For the Children!
Jun. 2nd, 2006 11:56 amOkay, y'know, maybe this is really a stupid question. But it's been bugging me lately.
One of the givens whenever discussions about porn or information about sex or anything like that comes up is "We've got to protect the children! Keep this away from the children!" Honestly, why? What's the problem if kids see naked people, or even people having sex? Seriously, kids who haven't hit puberty won't care, they think kissing is gross, they wouldn't even believe descriptions of sex. And if kids have hit puberty, then they're going to be able to find pictures of naked people one of many places. And even if they couldn't...
So what? Why are people so set on keeping kids ignorant about sex? Ignorance doesn't protect people, and seeing somebody naked isn't going to scar a kid for life.
Yeah, I'm never getting elected to political office now. And if I ever have kids, maybe I'll get all paranoid about keeping them away from naked people too. But right now, I just don't get it.
One of the givens whenever discussions about porn or information about sex or anything like that comes up is "We've got to protect the children! Keep this away from the children!" Honestly, why? What's the problem if kids see naked people, or even people having sex? Seriously, kids who haven't hit puberty won't care, they think kissing is gross, they wouldn't even believe descriptions of sex. And if kids have hit puberty, then they're going to be able to find pictures of naked people one of many places. And even if they couldn't...
So what? Why are people so set on keeping kids ignorant about sex? Ignorance doesn't protect people, and seeing somebody naked isn't going to scar a kid for life.
Yeah, I'm never getting elected to political office now. And if I ever have kids, maybe I'll get all paranoid about keeping them away from naked people too. But right now, I just don't get it.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-02 05:14 pm (UTC)No, I can't define 'disrespectful' porn. It's a wide category. I'd be inclined to say, hell, just see "National Lampoon style sexual humor" and that's a pretty good definition. Except it's not. :p
no subject
Date: 2006-06-02 06:08 pm (UTC)And yes, there's a lot of unrealistic, fucked up porn, probably in part because porn is already forbidden, so once you've broken that taboo, why not break some more? Part of the appeal of some porn is the forbidden nasty aspect. And then there's porn that's just "Hey! Hot people having sex!"
The screwed up part's just not the nudity and sex, it's the other parts. Just like with anything else. I wonder if there'd be more of a drive to make more "friendly" or "happy" porn if it wasn't illegal in so many states. Europe has a lot more random nudity on TV than we do, are their kids any more messed up?
But it's not something new, either. Authority throughout time has wanted to punish or control sex, and I'm not sure why. I guess it's a matter of showing control, and of preventing people from enjoying something outside the authority's control? I'm not sure.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-02 10:23 pm (UTC)Becuase, really, you see a naked body in that position, you've seen 'em all. Certainly after four or five, you need new positions.
And porn doesn't encourage men to think of women as, you know, people, rather than sides of meat. The very nature of porn - stimulation entirely on peripheral physical features rather than, you know, personality or mind being involved at ALL - encourages further dehumanizing of the people involved - male OR female - and thus making the act of sex little more than the grunting of animals.
(And here's where I expect you to say "That's what it is, isn't it?" which will merely prove my point.)
no subject
Date: 2006-06-02 10:25 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-03 02:27 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-03 04:50 am (UTC)Exposure to porn doesn't screw anybody up unless they were screwed up already. If we want to talk about anecdotal evidence, when I was really young, I found a pile of porn in my mom's boyfriend's house. I don't remember most of it, since I have a terrible memory, but I'll always remember one magazine that had a story and series of pictures about two women who lived together and had sex on the hood of their classic mustang. Granted, I have an unnatural attraction to mustangs, but having seen that imagery actually made it easier for me years later to understand what was going on when I started feeling attracted to other woman and made me feel like it must not be so wrong or unnatural. I have since then also seen a lot of other porn, such as pictures of women having sex with squid, but it certainly hasn't made me think that everything I see in porn is OK for me to do myself.
