Published by Morality in Media; 475 Riverside Drive; New York, NY 10115
Introduction
Whether pornography has any significant harmful effects on consumers continues to be a
controversial issue, not only for average citizens but also for behavioral scientists.
This is not surprising in light of the fact that two national commissions--the Majority Report of the 1970 Presidential Commission on
Obscenity and Pornography and the 1986 unprotected by the First Amendment, a judge or a jury representing a cross
section of the community must determine that the material :
· Taken as a whole, appeals to a prurient (sick, morbid , shameful, or lascivious)
interest in sex;
· Depicts sexual conduct in a patently offensive manner ( i.e. goes beyond contemporary
community standards with regards to depictions of sexual content or activity) ; and
· Taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political , and scientific value.
|
In common parlance, it (pornography) usually means "material that is sexually
explicit and intended primarily for the purpose of sexual arousal." |
Attorney General's Commission on Pornography--came
to diametrically opposed conclusions about this matter.
Some social commentators claim that pornography is mainly a form of entertainment,
possibly educational, sometimes sexually arousing, but essentially harmless. Or, they
claim, at the very least, that there is no good scientific evidence of harm. Other social
commentators claim more dire consequences and give as examples recent cases, played up by
the media, of sex-murderers who have claimed that pornography "made them do it."
LDS Perspective
I believe the
information shared in this article about pornography are as useful to us as
members of the LDS Church as it is for those who are non-LDS.
Defining Pornography and Obscenity
To ascertain something about pornography's effects, we first need to define it. The word
"pornography" comes from the Greek words "porno and "graphia"
meaning "depictions of the activities of whores." In common parlance, it usually
means "material that is sexually explicit and intended primarily for the purpose of
sexual arousal."
"Obscenity," however, is a legal term which was defined by the U.S. Supreme
Court in its 1973 Miller V. California decision. For something to be found obscene, and
therefore the material has to meet all three tests before it can be found obscene in the eyes of the
law and its distribution prohibited. This means that something could be regarded as
"pornographic" but still not be obscene, such as an explicit sex film produced
and used to teach medical students about human sexuality, or a film or book with serious
artistic and/or literary value which has some explicit sexual content.
Thus, the Supreme Court has protected a wide variety of sexual matter in movies, books,
magazines and in other formats from being prohibited for sale and exhibition to adults
(there is a stricter standard with respect to minors). Under the Miller test, however, the
distribution of pornographic material which is obscene, such as most of what has been
called "hardcore," can be prohibited and penalties proscribed.
The distribution of obscenity is prohibited on the federal level and on the state level in
over 40 states. While enforcement of obscenity laws has increased in recent years,
particularly at the federal level, enforcement is at best sporadic in many parts of the
nation.
This lack of enforcement, especially at the state and local levels, may be attributable,
in part, to the view of many people and, in particular, public officials that pornography
is essentially harmless or, at the least, that there is little or no real evidence of
harm.
Effects On Adults
Data From Clinical Case Studies
In reviewing the literature on the effects of pornography, there is a variety of evidence
suggesting risk and the possibility of harm from being immersed in repeated exposure to
pornography. These data come primarily from three sources:
· Clinical case history data
· Field studies
· Experimental laboratory type studies.
Clinical case history data come from the offices of professional health care personnel
treating individuals with sexual dysfunctions, as well as from clergy - and attorneys who
counsel or provide services to sexually troubled individuals. Also, in this category is
the evidence provided by sexual addicts affiliated with such national support groups as
"Sexaholics Anonymous," or in treatment at such centers as the Institute for
Behavioral Medicine at Golden Valley, Minnesota.
As a clinical psychologist, I have treated, over many years, approximately 300 sex
addicts, sex offenders, or other individuals (96% male) with sexual illnesses. This
includes many types of unwanted compulsive sexual acting-out, plus such things as child
molestation, exhibitionism, voyeurism, sadomasochism, fetishism, and rape. With only
several exceptions, pornography has been a major or minor contributor or facilitator in
the acquisition of their deviation or sexual addiction.
However, where pornography was a contributor or facilitator, regardless of the nature of
the sex deviation or addiction, I found a four-factor syndrome common to nearly all of my
clients, with almost no exceptions, especially in their early involvement with
pornography.
1. Addiction
The first change that happened was an addiction-effect. The porn-consumers got hooked.
Once involved in pornographic materials, they kept coming back for more and still more.
The material seemed to provide a very powerful sexual stimulant or aphrodisiac effect,
followed by sexual release, most often through masturbation. The pornography provided very
exciting and powerful imagery which they frequently recalled to mind and elaborated on in
their fantasies.
Once addicted, they could not throw off their dependence on the material by themselves,
despite many negative consequences such as divorce, loss of family, and problems with the
law (as with sexual assault, harassment or abuse of fellow employees).
I also found, anecdotally, that many of my most intelligent male patients appeared to be
the most vulnerable--perhaps because they had a greater capacity to fantasize, which
heightened the intensity of the experience and made them more susceptible to being
conditioned into an addiction.
While any male is vulnerable, attorneys, accountants and media people seemed, in my
experience, most vulnerable to these addictions. This is simply an anecdotal impression.
However, Sgt. Bob Navarro, a longtime investigator of the porno industry with the Los
Angeles Police Department, has commented, "Believe it or not- the higher their
education, the more prone these people are to becoming addicted to this material, and, of
course, the more money they have to spend on it...Many people have testified as to their
extreme addiction to the material in terms of having their whole lives consumed by it:
sitting for hours masturbating to adult material and needing progressively stronger,
heavier, harder material to give them a bigger kick. Like an alcoholic or a drug addict
they are looking for that big kick and they need more just to keep them at that level of
feeling 'OK."' (1)
One of my patients was so deeply addicted that he could not stay away from pornography for 90 days, even for $1,000. It is difficult for
non-addicts to comprehend the totally driven nature of a sex addict. When the
"wave" hits them, nothing can stand in the way of getting what they want-whether
that be pornography accompanied by masturbation, sex from a prostitute, molesting a child,
or raping a woman.
An example might help illustrate this problem. Ralph was a sexual addict, married 12 years
with three children. He was active in his church and held sincere, high moral principles.
He believed in the Ten Commandments and opposed adultery'. Yet his particular cycle
involved pornography -use, followed by paid sex with prostitutes. After each incident, he
begged God for forgiveness and swore it that it would never happen again. But did, again
and again.
Since the trigger of each adulterous act was pornography-use, we decided to try to free
him from his dependence on this material. I asked him to write me a check for $1,000,
indicating that I would return it if he went 90 days without using pornography. Ralph
loved to hang on to his money and was quite attracted to our strategy. "There's no
way I'd look at dirty videos or magazines if I knew it would cost me a thousand
dollars!" he said.
He managed to resist temptation remarkably well for a while. But on the 87th day, he drove
past an "adult" bookstore in an unfamiliar city while on a business trip. He
slammed on the brakes, entered the store, and went virtually berserk for 90 minutes. When
I saw him the following week, he tearfully confessed that he had lost his $1,000. Since he
had gone 87 days "sober," I decided to give him another chance.
So we started another 90-day "sobriety" cycle. We both felt that if he could go
87 days, he could certainly make 90 if we tried again, especially if it meant recovering
his $1,000.
This time he went only 14 days before he relapsed. He lost his money, which was given to a
charity. He was extremely committed to quit in order to save his marriage and to live in
harmony with his religious principles. But that was not the case. In my opinion, even if
he had given me $10,000, he still would have relapsed. When the wave hits them, these men
are consumed by their appetite, regardless of the costs or consequences. Their addiction
virtually rules their lives.
2. Escalation
The second phase was an escalation-effect. With the passage of time, the addicted required
rougher, more explicit- more deviant, and "kinky" kinds of sexual material to
get their "highs" and "sexual turn-ons." It was reminiscent of
individuals afflicted with drug addictions. Over time there is nearly always an increasing
need for more of the stimulant to get the same initial effect.
If their wives or girlfriends were involved with them, they eventually pushed their
partners into doing increasingly bizarre and deviant sexual activities. In many cases,
this resulted in a rupture in the relationship when the woman refused to go
further-often
leading to much conflict, separation or divorce.
Being married or being in a relationship with a willing sexual partner did not solve their
problem. Their addiction and escalation were manly due to the powerful sexual imagery in
their minds, implanted there by the exposure to pornography. They often preferred this
sexual imagery, accompanied by masturbation, to sexual intercourse itself. This nearly
always diminished their capacity to love and express affection to their partner in their
intimate relations. The fantasy was all-powerful, much to the chagrin and disappointment
of their partner. Their sex drive had been diverted to a degree away from their spouse.
And the spouse could easily sense this, and often felt very lonely and rejected.
I have had a number of couple-clients where the wife tearfully reported that her husband
preferred to masturbate to pornography than to make love to her.
