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Old 06-13-2021, 09:43 AM  
dcortez
DINO CORTEZ™
 
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Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Vancouver Island
Posts: 2,145
Quote:
Originally Posted by blackmonsters View Post
This is the most useless argument you can make.

Hollywood is fake; nobody really got shot or murdered or fucked or beat or spit on.
Porn is real, people really do get fucked, beat, spit on and pissed on.

I don't expect my "what-about-hollywood" argument to win any case, but it is necessary to compare apples to apples on the "intent" level from a cultural standpoint.

I agree with a lot of what you say, but at the root of my concerns is the REAL affect that FAKE creative production (mainstream and porn) has on society from a community mental health standpoint.

Of course, the "real-world harm" has to be considered first for the people "doing the job" (the talent), but equally, for a conversation that that has any chance of getting anywhere meaningfully, the societal harm has to be considered as well.

That's why Hollywood has to be dragged into the discussion.

So, mass-produced publicly unrestrained (kids can easily access it) fictional work that glorifies non-consensual psychotic behaviour (hollywood specializes in this), that we generally have decided to lock people up for if they did it "for real", disqualifies itself from any "free speech protection", just as "crying fire in a crowded theatre" is not protected by free speech.

"Speech" that knowingly causes harm, does not enjoy any legal protections.

The "free speech" legal approach may be the practical path to balancing things out today, but moving forward, I don't see any conversations in the adult industry (other than overt perfunctory concerns about ch*ld sexual abuse/human tr*fficking) regarding taking greater responsibility for the cultural messaging of its members' creations.

In some countries, using adult models to create the impression of underage sexuality is just as illegal as actually using underage models - as it should be.

That speaks directly to my point, and the topic of "abuse" is much broader than just the low hanging fruit that everyone picks, ch*ld abuse.

A producer who creates "legal" porn that obviously panders to ped*s, IS creating k*ddy porn, and the "free speech argument", while in court might win in some countries, from the level I'm talking about, it has no value nor place in society.

The law is always last. Cultural norms, the institutions that act as agencies of this (and sadly, big money), are what drives the laws.

The adult industry has a responsibility to raise this discussion to a more prominent level - or be happy with knowingly condemning most responsible adult producers and talent to being forever stigmatized by mainstream as "creepy dangerous people".

We are not.
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