Pornography is ravaging American families! Gasp!

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http://article.nationalreview.com/429884/getting-serious-about-pornography/anonymous

Getting Serious About Pornography
It is ravaging American families.

Imagine a drug so powerful it can destroy a family simply by distorting a man’s perception of his wife. Picture an addiction so lethal it has the potential to render an entire generation incapable of forming lasting marriages and so widespread that it produces more annual revenue — $97 billion worldwide in 2006 — than all of the leading technology companies combined. Consider a narcotic so insidious that it evades serious scientific study and legislative action for decades, thriving instead under the ever-expanding banner of the First Amendment.

According to an online statistics firm, an estimated 40 million people use this drug on a regular basis. It doesn’t come in pill form. It can’t be smoked, injected, or snorted. And yet neurological data suggest its effects on the brain are strikingly similar to those of synthetic drugs. Indeed, two authorities on the neurochemistry of addiction, Harvey Milkman and Stanley Sunderwirth, claim it is the ability of this drug to influence all three pleasure systems in the brain — arousal, satiation, and fantasy — that makes it “the pièce de résistance among the addictions.”

Earlier this month, the Witherspoon Institute released a report examining “The Social Costs of Pornography,” signed by more than 50 scholars representing a wide array of professions, academic disciplines, and political views. The report details the considerable social costs that pornography exacts upon men, women, and children.

The findings of the report hit particularly close to home for me. By his own account, my husband of 13 years and high-school sweetheart, was first exposed to pornography around age ten. He viewed it regularly during high school and college — and, although he tried hard to stop, continued to do so throughout the course of our marriage. For the past few years he had taken to sleeping in the basement, distancing himself from me, emotionally and physically. Recently he began to reject my sexual advances outright, claiming he just didn’t “feel love” for me like he used to, and lamenting that he thought of me “more as the mother of our children” than as a sexual partner.

Then one morning around 2am he called, intoxicated, from his office to announce that he had “developed feelings” for someone new. The woman he became involved with was an unemployed alcoholic with all the physical qualities of a porn star — bleached blond hair, heavy makeup, provocative clothing, and large breasts. After the revelation, my husband tried to break off his relationship with this woman. But his remorse was short-lived. Within a few months he had moved permanently out of the home he shared with me and our five young children. In retrospect, I believe he succumbed to the allure of the secret fantasy life he had been indulging since his adolescence.

My husband is not alone. According to Dr. Victor Cline, a nationally renowned clinical psychologist who specializes in sexual addiction, pornography addiction is a process that undergoes four phases. First, addiction, resulting from early and repeated exposure accompanied by masturbation. Second, escalation, during which the addict requires more frequent porn exposure to achieve the same “highs” and may learn to prefer porn to sexual intercourse. Third, desensitization, during which the addict views as normal what was once considered repulsive or immoral. And finally, the acting-out phase, during which the addict runs an increased risk of making the leap from screen to real life.

This behavior may manifest itself in the form of promiscuity, voyeurism, exhibitionism, group sex, rape, sadomasochism, or even child molestation. (What the fuck???) The final phase may also be characterized by one or more extramarital affairs. A 2004 study published in Social Science Quarterly found that Internet users who had had an extramarital affair were 3.18 times more likely to have used online porn than Internet users who had not had an affair. Among other things, the Witherspoon report is a stern warning to all married women to take seriously the signs of a sexual addiction, before it is too late.

Perhaps the greatest hardship for women who fear they have lost (or are losing) a husband to Internet porn is the absence of a public consensus about the harmful effects of pornography on marriage. Consider what we know. In a study published in Sexual Addiction and Compulsivity, Schneider found that among the 68 percent of couples in which one person was addicted to Internet porn, one or both had lost interest in sex. Results of the same study, published in 2000, indicated that porn use was a major contributing factor to increased risk of separation and divorce. This finding is substantiated by results of a 2002 meeting of the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers, during which surveyed lawyers claimed that “an obsessive interest in Internet pornography” was a significant factor in 56 percent of their divorce cases the prior year.