3. Desensitization
The third phase that happened was desensitization. Material (in books, magazines or
film/videos) which was originally perceived as shocking, taboo-breaking, illegal,
repulsive or immoral, though still sexually arousing, in time came to be seen as
acceptable and commonplace. The sexual activity depicted in the pornography (no matter how
antisocial or deviant) became legitimized. There was increasingly a sense that
"everybody does it" and this gave them permission to also do it, even though the
activity was possibly illegal and contrary to their previous moral beliefs and personal
standards.
4. Acting Out Sexually
The fourth phase that occurred was an increasing tendency to act out sexually the
behaviors viewed in the pornography that the porn-consumers had been repeatedly exposed
to, including compulsive promiscuity, exhibitionism, group sex, voyeurism, frequenting
massage parlors, having sex with minor children, rape, and inflicting pain on themselves
or a partner during sex. This behavior frequently grew into a sexual addiction which they
found themselves locked into and unable to change or reverse--no matter what the negative
consequences were in their life.
Many examples of negative effects from pornography-use come from the private or clinical
practice of psychotherapists, physicians, counselors, attorneys, and ministers. Here we
come face to face with real people who are in some kind of significant trouble or pain. A
few examples might illustrate this.
Deputy Mayor Arrested: The 46-year~old Deputy Mayor of the City of Los Angeles attended a
west L.A. porn theater one afternoon a few years ago. While watching the sex film, he
became so aroused that he started to sexually assault a patron sitting next to him. The
individual turned out to be an undercover city vice-squad officer. The Deputy Mayor was
arrested, booked, and found guilty in a subsequent trial. This distinguished public
servant left the office shamed and humiliated, his career in shambles.
Marriage Threatened:
A 36-year-old married male, college-educated, a professional and very
successful financially, had an addiction to pornography, masturbation and frequenting
massage parlors where he had paid sex. He had an excellent marriage, four children and was
very active in his church, where he assumed important positions of responsibility. While
he felt guilty about his engagement in illicit sex, which was contrary to his religious,
ethic, and personal values and had the potential of seriously disturbing his marriage
if
found out, he compulsively continued to do that which, at a rational level, he did not
want to do.
His problem came to light when he infected his wife with a venereal disease. This created
many serious and disturbing consequences in his life and marriage.
Incest: A 30-year-old single male, religiously active and very committed to his faith, had
a history of pornography-addiction. He was too shy and backward to ask adult females on
dates. So he developed intimate relationships with his four-and seven-year-old nieces and
their girlfriends which culminated in his repeatedly sexually molesting them. The modeling
of explicit sexual activity in the "adult" pornography which he consumed helped
fuel his sexual appetite and interest in these children.
Because of his guilt over what he was doing, he eventually sought professional help.
However, his state had a "disclosure law" which required that he be reported to
state officials for his sexual abuse of these children. Because of his cooperative
attitude and the fact that he sought treatment on his own, he was placed on probation,
received long term psychotherapy and is now living a more normal life.
Serial Rapist: I was asked to consult on a case where a Phoenix-Tucson area professional
person, president of his firm and head of his church's committee on helping troubled
children, was found to be a serial rapist who had violently raped a number of women at gun
or knife-point in the Arizona area. In doing the background study on him, I found him to
come from an exemplary background and trouble-free childhood. He was an outstanding
student in high school and college.
His wife, children, business, and church associates had not the slightest inkling of his
double life or dark side. The only significant negative factor in his life was an early
adolescent addiction to pornography which, for the most part, was kept secret from others.
This gradually escalated over a period of years, eventually leading to spending many hours
and incurring great expense in "adult" bookstores, looking at violent video-porn
movies and masturbating to these.
His first rape was triggered by seeing a close resemblance in the woman he assaulted to
the leading character in a porn movie he had seen earlier in the day. Reality and fantasy
had become extremely blurred for him as he acted out his pathological sexual fantasies.
Most Frequent Consequences: However, in my clinical experience, the major consequence of being addicted to pornography
is not the probability or possibility of committing a serious sex crime (though this can
and does occur), but rather its disturbance of the fragile bonds of intimate family
and marital relationships. This is where the most grievous pain , damage and sorrow
occurs. There is repeatedly an interference with or even destruction of healthy love and
sexual relationships with long term bonded partners. If one asks if porn is responsible or
causes any sex crimes, the answer is unequivocally in the affirmative, but that is only
the "tip of the iceberg."
In some patients, I find that there is an almost instant addiction,
while with others, it may take 5-10 years of erratic exposure to get hooked. But like a
latent cancer, it almost never disappears on its own or reverses its course unless there
is some therapeutic intervention.
Pornography's Impact On Psychosexual Development
It should be noted that other kinds of data which bear on these issues come from
therapists who see symptoms of arrested development in the psychosexual growth of the
heavy consumers of pornography they are treating.
An example would be psychiatrist Harold Voth, who is on the faculty of the Karl Menninger
School of Psychiatry in Topeka, Kansas. Dr Voth sees pornography as typically depicting
perverse sex, degradation through sex, violent sex, and transient, meaningless sex--all of
which are reflections of incomplete and abnormal human development. As he notes, healthy
mature people do not behave in these ways. (2)
However, he states, there are millions of people who appear manifestly healthy, but who
also harbor substantial latent sicknesses which are residues of developmental arrests or
abnormal development which may find expression in sexual perversions. Thus, viewing
pornography, most of which depicts perverse behavior, activates the developmental sexual
arrests which exist in millions of people.
He sees these people as developing a kind of addiction for pornography, thus receiving
many exposures to it over time. These pornographic stimuli promote regressive behavior
rather than more mature behavior.
Dr. Voth sees such exposure as especially damaging to the young who are on the threshold
of entering into an active sexual life. For them, these vital processes should be guided
toward greater maturity, not retrogressively toward perversion or transient, meaningless
sex. As he states, "Society and individuals alike can only be harmed when we
legitimize abnormal behavior."
Dr. Voth also notes that some men become dissatisfied
with their wives whom they believe to be inadequate (and vice versa) after viewing the
exaggerated sexual prowess as depicted by the typical pornographic movie. He suggests that
society has the responsibility to protect itself from itself--that is, from the elements
within society which harm it. He sees pornography as appealing to sexuality at its worst,
and since mature sexuality is so essential to the heterosexual bond and to family life, he
believes steps should be taken to clearly identify pornography as unhealthy with many
risks associated with its consumption.
Conditioning into Deviancy
Other cause/effect data come from the conditioning laboratories of investigators such as
Dr. Stanley Rachman. In his research, he demonstrated that, with the use of highly erotic
pictures, sexual deviations could be created in adult male subjects in a laboratory
setting. He was actually able to condition, in two separate experiments, 100% of his male
subjects into a sexual deviancy (fetishism). (3)
Additionally, the work of R.L. McGuire, author of a study, "Sexual Deviation as
Conditioned Behavior: A Hypothesis," suggests that exposure to special sexual
experiences (which could include witnessing pornography), and then masturbating to the
fantasy of this exposure, can sometimes later lead to participation in deviant sexual
acts. (4)
The considerable literature on therapy for sex deviates suggests that their sexual
orientation can sometimes be changed (reconditioned) with the use of explicit sex films as
a therapeutic tool. (5) If these data are valid, then one must also allow for the
possibility that deliberate or accidental exposure to pornography or deviant real life sex
experiences can also facilitate the conditioning of individuals into sexual aberrations.
Psychologist Patrick Carnes (currently the leading U.S. researcher on sexual addictions)
has published a series of research and data-based books, bringing to national awareness
the problem of out-of-control, compulsive sexual behavior. His latest volume documents a
host of serious legal, marital, and health consequences of such compulsions. (6)
He found that among 932 sex addicts studied, 90% of the men and 77% of the women report
pornography as significant to their addictions. He also found that two common elements in
the early etiology of sexually addictive behavior are childhood sexual abuse and frequent
pornography accompanied by masturbation.
Rather ironically, Dr. Carnes also found that many therapists (psychologists,
psychiatrists, and social workers) suffer from sexual addictions and inappropriate
"acting out" sexual behavior. As he put it, "One of the discoveries
that emerged from our survey is that women addicts seeking help are often sexually abused
by their therapists."
Therapists have also found their malpractice insurance rates rising dramatically in recent
years, due in part to lawsuits brought against significant numbers of their colleagues who
have sexually abused or exploited clients in the course of treatment. This suggests that
compulsive sexual behavior is a problem even for practitioners in the therapeutic
community. (7)
All Sex Deviations Appear
To Be Learned Behaviors
The best evidence to date suggests that most or all sexual deviations are learned
behaviors, usually through inadvertent or accidental conditioning. There is no convincing
evidence, to date, suggesting the hereditary transmission of any pathological sexual
behavior pattern such as rape, incest, pedophilia, exhibitionism, or promiscuity.
