The epoch times

States join forces to safeguard minors from harmful pornography.

Protecting Children from Harmful Online ⁢Pornography

Graphic, violent, deviant,⁣ and harmful online pornography‍ that​ can‌ permanently affect brain development can be easily accessed by children. And the federal government is doing little to stop it, experts and lawmakers told The Epoch Times.

Although showing pornography to ‌children is illegal⁢ under federal law, federal rules don’t ⁢require porn websites to verify the age of⁤ users.

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But recently, bipartisan efforts in state⁤ legislatures have intervened ​to protect children⁤ in a handful of⁤ states.

It’s ​important—and urgent—because watching violent porn damages children, therapist ⁢Jon Uhler and psychologist Amy Sousa told The Epoch Times.

“Being shown violence alongside a reward system is incredibly problematic⁣ because it is sending the ⁢body a signal that ⁢this⁤ violence is pleasurable,” Ms. Sousa ‍said.

By ​teaching children⁣ to associate sexual pleasure with⁢ pain, she said, pornography can rewire a​ viewer’s brain to want pain or want to inflict⁢ pain.

This rewiring undoes the body’s natural ⁤response of feeling distressed ​when seeing someone get hurt, she explained.

And porn-watching is more common than many might realize.

Porn​ gets more yearly “watch hours” than all Hollywood, Netflix, and Viacom programming ‍combined, Ms.‍ Sousa said.

Psychologist Amy Sousa speaks at a “Save Women’s Sports ⁣event⁣ in Nashville, Tenn., on ⁣April 27, 2023. ​(Jackson Elliott/The Epoch Times)

Normalizing Violence, Creating Psychopaths

“Eighty-eight percent ⁢of porn videos contain violence against ⁣women, which basically translates to 5.1 billion ​of those visits per month,” Ms.⁤ Sousa said.

“Porn ​represents a massive ​propaganda arm that ​is normalizing and desensitizing violence against women.”

Viewing‍ pornography teaches men to see women as objects, said Mr. Uhler, who has 15 years of counseling experience and thousands of hours of experience in treating sex offenders.

Children who admit⁣ to watching porn also⁤ admit⁣ to feeling guilty about it, he said.

Over ⁢time, repeatedly engaging in behavior that violates one’s conscience​ can turn‌ a person ⁣into a​ psychopath, he said.

“As you impact conscience, you will negatively ⁣impact remorse and⁤ empathy,”‌ he said.⁢ “Those three things are the basis of psychopathy.”

And this, he said, can open the gateway to becoming‌ a sexual predator.

In counseling​ thousands of sexual predators, ‍Mr. Uhler has seen a pattern. For all of his patients, the road to sexual deviancy involved viewing porn, he ​said.

Jon Uhler, a therapist who interviews sex offenders in prison. (Courtesy of⁣ Mr. ⁤Uhler)

“A lot of good researchers have looked at​ the effects that pornography has ⁢on​ the brain,” Mr. Uhler said.

“It’s identical⁣ to ⁢drugs, literally in terms of the impact on the structure itself‍ and the ⁢way it processes.”

With⁢ an unprecedented number of boys watching violent porn, Mr. Uhler said, the ⁢future will likely yield a ‌massive crop of men who have learned from childhood to defy their conscience.

“We⁤ are in uncharted territory.”

Conflicting Views on Restrictions

Despite‍ these ⁣dangers,‍ the federal government has done little to ⁣prevent children from accessing online porn, Sousa, Uhler, and lawmakers said.

“The federal law [banning pornography access for children] is not enforced,” Utah state Sen. Todd Weiler, a Republican, told The Epoch Times.

Ian Andrews, a spokesman for Pornhub, told The Epoch Times that the company supports measures to⁤ restrict children from viewing porn by verifying‍ the age of users.​ But he doubts new laws requiring ⁢age verification of users will ‌help protect minors. Pornhub is the world’s 12th-most-visited website, with more than 2.5 billion visitors yearly, according to the consumer ‍research firm Similarweb.

