May 10, 2023 |
To Be Fair, This Makes Just as Much Sense as Alex Jonesâ Frog Theory |
LONDON â This might come as a bit of a shock to a lot of folks in the sprawling, ideologically diverse, modern anti-porn movement, but the truth is, even those of us who make porn for a living donât think it should be used as a form of sex education. Among other things, this is why youâll often hear directors, performers and fans of adult entertainment emphasize that porn, by and large, represents fantasy scenarios. And while that notion invites the question of whether fantasizing about having sex with strangers inside a minivan, or having sex with oneâs pool boy, plumber or pizza guy is really a common enough phenomenon to justify the creation of roughly 47 billion scenes featuring those tropes, no porn fan Iâve met has ever suggested to me that they believed they were about to watch a documentary when they logged in to BangBus.com. Granted, younger people generally are considered more apt to copy behaviors they see around them than are adults â which is why weâve seen such massive effort from social conservatives to keep kids from watching mixed martial arts events, films in the Fast and Furious franchise and press conferences held by George Santos. Wait â whatâs that you say? There arenât major, well-publicized, international campaigns led by social conservatives to keep kids from consuming such things? How odd. To be fair, I suppose itâs hard to argue that watching MMA or listening to Santos tell lies about literally everything under the sun is making girls want to abandon their gender and become boys. Of course, itâs also ludicrous to argue that porn does such a thing, but here we are. And by here, I mean inside the brain of Baroness Jenkin of Kennington, which might sound like a lesser Game of Thrones character, but is in fact, the name of a Peer in the UK House of Lords. According to Lady Jenkin, when young girls see the unspeakable things being done to women in the context of porn, they are âhorrified by what they seeâ â and decide they donât want to grow up to be women at all, with the effect of âpushing some to identify as non-binary or the opposite sex,â as The Christian Institute paraphrased it. âSo it has a very, very dangerous effect,â Lady Jenkin added. âWe have no idea what the long term consequences are going to be with regards to relationships⦠we have to sort it out and we in Parliament have a responsibility to do that.â Do you, though, Lady Jenkin? Do you have a responsibility to âsort it outâ? Pray tell, will any part of this responsibility include speaking to young girls, or to trans folk, or anyone involved in the creation of sexually explicit content, to see if they think your theory has merit? I suspect the answer to that will be a big, fat (but painfully polite, in the British fashion) âNo.â While itâs easy to poke fun of Lady Jenkinâs argument, I suppose in the broader context of novel social theory coming out of the global right-wing political community in recent years, itâs not that strange. Is it any less sensible, for example, than Alex Jonesâ concern over the possibility that tap water is, as he once put it, a âgay bomb, babyâ? âThe reason there’s so many gay people now is because it’s a chemical warfare operation, and I have the government documents where they said they’re going to encourage homosexuality with chemicals so that people don’t have children,â Jones said on a June, 2010 episode of his show. You will be shocked, Iâm sure, to hear that Jones has never produced the âgovernment documentsâ which contained the smoking gun evidence that the U.S. military is using tap water to make people â not just frogs â gay. Iâm guessing Lady Brienne Margaery Jenkin would be aghast at being compared with a deranged conspiracy theory-peddler like Alex Jones. After all, his father wasnât the son of the 4th Baron Rayleigh, and Jones has never been a part of anything called the House of Lords. (The House of Lards, maybe, but not the House of Lords.) While I might not take Lady Jenkin or her âporn is causing girls to go transâ theory seriously, the unfortunate fact is that a lot of legislators and lawmakers, both inside and outside the UK, do take seriously people like her â and they arenât particularly interested in whether theories like this hold any water, because theyâll throw in with anyone who favors the same outcomes they do. Look, Lady Jenkin, letâs be clear here: The reason people like me are opposed to age verification and other mandatory content-filtering measures is we believe theyâre just about inevitably both over and under-inclusive in what they block access to; present serious privacy concerns; encourage the chilling effect of self-censorship by non-adult platforms that arenât sure whether their sites will be blocked, filtered, fined or prosecuted for offering NSFW content that no reasonable person would describe as âpornâ; and are often easily circumvented by anyone familiar with the acronym âVPN.â One last thing, Lady Jenkin: If rough sex in porn is the reason why people are transitioning to another gender, what are we to make of rough sex when itâs depicted within trans porn? Will watching rough porn that features trans performers make already-transitioned viewers want to transition back? Does the answer change if they watch trans porn while drinking tap water? I suppose Iâll have to tune in to Infowars â or a future debate in the House of Lords, perhaps â to find out. Frog photo by Pixabay from Pexels |