As McGuire explains it, as a man repeatedly masturbates to a vivid sexual fantasy as his
exclusive outlet (introduced by a real life experience or possibly pornography), the
pleasurable experiences endow the deviant fantasy (rape, molesting children, injuring
one's partner while having sex, etc.) with increasing erotic value. The orgasm experienced
then provides the critical reinforcing event for the conditioning of the fantasy preceding
or accompanying the act. (8)
McGuire indicates that any type of sexual deviation can be acquired in this way, that it
may include several unrelated deviations in one individual and that it cannot be
eliminated even by massive feelings of guilt. His paper cites many case histories to
illustrate this type of conditioning.
Other related studies by D.R. Evans and B.T. Jackson support his thesis. They found that
deviant masturbatory fantasy very significantly affected the habit strength of the
subject's sexual deviation. (9)
Common Pathway to Self Inflicted Sexual illness
In my treatment of primarily male patients with paraphilias (sexual pathology), I
consistently have found that most men are vulnerable to the effects of masturbatory
conditioning to pornography with a consequence of sexual ill health, because we are all
subject to the laws of learning, with few or no exceptions.
In my experience as a sexual therapist, any individual who regularly masturbates to
pornography is at risk of becoming, in time, a sexual addict, as well as conditioning
himself into having a sexual deviancy and/or disturbing a bonded relationship with a
spouse or girlfriend.
A frequent side effect is that it also dramatically reduces their capacity to love (e.g.,
it results in a marked dissociation of sex from friendship, affection, caring, and other
normal healthy emotions and traits which help marital relationships). Their sexual side
becomes in a sense dehumanized. Many of them develop an "alien ego state" (or
dark side), whose core is antisocial lust devoid of most values.
In time, the "high" obtained from masturbating to pornography becomes more
important than real life relationships. It has been commonly thought by health educators
that masturbation has negligible consequences, other than reducing sexual tension. Moral
objections aside, this may be generally true, but one exception would appear to be in the
area of repeatedly masturbating to deviant pornographic imagery (either as memories in the
mind or as explicit pornographic stimuli), which risks (via conditioning) the acquiring of
sexual addictions and/or other sexual pathology.
It makes no difference if one is an eminent physician, attorney, minister, athlete,
corporate executive college president, unskilled laborer, or an average 15-year-old boy.
All can be conditioned into deviancy.
The process of masturbatory conditioning is inexorable and does not spontaneously remiss.
The course of this illness may be slow and is nearly always hidden from view. It is
usually a secret part of the man's life, and like a cancer, it keeps growing and
spreading. It rarely ever reverses itself, and it is also very difficult to treat
and heal.
Denial on the part of the male addict and refusal to confront the problem are typical and
predictable, and this almost always leads to marital or couple disharmony, sometimes
divorce and sometimes the breaking up of other intimate relationships.
Imprinting the Brain
with Sexual Images
The work of psychologist James L. McGaugh at the University of California, Irvine, needs
mention here. His findings (oversimplifying considerably) suggest that memories of
experiences, which occurred at times of emotional arousal (which could include sexual
arousal), get "locked into the brain" by an adrenal gland hormone, epinephrine,
and are difficult to erase. This may partly explain pornography's addicting effect.
Powerful sexually arousing memories of experiences from the past keep intruding themselves
hack on the mind's memory screen, serving to stimulate and erotically arouse the viewer.
If he masturbates to these fantasies, he reinforces the linkage between sexual arousal and
orgasm, with the particular scene or image repeatedly rehearsed in his mind. (10)
One might quickly see the risks involved with large numbers of males being exposed to the
following film. This 8 mm motion picture film, marketed out of Los Angeles, depicts two
Girl Scouts in their green uniforms selling cookies from door to door. At one residence
they are invited in by a mature, sexually aggressive adult male, who proceeds to instantly
seduce them and subject them to a number of unusual and extremely explicit sexual acts,
all shown in greatest detail. The girls are depicted as eagerly enjoying this sexual orgy.
This film is what is usually termed hardcore pornography. This is the kind of pornographic
stimulus (here, a film) that the male viewer can play again and again either in the
privacy of his home or in his mind for his sexual pleasure.
If the research of Rachman, McGuire, McGaugh and scores of other investigators in the area
of human learning has any meaning at all, it would suggest that such a film could be
hazardous. It could potentially condition some male viewers into having reoccurring sexual
fantasies (vividly imprinted into the brain by the epinephrine) which they might
repeatedly masturbate to and then, later, be tempted to act out as sexual advances toward
female minors--especially if they were in Girl Scout uniforms.
The Research On Aggressive Pornography (Porno-Violence)
Aggressive sexual crimes against women are a very serious and escalating problem in the
United States. Recent Senate Judiciary Committee hearings concluded that rape has
increased four times as fast as the overall crime rate over the last decade. And, in fact,
the United States leads the world in rape statistics with a rape rate four times that of
Germany, 13 times as much as England, and 20 times as much as Japan. (11)
In recent years, there has been a considerable body of research on aggressive pornography,
much of it found in hard "R-rated" films. Many of these films are also broadcast
unedited on cable TV and later are available to children in nearly every video store in
America. The typical film shows nude females, or females in sexually arousing situations
and postures, being raped, tortured, or murdered.
The results of this research suggest the possibility of conditioning viewers into
associating sexual arousal with inflicting injury, rape, humiliation, or torture on
females. Where these films are available on videotapes (which most are), these can be
repeatedly viewed in the privacy of one's residence and masturbated to, with the
associated risks of negative or antisocial conditioning and behavior, previously noted.
Drs. Neil Malamuth and Edward Donnerstein noted in their research-based book,
Pornography
and Sexual Aggression, (12) that "Certain forms of pornography (aggressive) can affect
aggressive attitudes toward women and can desensitize an individual's perception of rape.
These attitudes and perceptions are, furthermore, directly related to actual aggressive
behavior against women. ...These results suggest, again, that aggressive pornography does
increase aggression against women."
Drs. Malamuth and Donnerstein also found that watching films, depicting a woman as saying
that she enjoys being raped, increased male acceptance of interpersonal violence against
women and tended to increase the male's acceptance of rape myths (such as believing that
women enjoy rape).
These authors conclude, "There can be relatively long-term, antisocial effects of
movies that portray sexual violence as having positive consequences" (e.g., the woman
indicated she enjoyed being raped, or she said "no" when she really meant
"yes" while being sexually assaulted).
The literature on aggressive pornography is rather impressive in its consistency in
suggesting a variety of harms or possibility of antisocial outcomes from exposure to this
material. This should not be surprising alter 40 years of research on film and TV violence
arriving essentially at the same conclusion. (13)
Dr. Malamuth and associates further found that when college males were exposed to sexually
violent pornography, such as rape and other forms of sexual violence, two-thirds of the
male subjects, following such exposure, indicated an increased willingness to force a
woman into sex acts if they were assured of not being caught or punished.
In similar research by Seymour Feshback and associates, 51% of "normal" UCLA
males indicated the likelihood of emulating a sadomasochistic rape (seen in porn material
they had been exposed to) if they were assured of not getting caught. (14)
.
The Effects Of The 'Rape Myth' On Pornography-Consumers
In a study by Mills College sociologist, Diana Russell, it was found that the depiction
and dissemination of the "rape myth" (e.g., that most women really enjoy having
sex forced upon them) were significant elements in reducing inhibitions to the use of
violence, habituating both males and females to the idea of rape and also accepting sexual
aberrance as "normal" behavior. (15)
She also found that once the seeds of deviant behavior were planted in the male fantasy,
the men were inclined to act out their fantasies. She found that both the fantasies that
were acted out, as well as the mere conceptualization of these deviant fantasies as viable
behaviors, led to considerable conflict and suffering on the part of both males and
females, particularly in their sexual relationships with intimate partners.
The Effects of Non-Violent Pornography
The issue which has caught the attention of some behavioral scientists doing work in this
area is whether it is the violence or the sex that is doing most of the "harm"
when it is fused together in so-called aggressive pornography or porno-violence. Some will
say, "Just eliminate the violence-the sex is OK."
If we look at non-violent pornography which is totally devoid of violence, we may ask,
what about its effects? First, we might indicate several examples of non-violent
pornography which most therapists, as well as most ordinary citizens, would not regard as
healthy models of sexual behavior:
· Child pornography
· Incest type porn (e.g., mother seducing son,
daughter seducing father, older brother
seducing younger sister, etc.)
· Sex with animals
· Group sex
· Sex which humiliates and denigrates women
and their sex role in man/woman relationships (viewed without overt violence)
· Pornography such as that involving the
eager Girl Scout teenagers having two-on-one
sex with the adult male, etc.
· Obscene films which present a massive amount of misinformation or gross distortions
about human sexuality.
All of the above, while lacking violence, still have the potential of having negative
effects on some viewers because they model unhealthy sex role behavior or give false
information about human sexuality. Additionally, nonviolent porn can contribute to
acquiring a great variety of sexual addictions.
