Relay-Version: version B 2.10 5/3/83; site utzoo.UUCP Posting-Version: version B 2.10.1 6/24/83; site yeti.UUCP Path: utzoo!linus!decvax!genrad!grkermit!masscomp!yeti!leiby From: leiby@yeti.UUCP Newsgroups: net.women Subject: pro-smut diatribe Message-ID: <146@yeti.UUCP> Date: Wed, 15-Feb-84 19:27:54 EST Article-I.D.: yeti.146 Posted: Wed Feb 15 19:27:54 1984 Date-Received: Thu, 16-Feb-84 05:47:28 EST Organization: Masscomp, Littleton, MA Lines: 69 > Mike Kelley (tty3b!mjk): > > An interesting approach to pornography is being tried in Minneapolis-St. Paul. > There, woman are suing the pornography outlets for violation of their civil > rights. Given the obvious civil liberties problems with outright banning of > pornography, I think that this form of retribution might be particularly > effective. In a profit-oriented society, to stop something, just take the > profit out of it. Explain to me how pornography is a violation of civil rights. I don't feel *my* rights are violated by, say, Playgirl magazine (in fact, I'm waiting for a call from their photo staff!). > John Hobson (ihuxq!amigo2): > > Martin Taylor wonders why women ... are against it [pornography]. > The reason is quite simple. Pornography, which is almost > exclusively directed towards men, depicts women purely and simply as > sex objects. .... Moreover, much of pornography depicts women as > subservient and abused by men. Well, John, maybe the porn *you* read depicts women as being subservient and abused. Try something more respectable. And what, I'd like to know, is wrong with appreciating the sexual attractiveness of another human being (or, as they say at the Naperville Anti-Smut Leage meetings (and you thought NASL was the North American Soccer League!)), "depicting {wo,}men as sex objects"? I wish someone would look at me as a sex object once in a while. > Ariel Shattan (orca!ariels): > > There was a study recently ... where a researcher showed male college > students some pornographic films, and then three days later gave > them and a control group a survey that covered additudes [sic] about > women and about violence towards women. > > The young men who saw the films were 1/3 more likely to condone > violence against women, and also, 1/3 more of them said that THEY > PERSONALLY might commit violence against women if they knew they > wouldn't be caught. I would like to see how this question was worded in the questionnaire! "Check here if you are likely to brutally rape a woman, given a 60% probability of being caught. 40%? 10%?" Perhaps the survey was given at the University of Illinois (Hi, Vijay! :-) and this accounts for the strange results. > Ariel again: > > Pornography is that which depicts people enjoying pain and > mistreatment. Also, that which celebrates violence as a valid form > of sexuality. This has a lot of merit. How about if we define pornography as above, and define "smut" to be naughty pictures. In that case, I am violently anti-pornography and rabidly pro-smut. "Who needs a hobby Like tennis, or philatilly? <--- sp? I've got a hobby Rereading 'Lady Chatterley'!" -- T. Lehrer -- Mike Leibensperger @ Masscomp, Westford MA 01886 {tektronix,harpo,decvax}!masscomp!leiby