Porn use creates the impression that aberrant sexual practices are more common than they really are, and that promiscuous behavior is normal. For example, in a 2000 meta-analysis of 46 published studies put out by the National Foundation for Family Research and Education at the University of Calgary, regular exposure to pornography increased risk of sexual deviancy (including lower age of first intercourse and excessive masturbation), increased belief in the “rape myth” (that women cause rape and rapists are normal), and was associated with negative attitudes regarding intimate relationships (e.g., rejecting the need for courtship and viewing persons as sexual objects). Indeed, neurological imaging confirms the latter finding. Susan Fiske, professor of psychology at Princeton University, used MRI scans to analyze the brain activity of men viewing pornography. She found that after viewing porn, men looked at women more as objects than as human beings.

The social implications of these data are significant, but we need to know more. The American Psychiatric Association is likely to add pornography addiction to their Diagnostic and Statistical Manual this year. Congress should fund a long-term, multidisciplinary analysis of the effects of porn addiction on marriage and family life. The National Institutes of Health are granted billions of taxpayer dollars for research on a wide variety of public-health problems, and yet pornography addiction is not among them. Most health-insurance companies provide little to no coverage for treatment of this problem, and the health-care legislation signed into law last week promises more of the same. The fact is that the moral and financial needs of couples struggling with this form of addiction will remain unaddressed in a country that views pornography use as a constitutional right.

I will never know with full certainty that pornography caused my husband to abandon me and our children. Although I loved him deeply, I was far from a perfect wife. In retrospect, I wish I had understood what he was experiencing and had acted to help him. If anything is clear to me, it is this: We must learn more about this scourge and its effects on families. The Witherspoon report makes it clear that countless women — and increasingly many men — have experienced the devastating effects of their spouse’s pornography use. Countless more will experience it in the future. It is our obligation as a nation to pursue the truth for their sake, no matter how inconvenient for some the verdict may be.

— The author is a psychologist who lives with her children in Virginia.



Thoughts?
 
That lady is avoiding why her husband left her, and indulging in scapegoating.

I wish I had her name, I'd write her into a story.
 
http://article.nationalreview.com/429884/getting-serious-about-pornography/anonymous

Getting Serious About Pornography
It is ravaging American families.

Imagine a drug so powerful it can destroy a family simply by distorting a man’s perception of his wife. Picture an addiction so lethal it has the potential to render an entire generation incapable of forming lasting marriages and so widespread that it produces more annual revenue — $97 billion worldwide in 2006 — than all of the leading technology companies combined. Consider a narcotic so insidious that it evades serious scientific study and legislative action for decades, thriving instead under the ever-expanding banner of the First Amendment.

According to an online statistics firm, an estimated 40 million people use this drug on a regular basis. It doesn’t come in pill form. It can’t be smoked, injected, or snorted. And yet neurological data suggest its effects on the brain are strikingly similar to those of synthetic drugs. Indeed, two authorities on the neurochemistry of addiction, Harvey Milkman and Stanley Sunderwirth, claim it is the ability of this drug to influence all three pleasure systems in the brain — arousal, satiation, and fantasy — that makes it “the pièce de résistance among the addictions.”

Earlier this month, the Witherspoon Institute released a report examining “The Social Costs of Pornography,” signed by more than 50 scholars representing a wide array of professions, academic disciplines, and political views. The report details the considerable social costs that pornography exacts upon men, women, and children.

The findings of the report hit particularly close to home for me. By his own account, my husband of 13 years and high-school sweetheart, was first exposed to pornography around age ten. He viewed it regularly during high school and college — and, although he tried hard to stop, continued to do so throughout the course of our marriage. For the past few years he had taken to sleeping in the basement, distancing himself from me, emotionally and physically. Recently he began to reject my sexual advances outright, claiming he just didn’t “feel love” for me like he used to, and lamenting that he thought of me “more as the mother of our children” than as a sexual partner.

Then one morning around 2am he called, intoxicated, from his office to announce that he had “developed feelings” for someone new. The woman he became involved with was an unemployed alcoholic with all the physical qualities of a porn star — bleached blond hair, heavy makeup, provocative clothing, and large breasts. After the revelation, my husband tried to break off his relationship with this woman. But his remorse was short-lived. Within a few months he had moved permanently out of the home he shared with me and our five young children. In retrospect, I believe he succumbed to the allure of the secret fantasy life he had been indulging since his adolescence.