Additionally, there exists empirical research on the effects of "adult"
non-violent pornography by researchers Dolf Zillmann and Jennings Bryant. (16) This research
suggests that when experimental subjects are exposed to repeated presentations of hardcore
non-violent adult pornography over a six-week period, they:
· Develop an increased callousness toward women; Trivialize rape as a criminal offense; to
some it was no longer a crime at all;
· Develop distorted perceptions about sexuality;
· Develop an appetite for more deviant, bizarre or violent types of
pornography (escalation); normal sex no longer seemed to "do the job;"
· Devalue the importance of monogamy and lack confidence in marriage as
either a viable or lasting institution, and
· View non-monogamous relationships as normal and natural behavior.
Pornography's Effect on Sexual Satisfaction and Family Values
In further research by Drs. Zillmann and Bryant on prolonged consumption of nonviolent
pornography, their subjects, after many weeks exposure, reported less satisfaction with their partner's sexual performance,
affection, and physical appearance.
The researchers further found an incompatibility of the sexual values in pornography and
the sexual values implicit in enduring intimate relationships, and, in particular, in
marriage. The chief proclamation of pornography is great sexual joy without any
attachment, commitment or responsibility.
Drs. Zillmann and Bryant found that their subjects (both male and female), after intensive
exposure to pornography, had a greater acceptance of pre-and extramarital sex and an
enhancement of the belief that male and female promiscuity is natural.
Extensive exposure also lowered their evaluation of marriage, making this institution
appear less significant and less viable in the future. It also reduced their desire to
have children and promoted the acceptance of male dominance and female servitude.
The authors saw the diminished desire for progeny as reflecting the pornographic
projection of carefree and consequence-free, promiscuous sexuality. Children have no place
in the short-lived relationship in which this maxim is practiced. This would suggest that
the consumption of pornography erodes marital values and the institution of marriage
itself. (17)
1986 Attorney General's
Commission On Pornography
The 10-member panel of the 1986 Attorney General's Commission on Pornography, after
reviewing a great volume of clinical and experimental research, concluded unanimously that
"Substantial exposure to sexually violent materials (violent pornography)...bears a
causal relationship to antisocial acts of sexual violence...," and, "There is a
causal relationship between exposure to sexually violent materials and an increase in
aggressive behavior directed toward women."
The members of the Commission also commented, "The evidence from formal or informal
studies of self-reports of offenders themselves supports the conclusions that the causal
connection we identify relates to actual sexual offenses..." (18)
The Attorney General's Commission on Pornography, in further reviewing the research on
pornographic materials which were not violent but did involve degradation, domination,
subordination and humiliation (of women), concluded, "Substantial exposure to
materials of this type bears some causal relationship to the level of sexual violence,
sexual coercion, or unwanted sexual aggression in the population so exposed...as well as
the incidence of various non-violent forms of discrimination against or subordination of
women in our society." (19)
1970 Presidential Commission On Obscenity & Pornography
If we look at field studies of pornography's effects, we might cite evidence going back to
the 1970 Presidential Commission on Obscenity and Pornography, the Technical Reports of which I carefully reviewed and later
wrote and edited a book entitled, Where Do You Draw the Line? (20)
In a sophisticated study, financed by the Presidential Commission and published in Volume
VII of its Technical Reports, Drs. K.E. Davis and G.N. Braucht assessed the relationship
between exposure to pornography and moral character, deviance in the home and
neighborhood, and sexual behavior. In their study, impressive in its rigorous methodology
and statistical treatment, Drs. Davis and. Braucht, while finding a "positive
relationship between sexual deviance and exposure to pornography at all ages of
exposure," also found that "exposure to pornography is the strongest predictor
of sexual deviance among the early ages of exposure subjects."
In this early age of exposure (to pornography) subgroup, "the amount of exposure was
significantly correlated with a willingness to engage in group sexual relations... (and
other) 'serious' sexual deviance; and there were trends for the number of both high school
heterosexual partners and total homosexual partners to be positively related to
(pornographic) exposure."
This suggests that pornography may act as a facilitator or accelerator of youthful
promiscuity, which could raise health concerns relative to the acquisition and spread of
AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases, as well as sexual addictions.
Correlation alone, of course1 never demonstrates a causal relationship. However, it does
sometimes permit a reasonable hypothesis. Because the researchers had partialed out the
contribution of other key variables in this study, the possibility of causation (of harm
via pornography exposure) was highly suggested.
In another study of 476 reformatory inmates, published in Volume IX of the Commission's
Technical Reports, Dr. Martin Propper notes again and again a relationship between high
exposure to pornography and sexually promiscuous and deviant behavior, as well as
affiliation with groups high in criminal activity and sex deviancy.
In yet another study, published in Volume VII of the Technical Reports, C. Eugene Walker
found that 39% of the sex offenders interviewed indicated that "pornography had
something to do with their committing the sex offense that they were convicted of."
While one must be cautious in interpreting these results, they again raise the possibility
of serious negative outcomes from exposure to pornography.
Sex Offenders' Use Of Pornography
In research conducted by Dr. W. Marshall, almost half of the rapists that he studied used
pornography depicting consenting sex to arouse themselves, preparatory to seeking out a
victim to rape. (21)
Another investigator, Dr. M.J. Goldstein, found that far more of the sex offenders than
the non-offenders he studied wished to, and often did, emulate the acts they saw depicted
in pornography. (22)
In still another study, most of Dr. G.G. Abel's sex offenders said that pornography
increased their appetites for deviant activities (and these were the men who reported the
least control over their deviant urges). (23)
Other investigators have reported that rapists and child molesters use pornography
incitefully, both immediately prior to their crimes and during the actual assaults.
(24)
Still another type of evidence comes from a study conducted by Darrell Pope, a former
Michigan State Police officer, who found that of 38,000 cases of sexual assault on file in
Michigan, 41% involved pornography-exposure just prior to the act or during the act. 25)
Gary Bishop, Serial Killer
Another example of the effects of pornography comes from Gary Bishop, convicted homosexual
pedophile who murdered five young boys in Salt Lake City, Utah in order to conceal his
sexual abuse of them. He wrote in a letter after his conviction: "Pornography was a
determining factor in my downfall. Somehow I became sexually attracted to young boys and I
would fantasize about them naked. Certain bookstores offered sex education, photographic
or art books which occasionally contained pictures of nude boys. I purchased such books
and used them to enhance my masturbatory fantasies."
"But it wasn't enough. I desired more sexually arousing pictures so I enticed boys
into letting me take pictures of them naked. From adult magazines, I also located
addresses of foreign companies specializing in 'kiddie porn' and spent hundreds of dollars
on these magazines and films.
"Such material would temporarily satisfy my cravings, but soon I would need pictures
that were more explicit and revealing. Some of the material I received was shocking and
disgusting at first, but it shortly became commonplace and acceptable. As I continued to
digress further into my perverted behavior, more stimulation was necessary to maintain the
same level of excitement."
"Finding and procuring sexually arousing materials became an obsession. For me,
seeing pornography was like lighting a fuse on a stick of dynamite; I became stimulated
and had to gratify my urges or explode. All boys became mere sexual objects. My conscience
was desensitized and my sexual appetite entirely controlled my actions."
Gary Bishop then continued to tell how he sexually abused and killed his boy victims.
Ted Bundy, Serial Killer
In the case of Ted Bundy, serial killer of possibly 31 young women, he stated in the
videotaped interview hours before his execution, "You are going to kill me, and that
will protect society from me. But out there are many, many more people who are addicted to
pornography, and you are doing nothing about that."
And, while some commentators discount his linking aggressive pornography to his
sex-murders (when he said it fueled his violent thoughts toward women), there seems little
doubt that Bundy consumed a great deal of pornography, much of it violent, from an early
age. This was suggested, not only in the interview with Dr. James Dobson, but also
documented by psychiatrist Dorothy Otnow Lewis in her prior extensive study of Bundy and
his history. (26)
A recent study by FBI researchers of 36 serial killers revealed that 29 were attracted to
pornography and incorporated it into their sexual activity, which included serial
rape-murder. (27)
Denmark Update.
Didn't sex crimes decrease in Denmark with pornography legalized? Apparently
not. Some of the more Serious types of sex crimes such as rape actually
increased in number and rate following the legalization of pornography in
Denmark. (41) The notion that Sex crimes dropped is illusory and was due to the
fact that a number of sex: crimes, Including homosexual prostitution, extra
marital Incest between close relatives, voyeurism (peeping), and “indecency
toward women”, Or frottage, were decriminalized at the time pornography was
legalized, giving the appearance of a decrease in the overall rate of sex
crimes. Because they were no longer counting any of those sex offenses (which,
of course, were still continuing to occur) in their new summaries of sex crime
statistics, it appeared that the incidence of Sex crimes was dropping. Also, one
investigator, B'. Kutchinsky, found that there were unofficial changes In the
handling by police of those sex crimes that remained, which also reduced their
“reported” incidence, further distorting the problem or elusion of decreased
sex offenses. (42)
Effects On Children
Spillover Effect on Children
I find in my clinical practice a spill-over effect where pornography used by adults very
frequently gets into the hands of children living in the home or neighborhood. This can
cause extremely negative outcomes.
