Pornography ethics
Pornography is a social problem and is a commodity brought into existence by certain characteristics of a highly developed civilization. The problem with pornography is that any form of censorship or suppression cannot solve it. These aggressive methods would merely aggravate the disease and create other deplorable consequences. Prevention is better than cure, and by diagnosing the psychological motives of those who consume pornography, we may be able to change the instincts involved (McCune, 1985:).In pornography a visual or verbal image acts as a direct stimulus to the erotic drives or impulses, which are always latent and ready to be stimulated in normal people (McCune 1985: 13). Television perhaps more than any other medium, is the average persons first glimpse at pornography. It invades your home through regular programming, cable and videos. A large part of this pornographic blitz pairs sexual pleasure with violence and develops the concept that women are expendable (McCune, 1985: 18). There are countless plots on television dealing with rape, murder, kidnapping, and beatings. All of this done to the leading man's wife or girlfriend a
People are always looking for a form of sex that is different than the associated group of norms. Your telephone has also become a vehicle for pornography through the infamous 900 numbers. There have also been cases where child pornography and prostitution have been organized into sex rings. US Department of Justice, Final Report of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography, 1986. Two grand juries have found thatorganized crime controls 90% of all hard-core pornography in this country alone. The Design Industries Foundation for Aids plastered posters in cities depicting couples of all persuasions engaged in acts of all descriptions. We see pornography in serial murders. People are fascinated with sex and are anxious to see something new or something they have not seen before. " But a judge or jury cannot know what these standards are if the community does not express them and express them loudly. The mere existence of laws like this means nothing however, unless they are enforced and enforced vigorously. We need to make it illegal to employ models under the age of 21 to do sexually explicit poses. Women are tortured for the sexual pleasure of murdering women (United States General Commission on Pornography, 1986: 198).
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