David Cameron, the United Kingdom's Prime Minister,
not only thinks porn is bad for children—he's done something about it. After calling in a speech last year for
a change in online access to adult sites in the UK from "opt-out" to
"opt-in", most internet providers were persuaded by Cameron's
government to make porn-blocking filters the default option for their customers. After the change, if an account holder
wants to view such sites he or she must actively set the account option to do
so. In promoting this initiative,
Cameron's goal was, as he put it, "protecting innocence, protecting
childhood itself." But
what I want to ask is, exactly what is the harm that this initiative protects
against?
Your opinion of how pornography can harm children
will depend on what you think children are.
If you believe children are simply economic units
that consume for their early years, and then become units of productivity for
their adult years, then you will naturally look to scientific surveys of
objective measures of harm such as increases in teen pregnancies, evidence of
social pathologies such as sex crimes, and so on. This is the view that New
York Times business writer David Segal took when he wrote a riff on
Cameron's action called "Does Porn Hurt Children?" After interviewing experts who did
meta-studies of more than 200 social-science papers examining the question, he
concluded that if there is any harm, it's hard to identify. There were slight statistical increases
in some measures, but nothing that could be called a smoking gun. The only time he mentioned ethics in
the article was when he decried the fact that the ideal scientific study of the
effects of porn on children could not be done for ethical reasons. It would be unethical, he said, to find
a sample of children who had never seen porn, and then give them a strong dose
of it over a period of months and measure its effects as compared with a
control group whose innocence was preserved.
But what if you believe children are immortal souls
whose eternal destiny may be affected by things they see? And what if you believe the words of
Jesus, who, after calling a child to him, and telling his disciples that they must
become as little children to enter his kingdom, said ". . . whoever causes
one of these little ones who believe in me to sin, it would be better for him
to have a great millstone fastened around his neck and to be drowned in the
depths of the sea"? In other
words, it's better to die a quick and certain death than to run a porn website
that children can view.
We seem to have a difference of opinion here. On the one hand is a materialist view
that looks to scientific studies as the ultimate authority on whether porn
harms children in objective, measureable ways. On the other hand is a view that there is something special
about children, an attitude or state of mind that we generally call
"innocence", and that doing anything to damage that innocence is a
worse thing than death by drowning.
Sociologists and psychologists don't have much to say
about innocence, and even less to say about the soul. William James, brother of the novelist Henry James and one
of the founders of modern scientific psychology, famously dispensed with the
soul, saying that if there was such a thing, it was incapable of being detected
or measured scientifically. For a
picture of innocence, one could turn instead to the Christian eighteenth-century
poet William Blake, whose Songs of
Innocence contrast with his Songs of
Experience. Blake is a puzzle
for modern readers, because he combines what for his time was a shocking
frankness about sexuality (many of his hand-illustrated poems depict nude
figures) and a total lack of what might be called pornographic intent, that is
hard to comprehend today.
As one of the leading spokesmen of the Romantic
movement, Blake opposed the Industrial Revolution and the new scientific,
rational mode of thought that was sweeping the intellectual world around
1800. After two centuries of its
dominance, we have a lot of trouble trying to think in any other way. But even Segal encountered hints that
there is another way of viewing children besides the scientific one. Many scientists he talked with prefaced
their remarks with comments like, "Don't portray me as endorsing
pornography" or "I don't want my kids watching this stuff." And he described an interesting event
in which a group of teenagers were divided into two panels. One panel was to argue in favor of the
idea that pornography affected them, and the other was to argue that it
didn't. The pro-impact panel waxed
eloquent about how pornography negatively affected their views of what sex
should be like, and tempted them to go out and try some of the pornographic
acts they'd seen. By contrast, the
no-impact group ran out of things to say after two minutes.
It has been argued that the widespread availability
of internet porn has damaged or destroyed what should be one of the strongest
bonds between a married couple:
the channeling of a man's sexual desire into fulfillment exclusively by
his wife, and vice-versa. True,
this is an ideal, not always realized for long, if at all, in some
marriages. But the fact that an
ideal is not always realized does not make it any less of an ideal. And the competition women feel between
their own appearance and the fictional airbrushed images online may explain why
so many young women obsess about their looks and are generally unhappy with
them, no matter how attractive they are.
So I applaud Cameron's move toward restricting
internet porn access in the UK, and wish we could do something similar here,
though our federal system and fragmented regulatory structure makes such a move
much more difficult in the U. S.
But for sure, nothing much will happen about protecting children from
internet porn if the only authorities we listen to are scientific ones.
Sources: David Segal's article "Does Porn
Hurt Children?" appeared on Mar. 29, 2014 at http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/29/sunday-review/does-porn-hurt-children.html. David Cameron's speech before Britain's
National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children calling for the
change to opt-in for internet porn is at
https://www.gov.uk/government/speeches/the-internet-and-pornography-prime-minister-calls-for-action. The quotation from Jesus is from the
English Standard Version of the Bible, Matthew 18:6.
Nice straw man argument...
ReplyDeletehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Straw_man