Example: A mother brought her pregnant 13-year~old daughter to my office. The girl and her
14-year old boyfriend had discovered her father's secret cache of pornography and had
imitated the sexual acts portrayed in those materials over many months. The ensuing
consequences, including pregnancy, abortion and depression, were very traumatic for the
whole family as well as for both youngsters. The mother divorced her husband because of
the complications surrounding what happened.
Example: Parents of a 14-year-old boy brought their son to me when they discovered that he
was sexually molesting his sister. We found on investigation that cable TV was in the
home, and late at night on one of the channels, there were some very graphic, rough, very
violent depictions of sexuality. He got up at two in the morning, went downstairs, and
watched these films night after night. They became the training manual or "sex
education" that triggered him to assault his sister sexually.
Example: From my private practice--two brothers, ages 9 and 10, stumbled across their
parents' X-rated video tapes and secretly played them for many months while their dad and
mom were at work. They later forced two younger siblings and a neighborhood boy to view
the video tapes, stripped all three children naked, forced dirt, sticks, and small rocks
into their rectums, forced them to engage in oral sex and anal sex, and threatened to
shoot them with a BB gun if they told. This abuse continued for nearly a year before
finally being discovered when one of the younger abused children could no longer tolerate
it and gained the courage to report it.
Effects of Dial-A-Porn on Children
With the sponsorship of the U.S. Dept of Justice, I was commissioned to conduct a pilot
field study on the effects of Dial-A-Porn on children in 1985. I interviewed a number of
children (mostly preteens or early teens), who had become involved with this type of
pornography, and their parents.
When one makes a Dial-A-Porn call, it is usually answered by a very sexy, seductive
sounding female (this may be a recording or a live female) who talks directly to the
caller about how badly she wants to have sex with him. With panting voice, she then tells
him in specific detail all of the things she now wants to do to him sexually. There may be
a second young woman on the line and they may talk about all three having sex together.
They may mention having a sex marathon (dozens of partners) with all of the explicit
details.
In some cases, bondage is part of the scenario (having sex while gagged, handcuffed and
leashed at the neck), suggesting that sex is better if it "hurts so good--don't
stop."
Sex with animals is also included as well as group sex; rape; inviting a married male to
have sex with the "baby-sitter;" a schoolteacher having sex with her students;
inviting the caller to urinate in the woman's face; degrading the woman as a slut and
trash while having sex with her, as well as inviting beatings, torture, and general
physical abuse as part of the sexual activity.
At the time of the study, any youngster of any age could call these porno lines and get
these messages from nearly any place in the country. All they needed was a phone number to
call, and the numbers were very easy to come by. If parents put a "block" on
their phone to prevent these calls, the children merely found another phone to use.
Hooked on Phone Sex: With every one of the children we studied, we found an
"addiction-effect." In every case, without exception, the children (girls as
well as boys) became hooked on this sex by phone and kept going back for more and still
more. None of them ceased until found out. In some cases, more than 300 long distance
calls were made by particular children.
Disclosure usually occurred when the parents later received an enormous phone bill. This
alerted them that something was amiss. Only after investigation (often having to call the
number which was printed on the phone bill) did the parents become aware of what their
children were calling and listening to. There was always a major confrontation, and the
children were usually made to pay the long distance phone costs as well as given a variety
of chastisements, lectures, and/or punishments.
When both parents worked or when there was
a single parent working, left behind were "latch key children" who were not
monitored or supervised for a number of hours during the day. This created a very
difficult problem in controlling phone use. I found that nearly all of the children had
clear memories of a great deal of the content of the calls they heard, even when there was
a time lag of one or two years. I also found that, almost without exception, the children
felt guilty, embarrassed, and ashamed about their involvement with Dial-A-Porn. In nearly
all cases, there were some problems and tensions generated in the parent-child family
relationships because of the Dial-A-Porn calls.
Acting Out Phone Sex: I have also interviewed some children, where as a result of hearing
Dial-A-Porn messages, they engaged in sexual assaults on other children. One 12-year old
boy in Hayward, California listened to Dial-A-Porn for nearly two hours on the phone in
the empty pastor's study between church meetings one Sunday afternoon. A few days later he
sexually assaulted a four-year old girl in his mother's day care center.
He had never been exposed to pornography before. He had never acted out sexually before
and was not a behavior problem in the home. He had never heard or knew of oral sex before
listening to Dial-A-Porn. And this was how he assaulted the girl, forcing oral sex on her
in direct imitation of what he had heard on the phone.
I later interviewed a number of children in Michigan where similar sexual assaults
occurred: males in their early teens, forcing sex on younger females as a result of
listening to Dial-A-Porn. All of these children might be considered victims--the abusers
as well as the abused.
The National Center on Child Abuse and Neglect reported in 1988 that the incidence of
child sexual abuse-reports tripled in the previous six years in the United States. In my
clinical judgment, at least part of this was due to the influence of Dial-A-Porn and other
porn materials as a "how to manual," especially where older children were
sexually abusing younger ones.
Since I conducted this study, Congress enacted legislation
prohibiting obscene Dial-A-Porn messages and restricting access to indecent messages. Many
Dial-A-Porn services, however, continue to operate in violation of this law, and neither
the Justice Department nor the FCC is doing much about it.
Acquiring the Values Which Permeate Hardcore Porn
In a study reported to the 1986 Attorney General's Commission on Pornography by Dr.
Jennings Bryant, 600 American males and females of junior high school age and above were
interviewed about their "out in real life involvement with pornography. 28 He found
that 91% of the males and 82% of the females admitted having been exposed to X-rated,
hardcore pornography. Two-thirds of the males and 40% of the females reported wanting to
try out some of the sexual behaviors they had witnessed.
And, among high school students, 31% of the males and 18% of the females admitted actually
doing some of the things sexually they had seen in the pornography within a few days after
exposure. This clearly suggests the modeling effect or imitative-learning effect, as well
as "triggering effect," that even non violent pornography has on human sexual
behavior in some individuals.
Additionally, it was found that massive (e.g., six weeks) exposure to non-aggressive
pornography was able to change the attitudes and feelings of adult subjects in a
laboratory setting in the direction of making sexual improprieties and transgressions seem
less bad. The victims of such transgressions were also perceived to suffer less and be
less severely wronged. In other words, they had become to some degree desensitized to the
breaking of sexual taboos as a result of the pornography exposure.
As Dr. Jennings Bryant comments, "If the values which permeate the content of most
hardcore pornography are examined, what is found is an almost total suspension of the
sorts of moral judgment that have been espoused in the value systems of most civilized
cultures. Forget trust. Forget family. Forget commitment. Forget love. Forget marriage.
Here, in this world of ultimate physical hedonism, anything goes.
"If we take seriously the social science research literature in areas such as social
learning or cultivation effects, we should expect that the heavy consumer of hardcore
pornography should acquire some of these values which are so markedly different from those
of our mainstream society, especially if the consumer does not have a well developed value
system of his or her own."
And, of course, this is just what Dr. Bryant found in his research reported above.
Influences of Rock Music Porn
Most people would probably agree that music itself--that is, minus the lyrics--is
basically neutral. Music and sound patterns can be attention-getting, pleasing and even
unappealing. When lyrics are added, however, that is another story. It is the lyrics of
songs that impact the brain most dramatically.
Consider the Alphabet Song that nearly every pre-schooler learns, or the radio and TV
jingles or ditties which nearly every child-and adult--find hard to erase from
consciousness. The catchy music helps anchor this information in the conscious mind and
memory.
When one rock group "2 Live Crew" exults in their lyrics about the degradation
of women, the joys of forcing sex on them, busting vaginal walls, and repeatedly referring
to females as bitches, plus many unprintable and dehumanizing indignities, the question
is, can these persuasive communications be without consequences?
Social commentator John Leo calls these "venomous messages...disguised as harmless
fun.... packaged and beamed to kids as entertainment." (29)
Stanley Crouch, a prominent critic and essayist, refers to this music as "sadistic,
misogynist, hateful..." (30)
Columnist George Will raises the question of, "Which words are .lyrics, and which are
testimony?" (31) As he compares the explicit obscene and brutal rock music lyrics
performed by a popular rock group with the court testimony of the teenagers who violently
assaulted and raped the Central Park (New York) jogger several years ago, he notes that
the messages, the words, the communications are essentially identical.
