports Inside Higher Ed.

Their goal, Nortre Dame senior Jim Martinson explained to the Daily Beast, is to ban porn from campus WiFi by installing filters similar to once recently implemented by Starbucks, McDonalds and Panera. It’s also fairly pointless, though, given that students can easily stream porn from their phones by using data or access porn via a private WiFi network. Martinson is the lead writer of a letter imploring the university to implement the ban. He told the Daily Beast in December that he’s since heard from at least 40 students who want to campaign for an anti-porn filter at their own campuses.

While conservatives have been leading anti-porn movements for decades, Inside Higher Ed notes that unlike past anti-porn crusaders, who have claimed porn is immoral, college men are adopting the language of feminists, focusing on abuse against women. “Pornography is the new sex education, providing a disturbing script about what men find sexually appealing and what women should do to please them. Notre Dame’s sincere efforts to educate students about consent and other aspects of healthy sexuality are pitifully weak in light of the fact that by the time students arrive on campus, many have been addictively watching pornography for years,” Martinson wrote in his letter. “Porn is not acting. The overwhelming majority of contemporary pornography is literally filmed violence against women — violence somehow rendered invisible by the context.”

Research on the relationship of porn and violence against women is mixed: Increased viewing of pornography can contribute to negative attitudes towards women, but there isn’t a cause-and-effect relationship between watching porn and committing sexual assault. Researchers have found that aggressive men interpret porn differently from non-aggressive men, and there are “reliable associations between frequent pornography use and sexually aggressive behaviors” for men who consume “violent pornography and/or for men at high risk for sexual aggression.” That doesn’t mean the problem is porn—the problem is aggressive men.

While mainstream porn is certainly overrun by men who exploit women (both on and off the screen)—and so much of it is unethical—some feminists are challenging that by creating ethical porn that focuses on the pleasure of women and values consent. Martinson’s campaign may be couched in the language of a progressive activist, but the argument is the same as his conservative predecessors. Harvard senior Will Long, who launched an anti-porn campaign inspired by Martinson’s, told Inside Higher Ed that porn “is really the ultimate example of abstracting away a person, someone’s daughter, into an object of gratification.” Interesting, a lesson on objectification from a man who describes a human being only as “someone’s daughter.”

While the campaign has generated buzz, it hasn’t moved the school’s policy. Notre Dame spokesman Paul J. Browne told Inside Higher Ed that, while, “We recognize that pornography is exploitative and not a victimless crime,” students are expected to “self-filter” the sites they visit.

Feminist writer and sex educator Jaclyn Friedman, whose book Unscrewed asserts that women live in an era of empty sexual empowerment, told Philly.com that the campaign is “wrongheaded.”

“If social conservatives on college campuses want to do something on sexual violence, they should start by allowing survivors to lead the conversation,” Friedman said. “There are very few [survivors] who are calling for a porn Wi-Fi ban.”

just the usual swing in generational politics

aimike 01-08-2019 10:10 AM

That would actually make porn valuable again.

aimike 01-08-2019 10:11 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CjTheFish (Post 22392296)
Porn will never die.

Free porn will never die. Paying for Porn died along time ago.


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