Mr. Andrews⁢ argued that the laws may have the opposite effect.

“We hypothesized for years that, if only certain platforms were forced to verify user age, or if‍ a‍ law is not regulated properly, the results would see users flocking to the ‍platforms ‌that ‍do not verify age,” he said.

“This is no ‍longer hypothetical. Since we became one⁢ of the few platforms in Louisiana to comply with the law⁣ and institute mandatory age verification, ‌we have ‌seen an approximately 80 percent drop in our traffic⁣ in the state.”

Amping Up​ Laws

Lawmakers in some states are determined​ to ​amend state laws to block children from viewing porn.

In May, ‍Utah passed a law ‍requiring pornographic websites ⁣to verify that users from that state‌ are at least⁣ 18. Louisiana, which enacted a similar law in 2022, was the first state to demand age-verification measures to access pornographic websites, Mr. Weiler said.

“We‍ made a⁤ few minor tweaks, but we basically copied Louisiana’s” law in Utah,‍ he‍ said.

The Louisiana‌ law demands that porn websites perform “reasonable ⁣age-verification methods”⁤ for ⁤Louisiana users.

For‍ Mr. Weiler, the ‍fight to protect children from porn websites began in 2016.

“I ran the⁣ first resolution in the country to declare ⁢pornography to‍ be a public health crisis,” he said.

While the resolution ⁢ declared that child viewing of pornography ⁢was a⁣ public ⁢health crisis, resolutions don’t have​ the ⁤force of law or any law ​enforcement effects.

“And since that time, ⁢about ⁣15 other⁢ states have basically copied” the‌ resolution, Mr. Weiler said.

Utah State ​Sen. Todd Weiler. (Courtesy of Mr.⁢ Weiler)

Five states have joined Utah and Louisiana in going farther.

Virginia, Mississippi,‌ Texas, Montana, and ⁢Arkansas have added⁤ age-verification⁤ laws for pornography websites.

Arizona, California, ⁣South Carolina, Minnesota, and New Jersey all have bills for age verification under consideration, according to‍ data gathered by the Free⁢ Speech Coalition (FSC).

Support for the bills is largely bipartisan, Mr. Weiler said.

“This is not just a Republican issue,” he said. “I⁤ think many Democrats agree that children ⁣shouldn’t be viewing this content.”

Florida, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, ⁤South ⁣Dakota, West Virginia, Missouri, Alabama, and Tennessee have considered bills requiring age verification for porn users,‍ but they failed to pass, according ‌to FSC.

Relying on Honest Answers

According to federal law, the crime⁤ of “knowingly” using computer services to display obscenity to ⁤minors is punishable with imprisonment, fines, and ⁢sex ​offender registration.

But⁤ the word “knowingly” provides a loophole, Mr. Uhler said.

Under federal law, if a‌ teen lies about his or her age to access porn, porn distributors can’t​ be blamed for believing the age ⁢verification information provided by the child, ‌he said.

“Like a kid who wants to access porn is going ⁤to be⁤ honest,”⁤ Mr. Uhler ‌said wryly.

This⁤ system⁣ puts the responsibility on minors to be truthful, rather than on‍ porn website operators to ascertain the truth, Mr. Weiler said.

Companies‌ have “taken ​steps to make sure ​that 14-year-old girls in Topeka, Kansas, aren’t accessing ‌online gambling sites,” he said. “They’ve taken steps‍ to make sure that 14-year-old girls in Topeka, Kansas, aren’t buying vaping and ‌nicotine products ⁤online. And those companies are not directly shipping wine to 14-year-old girls.”

But⁣ the porn industry hasn’t received the same regulatory pressure to protect children from its products, ⁢he said.

Any company actually interested in blocking minors from⁢ accessing the porn it offers could use a third-party company to screen users before they’re allowed⁢ to access the site.

“The technology’s there,” Mr. Weiler⁤ said. “It would take about​ 30 seconds” to verify a would-be ⁣user’s identity and age.

Utah’s ⁤laws



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