I find that to be a highly suspect claim that it's porn of the last century or past few decades that's been both objectifying women and encoded "male supremacy" into our culture.
That just seems like a wilful desire to ignore history and makes it really hard for me take these generalizations that "porn is bad" and "male sexual desires are bad" discussions seriously.
I learned there have been 100 years of studies all with consistent results confirming the same basic statistic: one of every three girls silently suffer with having been subjected to serious sexual abuse by the age of 18. I thought about that as I attended each of my four daughters high school graduations... looking at my daughter and their girlfriends as they stood on the stage, saddened by the realization that one third of them had been subjected to long term sexual rape. One third of them who would suffer silently for most of their life (that's the other thing I learned: these studies are forced to rely upon anonymous responses from women - who rarely tell anyone about their abuse - they are so full of shame).
What outraged me then - and still outrages me today - is how such information could have been hidden from a highly educated trial attorney such as myself. As it continues to be to this current day.
That is what I thought about as I read this article. A female author writing a story of female objectification and not once mentioning the widespread ongoing raping of female children right under our noses.
As aside, one out of six boys is likewise subjected to serious sexual abuse. Unlike girls, whose sexual abusers are overwhelmingly (95+%) male, the abusers of boys are 'only' 66+% male.
And a point about the shame I mentioned. The abuse we are talking about is overwhelmingly not committed by a stranger. Rather we are talking about long term ongoing abuse by a father, grandfather, uncle, or close family friend. Males who are trusted by the entire family.
And the shame that arises later in life comes from the realization that a trusted loved one (father grandfather uncle) thought so little of you to do such things.
What do studies taken of anonymous women show the percentage of girls sexually abused before age 18 in the united states
Workflow Percentage of Girls Sexually Abused Before Age 18 in the U.S. Studies indicate that 1 in 3 girls (approximately 33%) are sexually abused before the age of 18 in the United States . Another source suggests that at least 1 in 4 girls (25%) experience child sexual abuse, though the true numbers may be higher due to underreporting . These statistics highlight the significant prevalence of child sexual abuse and the challenges in accurately capturing the full scope of the issue due to factors like delayed or non-reporting. Let me know if you'd like further details or related information!
Don't get me wrong, Porn is not worthy of a defense. As an industry, it often mistreats and abuses it's subjects. Aesthetically most of it is bankrupt -- a documentation of depravity. However, provided it is legal, it is an expression of free speech featuring consenting adults. We may want to ban it, but, as we are discovering in the authoritarian times we live in, censorship is a slippery slope. We ask to take down pornhub today, it's vox tomorrow...
Gender politics are a complex topic that our society has been ignoring for a long time and though many on the right are conditioned to tune it out, we really need to find a way to have these conversations without superficial finger pointing.