George Will suggests that, as a certainty, the coarsening of a community, the
desensitizing of a society by these words or persuasive communications, so artfully
presented, will have behavior consequences. He further notes that America today is capable
of terrific intolerance about smoking, or toxic waste that threatens trout. He suggests
that only a deeply confused society is more concerned about protecting lungs than minds,
or trout than women.
When one of the Central Park rapists was arrested, he said, "It was something to do.
It was fun." George Will asks, "Where can you get the idea that sexual violence
against women is fun?" His unsettling response:
"From a music store, through Walkman earphones, from boom boxes blaring forth rap
lyrics."
John Leo asks the question, "Why should our daughters have to grow up in a culture in
which musical advice on the domination and abuse of women is accepted as
entertainment?"
Pornography as a Training Manual
We also have a great deal of
information gained from studies treating sex offenders, suggesting that pornography is often used
by them as a
facilitator or "training manual" in not only acquiring their own deviation but
also as a device to break down the resistance and inhibitions of their victims or targets
of molestation--especially when these are children or juveniles. (32)
Bob Peters and Bob Navarro of the Los
Angeles Police Department's Administrative Vice Division cite an in-house study of every
child molestation case referred to them during a 10-year-period which found, in 60% of the
instances, adult or child pornography was used to lower the inhibitions of the children
molested or to excite or sexually arouse the perpetrator of the abuse.
In another study of 43 pedophiles, they found adult or child pornography (magazines,
photos or videos) involved in 100% of the cases investigated. In every interview they
conducted, the officers reported the abusers repeatedly saying the same thing: "I
used this stuff to stimulate the child, to break down his inhibitions." (33)
Child Pornography
The majority of producers of pornography avoid getting mixed up
with child pornography. They draw a line here, and for a very simple reason. The making of
child pornography (using still pictures, video or movies) requires child sexual abuse. In
fact, it is a crime in progress, permanently recorded.
The most they will do is use females over the
age of 17 who look much younger and dress them as "teeny boppers" to suggest
that the viewer is seeing a 12-to 15-year-old engaging in sex. Viewing and masturbating to
this kind of simulated child pornography can still have major negative consequences for
the voyeur in terms of creating a sexual appetite for minors.
It is mainly pedophiles who create true child pornography using children. And they do this
for their own use as well as to exchange or sell the materials they produce. When this
occurs, the children are doubly abused: at the time the films or videos or pictures are
made, and then when others observe their victimization in the years to come and get turned
on sexually by observing the children being sexually used.
Child pornography invariably produces great shame and guilt in the children involved,
especially as they get older and more fully comprehend the enormity of their abuse and
know that there is a permanent record of their degradation out there, circulating around
for people to see--maybe future friends or their own children when grown up. Only
pedophile organizations and the American Civil Liberties Union defend the distribution of
child pornography, which is, of course, illegal everywhere at both national and local
levels.
Other Considerations of Pornography's Effects
People Are Affected by What They See
There is a belief strongly held by some
Americans that pornography (or obscenity), while it may be vulgar and tasteless, is still essentially harmless and has no real effect on the viewer.
However, for someone to suggest that pornography cannot have an effect on you
(including
a harmful one) is to deny the whole notion of education, generally, or to suggest that
people are not affected by what they read and see. If you believe that a pornographic book
or film cannot affect you, then you must also say that Karl Marx's Das
Kapital, the Bible,
the Koran or advertising have no effect on their readers or viewers. But, of
course, hooks
and other media do have an effect on their consumers.
Consider a single book by Ralph Nader,
Unsafe at any Speed. It set in motion a whole series of events leading to legislation which
is now undoubtedly saving thousands of lives yearly on the highway and which put General
Motor's Corvair out of business.
Additionally, astute businessmen would not spend billions of dollars a year on television
advertising if their visual/verbal messages and imagery did not motivate people to buy
deodorant, Chevies, or Pampers. Therefore, the key question is, not whether, but what kind
of an effect does pornography have?
Use of Sexually Explicit Films To Change Sexual Behavior & Attitudes
Many hundreds of sex counseling clinics in the United States daily
make use of explicit sexual pictures, films, books, and videos to change couples' sexual
behavior, beliefs, and attitudes. Other centers use graphic sex films in an attempt to
recondition the sexual behavior of sex offenders.
However, these are as carefully selected and prescribed as a physician would in writing a
prescription for a particular drug to treat a specific illness or infection. No
responsible doctor would ever send a patient to a pharmacy and say, "Take anything
available on the shelf." And no responsible sex therapist would ever say to a patient
who had a specifically focused sexual problem, "Go down to the adult bookstore and
help yourself to anything you find there."
You cannot logically argue that the kind of change which takes place in a sex counseling
clinic can function only one way (just to make people healthy). The possibility certainly
exists that some pornography can harm people through accidental conditioning processes or
modeling and imitative learning of destructive, unhealthy, or illegal kinds of sexual
activity, which some viewers may later act out. This could be especially true for more
impressionable, immature, and vulnerable children and adolescents.
Pornography As A Form of Sex Education
Consider also the spread of sex education courses through schools in the United
States. The assumption is that you can change attitudes and behavior about sex through
some form of teaching and instruction. If you assume that this is so (still a
controversial issue among researchers), then you have to admit to the possibility that
films, magazines, and books which model rape and the dehumanization of females in sexual
scenes are also powerful forms of sex education. This latter type of material educates,
but not necessarily in healthy ways.
Anyone who has seen much pornography knows that most of it is made by men for male
consumption; is extremely sexist; gives a great deal of misinformation about human
sexuality; is devoid of love, relationship, responsibility; mentions nothing about the
risks of sexually transmitted diseases, and for the most part, dehumanizes both male and
female participants. Pornography falsely represents sex, and some of it is very hostile to
females who are often denigrated and humiliated.
If you were to regard pornography as a form of sex education, you would have to label most
of it as miseducation because it presents and models scientifically inaccurate, false and
misleading information about human sexuality, especially female sexual nature and
response
In addition, pornography portrays "unhealthy" or even antisocial kinds of sexual
activity such as sadomasochism, abuse and humiliation of the female, involvement of
minors, incest, group sex, voyeurism, exhibitionism, bestiality, etc. Thus, if we examine
just its educative impact, it presents us with some grounds for concern.
Why Some Claim 'No Effects'
Some of the educated commentators or even "experts" that I know who publicly
suggest that pornography has no effects are just simply unaware of the new
research/studies suggesting harm. There are others who really do not believe what they are
asserting. And, there are still others who will only reluctantly admit to the possibility
of harm from just "violent pornography."
In some cases, they are pretending "not to
know" because of their concern over what
they falsely believe is censorship or loss of First
Amendment rights. Some fear the tyranny of a moralist minority who might take away their
rights to view and use pornography, then later maybe free speech and expression. And, some
are themselves sex addicts with a hidden agenda behind their public posturing. Thus, for
some of them, the issue is political. It also has to do with their personal values and
much less with what any contrary evidence might suggest.
This is somewhat akin to the repeated and pious denial of "effects" of exposure
to extreme media violence by movie and TV executives despite massive evidence to the
contrary--especially concerning exposure to children. These denials, as well as the
contradicting harm-evidence, have been extensively documented by Michael Medved, author of
Hollywood vs. America. (34)
Some of the tobacco institute scientists are still claiming there is no proof of harm from
smoking despite 30 years of carefully researched evidence to the contrary and the deaths
of hundreds of thousands of victims.
One striking example of experts "speaking out of both sides of their mouths" to
different audiences can be found documented in "Misrepresentation of Pornography
Research, Psychology's Role," by Stewart Page. (35) Dr. Zillmann and Dr. Bryant also
touched on this subject in a 1989 book, Pornography: Research Advances and Policy
Considerations. (36)
In summary, some of the experts who deny harm are simply unaware of the new studies and
research suggesting health hazards. With others, it is a matter of their personal politics
and values.
The Feminist Position On Pornography
In reviewing the evidence on the effects of pornography, brief mention should be made
of the feminist position. Their general view is that a great deal of scientific studies
proving or disproving harm are irrelevant and unnecessary. Pornography, on its face, is
abusive and denigrating, especially of women, and you do not have to do research to prove
that.
Sociologist Diana Russell states in her privately published paper, "Pornography, A
Feminist Perspective" (Berkeley 1977), "Pornography is vicious, anti-woman
propaganda. It tells lies about us. It degrades women. Pornography is not made to educate
but to sell, and for the most part, what sells is a bunch of lies about sex and women.
Women are portrayed as enjoying being raped, spanked or beaten, tied up, mutilated,
enslaved, or they accept it as their lot as women to be victims of such experiences. In
the less sadistic films, women are portrayed as turned on and sexually satisfied by doing
anything and everything men order them to do. What this involves is, for the most part,
totally contrary to what we know about female sexuality: i.e. it is almost totally
penis-oriented, often devoid of foreplay, tenderness, or caring, to say nothing of love
and romance."