Despite the low opinions our society has of its children, kids are actually very good at telling the difference between reality and fantasy. Despite the fact that the news is telling us to be worried for our kids not being able to know right from wrong because of violent video games, research consistantly show that healthy children aren't negatively effected by violent games or TV. This will carry over to porn as well. When I first discovered anime when I was 15 and rented one in which monsters rape young women, it certainly didn't make me or my brother go out and start raping people. Because it was a fucking cartoon. Children understand this.
My mom sure was pissed when she saw what we were watching, though.
Folks who specialize in telling you how you should raise your children (the kind that actually went to school and have done research and know what they're talking about, no the kind you see on TV) will tell parents that they should introduce their kids to what sex is when they're young. They might not understand every detail, but they should have heard of sperm and ova long before sixth grade, or whenever the public school system teached sex ed. And you shouldn't talk to your kids just once. Start early and bring up the subject often. That way when your kid is old enough to get someone pregnant (or get pregnant), they'll be more likely to listen to you or come to you with questions when you try to explain how not to get pregnant.
But parents are afraid. They're afraid of having that conversation with their kids because their own parents couldn't do anything more than try to scare them into not being sexual beings. Hiding information from children is a way of controling them and for some parents, it's easier to control then to teach.
More on control below.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-03 05:16 am (UTC)In our own culture, sexuality in general is still frowned on to a great degree. Lots of parents today think there's something wrong with their kids, whether male or female, when they catch them masturbating. Male homosexuality is far more socially stigmatized than female sexuality. Also, the idea of having sex with prostitutes or any woman one isn't married to is expressly forbidden by an overwhelming number of religious and secular traditions, including socialism. Historically in the U.S., male sexuality has been heavily regulated. There have been times when a man who had sex with someone of another race would be looked won upon and were subject to legal penalties. Sexuality for men and women is still regulated through age of consent laws. In Kansas, all sex with anyone under the age of 16 is illegal, even if both partners are under 16 and the same age. If a girl under the age of 16 sought prenatal care, it would be assumed she was a victim of rape and her partner could be prosecuted.
Christian control over male sexuality is incredibly complex. There are plenty of schools of thought which make the ideal of male sexuality celibacy. They didn't just tell women they had to reign their hormones in. In Catholicism before the 12th century, castration was not uncommon among monks and some lay people. Judaism requires that men get circumsized, which reduces pleasure during sex. This is not the reason Jews get circumsized, but it is the reason it became so popular in the US. It was supposed to be a way to get boys to masturbate less. Now, supposedly, it' sconsidered healthier than going uncircumsized (even though there's only very weak and unconfirmed evidence to support this). Really, people let doctors cut up their babies because they want them to look "normal" and not be shunned. They're already setting the groundwork to control their boy's sex life.
I'm unclear on whether you meant tos ay that prostitues are not controlled. It seems as if you're saying only "good" women are. If anything, prostitutes are controlled more than any other woman. Their trade is illegal in most places, after all (I'm sticking to the U.S. at this point). They get arrested for exchanging something that should belong to no one but themselves for money. Because we make it illegal, however, their bodies and sexuality no longer belong to them. They have to seek protection from cops and from people who will rape and beat prostitutes because they know they have no way to defend themselves legally. They end up selling themselves to pimps who control not just their sexuality, but every aspect of their lives.
Even in the one state where prostitution is legal, the women are still controlled. They have to work in certain places, at certain times. They can't live with a man who they aren't married to, because he might be a pimp. They have to get regular check ups, which sounds good, but the state can lock them up in quarantine whenever it feels like it. Instead of being slaves to some pimp, they're slaves to the state.
Now, men and women are certainly not equal and there are a lot of cases in which female sexuality is demonized more than male sexuality is. We could make a very strong case for the idea that Christianity has been making a two thousand year crusade to vilify female sexuality. I do strongly believe that women need to take control of their own sexuality and be proud of it. However, it is beyond ignorant to say that controling sex is only about controling women. Controling sex is about controling people, men and women can be victims or perpetraters.