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The findings: 76% of all teen girl alerts received are about the bad or the bizarre including sex, rape, abuse, assault, porn, pregnancy, prostitution, kidnapping, runaways and murders. Girls are the victims and the culprits.
Some videos posted on Ryan’s World, a top kids’ channel with more than 30 million subscribers, illustrate the problem. In one, the phrase “You should also buy corn” is rendered in captions as “you should also buy porn.” In other videos, a “beach towel” is transcribed as a “bitch towel,” “buster” becomes “bastard,” a “crab” becomes a “crap,” and a craft video on making a monster-themed dollhouse features a “bed for penis.”
In our own experience and research, spanning three years, we realized that the sexual misconduct we were witnessing was not an anomaly. Rather, it was part of the “normal” spring break experience. An experience in which groping, violence, and rape just come with the territory. It forced us to ask the question: Is there a connection between porn and rape?
Porn culture pervades almost every area of life. More than just the glorification of an extremely disposable view of sex, violent porn is creating predators out of young men and exalting rape and abuse.
To be clear, we know that not everyone who watches violent porn becomes a perpetrator of physical sexual abuse. However,
We recently had a woman send us her story on Instagram, sharing her experience of being sexually abused by her boyfriend. He had forced himself onto her and held her down, even when she tried to get him to stop. She shared, “Afterward, I sat on the ground and cried. He tried to comfort me while I told him, ‘don’t touch me.’ He wasn’t a bad guy and didn’t realize he’d done anything wrong… it turns out he’d seen on porn that women were ‘face f****ed’ this way.”
Children are discovering porn at earlier and earlier ages with unhindered access from any device they can get their hands on. We must cut off the normalization of sexual abuse and rape at its root.
An 18-year-old woman in Ohio is being charged with kidnapping, rape, sexual battery and a variant of distributing child pornography.
The narrative described above is neither surprising nor original; in fact, these kinds of violent desires show up in other aspects of society. Take, for instance, Catherine MacKinnon’s feminist critique of pornography. Porn, she argues, “makes hierarchy sexy” and “eroticizes…dominance and submission.” In the content, women actually “desire dispossession and cruelty,” they “want to be bound, battered, tortured, humiliated.” Women in pornography appear to covet subordination. And in many ways, pornography is just an extension of the everyday enforcement of patriarchy. Pornography mirrors rape fantasies of romance novels. “Inequality,” MacKinnon posits, “is its central dynamic; the illusion of freedom coming together with the reality of force” (MacKinnon 171). In fact, by law, one factor which defines pornography is that “women are presented as sexual objects who experience sexual pleasure in being raped” (Bartlett, Grossman, and Rhode 497). Pornography bears striking similarities to rape fantasies in which, as Vargas-Cooper describes, people are “at the height of their prescribed sex roles.”
“The timespan on his offenses date back several years and include allegations he created child pornographic images/videos during the abuse and that some instances of sexual abuse include a victim while he/she was under the age of 10 years old,” a court document stated. “Some of the incident(s) of sexual abuse also included a weapon. A search warrant conducted at defendant’s residence has confirmed some of the details of the sexual abuse the victim describes.”