Legal scholar Catherine MacKinnon argues that pornography is central to the subordination
of women because it eroticizes dominance. As she puts it, "Part of the reason that
women--to the extent that women do--get pleasure out of subordination has to do with their
experiences of abuse very early on. Look at the rape rate. Look at the rate of child
sexual abuse. Women learn to sexualize powerlessness through experiencing their sexuality
under conditions of powerlessness.
"About 38% of all young girls are sexually molested before they reach the age of
maturity. That means their experience of their body's being accessed, aroused, as well as
the experience of being loved and approved is an experience of violation."
MacKinnon believes that women are getting obliterated by pornography and feels that since
harm occurs, one should be able to get an injunction against it. (37)
Susan Brownmiller sees much "woman hatred" in pornography~ suggesting in her
book, Against Our Will, (38) "Pornography, like rape, is a male invention, designed to
dehumanize women, to reduce the female to an object of sexual access. The gut distaste
that a majority of women feel when we look at pornography comes from the gut knowledge
that we and our bodies are being stripped, exposed and contorted for the purpose of
ridicule, to bolster that 'masculine esteem' which gets its kicks and sense of power from
viewing females as anonymous, panting playthings, adult toys, dehumanized objects to be
used, abused, broken and discarded."
The feminists may be right when they insist that proof of harm may be really an irrelevant
issue. We do not set up Presidential commissions to decide whether prostitution or crack
houses" are harmful to the public interest or whether cigarettes can be advertised on
TV. These are all issues which, in one way or another, involve public morality, and
prohibitions against them have evolved out of English common law as well as common
sense legislation using democratic procedures and processes.
It should also be noted here that in a leading obscenity case, Paris Adult Theatre v.
Slaton (1973), the United States Supreme Court expressly rejected the argument that no
regulation of obscenity is permitted without "scientific data" conclusively
demonstrating that exposure to obscene materials adversely affects individuals or society.
The Court stated, in part: "If we accept the unprovable assumption that a complete
education requires the reading of certain books...and the well nigh universal belief that
good books, plays and art lift the spirit, improve the mind, enrich the human personality
and develop character, can we then say that a state legislature may not act on the
corollary assumption that commerce in obscene books, or public exhibitions focused on
obscene conduct, have a tendency to exert a corrupting and debasing impact leading to
antisocial behavior? Many of these effects may be intangible and indistinct, but they are
nonetheless real..."
The decision concluded: "Nothing in the Constitution prohibits a State from reaching
such a conclusion and acting on it legislatively simply because there is no conclusive
evidence or empirical data."
Research Methodology
To the average
reader uninitiated in the complexities of behavioral science and research methodology, mention should I
be made of an important issue which has to do with whether two things you are studying are
related (correlated with each other) or whether one causes or makes the other to happen (a
cause/effect relationship). You can have the first without the second and many people, even
scientists, come to grief over this issue.
Correlation alone never demonstrates or proves a causal relationship, though it can be
suggestive or raise that possibility.
Therefore, the sun rising each morning and a person being consistently hungry at that time
are correlated events. But one does not cause the other to happen. However, the sun rising
in the morning and the outdoor temperature increasing are correlated in a causal way.
Thus, a number of studies suggest a relationship (correlation) between early exposure to
pornography and later sexual promiscuity and deviancy.
Pornography could be one cause of promiscuity.
Or, affiliation with delinquent companions could be a factor contributing to an interest
in pornography as well as to participation in later promiscuous sexual activities.
Or, promiscuity and pornography could be reciprocally and causally related. We are really
not sure what all the causal connections, if any, are in this instance. However, we can
make some good guesses hypotheses which might be tested through further research.
(39)
Sometimes the methodology of behavior science cannot disentangle all of these influences
and precisely measure their individual unique contributions. But, the fact that we cannot
adequately measure them does not mean that they do not occur or that they have no effects.
For example, all of the evidence linking drunk driving with high vehicular accident and
fatality rates is correlational and anecdotal. However, despite this, nearly all of us
would agree that there is probably a cause-effect relationship here. And many laws have been passed as well as public policy decisions made,
based on this assumption.
In addition, I have not heard of any behavioral scientists who are critical of this
interpretation of the data and evidence, even though it is only "correlational."
Frequently, good judgment~ correct inference, and sound logic have to be used--along with
proper scientific data analysis to arrive at reasonable judgments about risk of harm. In
the meantime, all people (including parents) are faced with making daily decisions,
without final knowledge (as they have for eons of time) as to whether or not to continue
smoking or eating foods that may be carcinogenic (even though the data suggesting their
lethality is only correlational or suggestive--not conclusive) and, similarly, whether or
not to expose themselves or their offspring to pornographic materials.
Nobody will ever do the definitive
cause effect study on pornography's effects by
taking young children or even pre-college adolescents, for example, in experimental and
matched control groups, exposing them to various amounts of pornography or porno-violence,
and then following them through for 25 years to see what harm might occur.
Ethical considerations would simply rule out such experiments, and few
or no parents would
permit it. University Human Subjects Review Committees would not approve it. The risks to
the participants would be perceived as too great.
So we will continue, as in the past, to make social policy decisions and law on the basis
of the best evidence available, good common sense, and the data available to us, including
that out of the laboratory of our everyday experience, in handling
pornography, carcinogens in our environment, job and sex discrimination, and a number of
other matters.
We need not claim that we are paralyzed
or immobilized or unable to make these decisions just because there is not final
conclusive proof. There never is. While cigarette manufactures are still
claiming that
there is no conclusive evidence
of a causal connection between smoking and lung cancer (and many other illnesses),
millions of Americans have still chosen to stop smoking in recent years on the basis of:
what evidence that does exist.
In Conclusion
In should be emphasized in this brief essay that it is not possible to review any
more than a few representative studies and summarize some of the trends of current as well
as past research on pornography's effects, focusing especially on the harm issue. But the
studies and other evidence set forth here should still be sufficient to give the reader a
sense of the field and, thus, answer for himself or herself the question of pornography's
potential to change or influence sexual attitudes and behavior in adults as well as
children.
There are many people who still argue that immersing oneself in a milieu of
pornography is devoid of any negative consequences. But, that perhaps reflects their
unfamiliarity with the new literature and research on this issue or maybe a very protected
life experience. For there do indeed exist a number of experimental, field and clinical
studies, and related data that give contrary evidence.
In my clinical practice, I have
daily treated both children and adults who have been unequivocally and repeatedly injured
by exposure to pornography, where the cumulated evidence over many years demonstrates a
cause/effect relationship between such exposure and a variety of harms.
If anyone who reviews this report still has doubts about pornography's effects, I would
suggest that he or she get invited to some meetings of "Sexaholics Anonymous" or
"Sex Addicts Anonymous" and personally witness the pain, trauma, and evidence first hand. Most members of these groups, when they
share their pathology and histories, will implicate pornography as a contributing
facilitator of their compulsive, out-of-control sexual behavior.
These groups are located in almost every major city in America and usually meet up to
seven nights a week. Their times of meeting and location can usually be found by calling
AA (Alcoholics Anonymous--a related organization) which is listed in most city phone
directories.
However, in fairness, it should be emphasized that, as with using alcohol or even some of
the highly addictive drugs, not everyone exposed will become an alcoholic or addicted--at
least in the early stages of use.
But there are risks and there seems little doubt that there are at least some people-even
those who are initially healthy--who can be eventually harmed through repeated exposure to
pornography. In my clinical work, I find pre-teen or adolescent males, who are mostly
innocent and uninformed, being particularly vulnerable to these negative and addictive
effects.
In treating patients with out-of-control sexual and pornography addictions, I have found
that a combination of personal therapy, which always includes the partner's spouse (when
available), and using an addiction model therapeutically, plus involvement with a 12-step
Sexaholics Anonymous type group, yields the most successful healing results.
In a society where some types of pornographic material are protected by the Constitution
and obscenity laws often go unenforced, some individuals may choose to immerse themselves
in a pornographic milieu, just as some people may choose to drink or smoke excessively or use illegal drugs. These individuals should be
made cognizant of the health hazards involved. This kind of knowledge is also especially
important for parents to have since most sexual and pornographic addictions begin in middle childhood or early adolescence and most of the
time without the parents' awareness or the children themselves having a sufficient
understanding of the risks involved.
Obscenity and the First Amendment
Obscenity is not protected speech under the First Amendment. For example, in
Miller v. California; 413 U.S. 15(1973), the Court stated: "This much has been categorically
settled by the United States Supreme Court, that obscene material is unprotected by the
First Amendment." And, in Roth v. United States, 354 U.S. 476 (1957), the Supreme
Court said: "We hold that obscenity is not within the area of
constitutionally protected speech or press."
