Category Archives: Child Abuse

How much pornography is made of prostituted women?

There are at least 42 million prostituted persons worldwide and less than half of them are ever identified.* At least half of the entire total are children, 80% female, and 80% under the age of 25. The average age someone is trafficked into prostitution is 12 years old, and the average life expectancy for females is 7 years from the moment they’re trafficked – largely by homicide. Needless to say, research and studies of any sample of prostituted persons could never be random, and hence may not be typical of all prostituted persons. That said, of the surveys and reports conducted on pornography being made of prostituted women, a clear pattern emerges: around 50% of prostituted women have had pornography made of them.**

One of the more comprehensive studies was conducted by Dr. Melissa Farley, of Prostitution Research & Education in San Francisco. She found that across 8 countries, including Canada, Colombia, Germany, Mexico, South Africa, Thailand, Turkey, the United States, and Zambia, of the 854 female respondents, 49% reported having had pornography made of their being sexually violated. These statistics were comparable to a study conducted by the WHISPER Oral History Project more than a decade earlier, which found that more than 53% of prostituted women had been filmed for pornography – by the johns / buyers of sex alone. Both studies found that between half or two-thirds of these men specifically demanded the prostituted women re-enact scenes they had consumed in pornography.

Furthermore, it is worth noting that of prostituted persons, 68% had PTSD (a very high prevalence of psychological harm for any group). Most of them had come from a home of childhood sexual abuse, rape, and other forms of abuse. Of these women, those who had been filmed in pornographic videos had significantly more severe PTSD symptoms than those who hadn’t been filmed.

Much of the pornography made of these prostituted persons is, of course, available online, everywhere, free of charge, today. Identified or nameless, twelve years or twenty, 2,000 days or one from being murdered, their prostitution lives online forever across small sites and large networks, comprising likely, or very likely, millions of hours across Xvideos, Pornhub, YouPorn, and so on.

As has been noted in many studies, it is the pornography industry itself that largely fuels the demand for sex trafficking and prostitution. And it is the consumption of these videos that continues to drive a demand for men’s sexual access to women. It is not illogical to state that the people who consume pornography regularly have likely found and even masturbated to a number of these women, many of whom were brought into this industry when they were children, most of whom suffered from PTSD, and a large number of whom are no longer alive.

* Of the 42 million prostituted persons, only 4.5 million are recognized as having been trafficked into the industry. Pornography FAQ maintains that mythologizing the false distinction between sex trafficking, or forced prostitution, and “free” prostitution perpetuates the irresponsible ideology that one is bad while the other is good. In the context of the sex industry, which sells women, men, and children as commodities for personal sexual pleasure, the concepts of “free” and “good” are deeply insulting.

** Pornography FAQ also maintains that pornography is prostitution, albeit filmed. Most people readily distinguish between the two. For the sake of keeping this individual post coherent and clear for the majority of readers, I maintain that distinction. The clear connections between the two will be explored in length and in scope elsewhere on this site.

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What is “childification?”

“Childification” is the act of portraying adults as children or as pre-pubescent teenagers. Usually, smaller-framed, younger-seeming women are cast, dressed up in childhood clothes, adorned with props (lollipops, school uniforms, pigtails), given braces, and removed of all pubic hair. In pornography, and especially in the sub-genre, teen pornography, “children” are staged in scenarios where they have sex with a “grown up.” The grown up in these situations is almost always an older brother or father to the child.

The intent of childification in teen pornography is clear: to produce child pornography while operating within legal parameters. A common defense of teen pornography would be that children are not actually being exploited. However, childification legitimizes and normalizes the sexual exploitation of children. Empirical evidence from many studies tells us that pornography consumption absolutely plays a role in shaping the way people think; in the context of pornography that sexualizes children, it conditions consumers (primarily male) to believe that children are not off-limits and that it is okay to use  children for personal sexual pleasure.

It is beyond doubt that sexually abusing children has damaging ramifications on their lives, including lowered inhibitions, devalued self-worth, self-objectification, increased rates of drug & alcohol abuse, suicide, and so on. Children do not have the capacity to comprehend sexual intercourse, sexual curiosity, exploitation, and power imbalance on the same emotional and cognitive level as adults do. Comprehensive studies, research, and testimony outline clearly the consequences of perpetrating sexual acts against children and / or exposing children to sex. Beyond the scientific approach, there is also a matter of common sense: adults sexualizing and using children for sexual pleasure is wrong.

Yet, in pornography, adults sexualize and use children for sexual pleasure all the time by proxy via the act of childification. In 2016, PornHub (one of the internet’s most frequented pornography sites) revealed that “teen” was the fifth most searched term for the entire year (coming in at sixth was “step sister”). Some titles in Pornhub’s list of most viewed teen pornography videos of all time include, “BFFS – Step Dad Fucks Daughter And Her Friends,” “Mother helps Babysitter with her video project,” “ExxxtraSmall – Step Brother Takes advantage of Little Sister,” “Kimmy Granger Likes It Rough,” and “Mofos – Teen needs a dick to distract her.” As of writing, those five videos have a combined total of 206,801,857 views. Those are just five of 82,667 videos in the teen (pseudo-child pornography) section alone. With an average duration of 20 minutes per scene, scenes depicting the sexual abuse and rape of children comprise at least 1,653,340 minutes on Pornhub. The sheer amount of content sexualizing children would take more than 3 years of continuous watching to finish.

It is hardly surprising that consumption of teen pornography has been linked to an increased likelihood of watching child pornography and of sexually abusing children. Look at those titles. Adults are making them. Adults are using them to facilitate masturbation. And should laws make room to accommodate the sexual exploitation of actual children (though it should be noted here that child pornography is already ubiquitous and comprises upwards of 20% of all pornography presently online), it is logical and fair to assume that the same adults who consume teen pornography today would easily become perpetrators of children tomorrow.

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How are children accidentally exposed to online pornography?

Children are accidentally exposed to online pornography through a variety of methods, likely intended by the pornography industry. In fact, upwards of 74% of all pornography websites display sexual content before asking if the viewers are of legal age.

(I recently disabled image loading in my browser [Chrome] when going to a porn site to do a video title analysis. My efforts did nothing to prevent pornography ads and short pornographic videos from visually displaying as soon as I arrived on the site.)

Children are accidentally exposed to pornography via the following routines:

Links from innocent word searches. (40%)
Clicking on a link to another site. (17%)
Pop-ups. (14%)
Other. (13%)
Misspelled web addresses. (12%)
They don’t know / don’t remember. (4%)

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