The First Amendment is not absolute and
never has been. In fact, in addition to
obscenity, there are many other kinds of speech and expression also not protected by the
U.S. Constitution's First Amendment--such as slander, libel, perjury, false advertising,
conspiracy, yelling "fire" in the crowded theater, contempt of court,
copyright
violations and child pornography. The relevant statutes, designed to protect the
public interest, were enacted using democratic processes and can always be revoked or modified if
the elected legislatures choose to do so.
There are a few people who would like to
make the First Amendment absolute, and they
have every right to have that opinion and lobby Congress and their state legislatures
toward that end. However, the Supreme Court, as well as Congress and every state
legislature, has rejected this absolute point of view.
Some individuals confuse anti-obscenity laws with censorship. Technically, censorship is
"prior restraint" on speech by the government, and as the United States
Supreme
Court stated in its 1993 Alexander v. United States decision, the term "prior
restraint" is used to describe government orders forbidding speech
"when issued in advance of the time that such communications are to
occur." Obscenity laws, however, operate subsequent to publication as
punishments for past criminal conduct.
Additional Resources
Helpline for Sexual Addicts: 1-601-844-5036, OutReach Division of American Family
Association, P.O. Drawer 2440, Tupelo, MS 38803
12-Steps to Sexual Addiction Recovery. A Christ-centered Bible Study written by Neal Clement, OutReach Director of the
American Family Association, P.O. Drawer 2440, Tupelo, MS 38803
Don't Touch That Dial. by Barbara Hattemer and H. Robert Showers. A highly recommended new
book for those interested in
further documentation on pornography's effects and the impact of media violence on children
and families. (Huntingdon House, Lafayette, LA: 1993, $9.95)
TV. The World's Greatest Mind-Bender. by Morality in Media is an excellent handbook on
the negative effects of TV and strategies for
coping with it, including a listing of the top 100 TV advertisers. It is available for $3.
00 from Morality in Media, 475 Riverside Drive, New York, NY 10115.
Pornography Has Consequences. by Morality in Media. A pamphlet of excerpts from research
and studies of the effects of pornography. 10 cents each.
Endnotes
(1) "The Pornography Industry Today." The World & I, Dec.1992:
pp.511,516.
(2) Presentation before conference on "Pornography: Solutions Through Law." Dallas, Texas: National Forum Foundation, May
1985.
(3) Rachman, S., "Experimentally Induced Sexual Fetishism."
Psychological Record,
1968: vol.18, p.25.
(4) McGuire, R.J., et al. "Sexual Deviations as Conditioned Behavior: A Hypothesis." Behavior Research Therapy. 1965: vol.2, p.185.
(5) Marquis, J.N., "Orgasmic Reconditioning: Changing Sexual Object Choice Through Controlling Masturbation Fantasies." J.
Behav. Ther. & Exp. Psychiat., 1970: vol.1 pp.263-71.
(6) Carnes, Patrick, Don't Call It Love: Recovery From Sexual Addictions.
New York: Bantam Books, 1991.
(7) Blanchard, G.T., "The Role of Sexual Addictions in the Sexual Exploitation of Patients by Male Psychiatrists." Am Journal of
Preventive Psychiatry & Neurology, Spring 1991.
(8) McGuire, R.J. et al, Sexual Deviation as Conditioned Behavior,
Behavior Research & Therapy, 1965 vol.2, p.185.
(9) Evans, D. R., "Masturbatory Fantasy & Sexual Deviation." Behavioral Research & Therapy, 1968: vol.6, p.17; and: Jackson,
B.T., "A Case of Voyeurism Treated by Counter Conditioning." Behavior Research & Therapy, 1969: vol.7, p.133.
(10) "Preserving the Presence of the Past." American Psychologist (Feb.1983):
p.161.
(11) Newsweek, July 23, 1990, pp.51-52.
(12) Malamuth, Neil Dr. & Donnerstein, Edward Dr. (eds.),
Pornography and Sexual Aggression. New York: Academic Press, 1984.
(13) Rubinstein, E. "Television & Behavior." American Psychologist,
1983: vol 38, p.820; and: Eron L., American Psychologist Association Monitor (May 1992): vol.23,
no 4, pp.11.
(14) "Sex and Aggression: Proving the Link." Psychology Today (Nov.1978): pp. 11 1-j 12; and: "Rape Fantasies as a Function of
Exposure to Violent-Sexual Stimuli." Archives of Sexual Behavior, 1986: vol.10, pp.
34-37.
(15) Russell, Diana, Rape & Marriage, Beverly Hills, CA: Sage 1982.
(16) "Symposium on Media Violence and Pornography." Toronto, Canada:
Media Action Group, 1984; and: Testimony given to U.S. Attorney General's Commission on Pornography, Houston, Texas,
Sept.1985.
(17) Zillmann, D. & Bryant, J., "Pornography's Impact on Sexual Satisfaction" Journal of
Appl. Social Psychology, 1988: vol.18, no.5, pp. 438-453; and: Zillmann, D. & Bryant, 1, "Effects of Prolonged
Consumption of Pornography on Family Values." Journal of Family Issues. Dec. 1988): vol.9, no.4, pp.518-544.
(18) Attorney General's Commission on Pornography: Final Report.
Washington D.C., U.S. Printing Office (1986), pp. 324-326.
(19) Attorney General's Commission: -Washington D.C., U.S. Printing Office (1986),
pp. 333-334.
(20) Where Do You Draw the Line?: Explorations in Media
Violence, Pornography & Censorship. ed. Victor B. Cline. Provo UT; Brigham
Young University Press, 1974.
(21) Marshall, W.L., "A Report On the Use of Pornography by Sexual
Offenders." Ottawa, Canada: Federal Department of Justice, 1983.
(22) Goldstein, M.J. et al, Pornography and Sexual Deviance. Berkeley, CA: Univer. of Calif Press, 1973.
(23) Abel, G.G., "Use of Pornography and Erotica by Sex
Offenders." Presented to the U.S. Attorney General's Commission on Pornography. Houston, Texas, 1985.
(24) Silber, M.H. & Pines, A.M., "Pornography & Sexual Abuse
of Women." Sex Roles, 1984: vol.10, pp. 857-868: and: Carter, D.L.
et al (in press), "Use of Pornography in the Criminal & Developmental Histories of Sexual Offenders." Journal of
Interpersonal Violence.
(25) "New Weapon Against Obscenity," June 3, 1983, Paducah (Mich. ) Sun-Democrat.
(26) AP dispatch, Jan 27, 1989, Seattle Times (Wash).
(27) Burgess, A., "The Effects of Pornography on Women and Children Including an Analysis of Sexual Homicide Crime Data."
Testimony before the Subcommittee on Juvenile Justice, Committee on the Judiciary, U.S. Senate. Wash. D.C., 1984.
(28) Bryant Jennings, "Frequency of Exposure, Age of Initial Exposure and Reactions to Initial Exposure to Pornography."
Presented to the Attorney General's Commission Pornography, Houston, Texas, March 1985; and: Bryant, J. & Brown D.,
Uses of Pornography. In Zillmann, D. & Bryant, J. (eds), Pornography:
Research Advances & Policy Considerations. New Jersey: L. Erlbaum & Assoc. 1989.
(29) US. News, July 2,1990.
(30) U.S. News, July 2, 1990.
(31) Newsweek, July 30, 1990.
(32) Burgess, A., "Pornography-Victims &
Perpetrators."
Symposium on Media Violence & Pornography Proceedings Resource Book & Research
Guide (D. Scott, ed.) Toronto: Media Action Group, 1984: pp. 173-183.
(33) The World & I, December, 1992: p.508.
(34) Medved, Michael. Hollywood vs. America. New York: Harper-Collins, 1992: pp. 239-252.
(35) Page, Steward, "Misrepresentation of Pornography
Research." American Psychologist (March 1989): p.578.
(36) Zillmann, Dr. & Bryant, Dr., Pornography: Research Advances and Policy Considerations.
Hillsdale, NJ: L. Erlbaum & Assoc.: pp. 387-482 (1989).
(37) Michigan Today. Ann Arbor, Mich: Univ of Mich., June 1989: pp. 6-8.
(38) Brownmiller, S., Against Our Will: Men. Women. and Rape. New York:
Simon and Schuster, 1975.
(39) Brigham, T.A., On the importance of recognizing the difference between experiments and correlational
studies. American Psychologist (July 1989): vol.44, pp.1077-i078; and: Dominowski,
R.L., "Method Theory and Drawing Inferences." American Psychologist (July 1989): vol. 44,'p. 1078.
(40) University of Chicago Division of Biological Sciences Pritzer School of
Medicine Reports, Winter 1970.
(41) Court, J.H., "Pornography & Sex Crimes." intern.
Journal of Criminology & Penology, 1977: vol.5, pp. 129-157.
(42) Kutchinksy, B., "Toward an Explanation of the Decrease in Registered Sex Crimes in Copenhagen." Tech. Report of
Commission of Obscenity and Pornography, Vol. VII., Wash. D.C.: U.S. Govt. Printing Office, 1971.