My husband is not alone. According to Dr. Victor Cline, a nationally renowned clinical psychologist who specializes in sexual addiction, pornography addiction is a process that undergoes four phases. First, addiction, resulting from early and repeated exposure accompanied by masturbation. Second, escalation, during which the addict requires more frequent porn exposure to achieve the same “highs” and may learn to prefer porn to sexual intercourse. Third, desensitization, during which the addict views as normal what was once considered repulsive or immoral. And finally, the acting-out phase, during which the addict runs an increased risk of making the leap from screen to real life.

This behavior may manifest itself in the form of promiscuity, voyeurism, exhibitionism, group sex, rape, sadomasochism, or even child molestation. (What the fuck???) The final phase may also be characterized by one or more extramarital affairs. A 2004 study published in Social Science Quarterly found that Internet users who had had an extramarital affair were 3.18 times more likely to have used online porn than Internet users who had not had an affair. Among other things, the Witherspoon report is a stern warning to all married women to take seriously the signs of a sexual addiction, before it is too late.

Perhaps the greatest hardship for women who fear they have lost (or are losing) a husband to Internet porn is the absence of a public consensus about the harmful effects of pornography on marriage. Consider what we know. In a study published in Sexual Addiction and Compulsivity, Schneider found that among the 68 percent of couples in which one person was addicted to Internet porn, one or both had lost interest in sex. Results of the same study, published in 2000, indicated that porn use was a major contributing factor to increased risk of separation and divorce. This finding is substantiated by results of a 2002 meeting of the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers, during which surveyed lawyers claimed that “an obsessive interest in Internet pornography” was a significant factor in 56 percent of their divorce cases the prior year.

Porn use creates the impression that aberrant sexual practices are more common than they really are, and that promiscuous behavior is normal. For example, in a 2000 meta-analysis of 46 published studies put out by the National Foundation for Family Research and Education at the University of Calgary, regular exposure to pornography increased risk of sexual deviancy (including lower age of first intercourse and excessive masturbation), increased belief in the “rape myth” (that women cause rape and rapists are normal), and was associated with negative attitudes regarding intimate relationships (e.g., rejecting the need for courtship and viewing persons as sexual objects). Indeed, neurological imaging confirms the latter finding. Susan Fiske, professor of psychology at Princeton University, used MRI scans to analyze the brain activity of men viewing pornography. She found that after viewing porn, men looked at women more as objects than as human beings.

The social implications of these data are significant, but we need to know more. The American Psychiatric Association is likely to add pornography addiction to their Diagnostic and Statistical Manual this year. Congress should fund a long-term, multidisciplinary analysis of the effects of porn addiction on marriage and family life. The National Institutes of Health are granted billions of taxpayer dollars for research on a wide variety of public-health problems, and yet pornography addiction is not among them. Most health-insurance companies provide little to no coverage for treatment of this problem, and the health-care legislation signed into law last week promises more of the same. The fact is that the moral and financial needs of couples struggling with this form of addiction will remain unaddressed in a country that views pornography use as a constitutional right.

I will never know with full certainty that pornography caused my husband to abandon me and our children. Although I loved him deeply, I was far from a perfect wife. In retrospect, I wish I had understood what he was experiencing and had acted to help him. If anything is clear to me, it is this: We must learn more about this scourge and its effects on families. The Witherspoon report makes it clear that countless women — and increasingly many men — have experienced the devastating effects of their spouse’s pornography use. Countless more will experience it in the future. It is our obligation as a nation to pursue the truth for their sake, no matter how inconvenient for some the verdict may be.

— The author is a psychologist who lives with her children in Virginia.



Thoughts?

Weak people can succumb to certain influences and then you get people like this crying about how it's someone or something else's fault.
 
In a study published in Sexual Addiction and Compulsivity, Schneider found that among the 68 percent of couples in which one person was addicted to Internet porn, one or both had lost interest in sex.

People who are in sexless marriages like porn? Shocking.

It couldn't possibly be that a lot of people just fall out of love or get bored of having sex with the same person or even have serious marital issues that lead to the demise of their sex life but not of their sex drives...No, that's just silly.
 
I think the root of the problem is that America is just too damn prudish of a society. A kid can watch a movie at 10:00am in the morning on half the cable stations in which someone gets shot in the chest 37 times or decapitated by a gargoyle, but heaven forbid he or she see a pair of boobies- because then he or she will grow up to be a warped degenerate.

I don't think there would be porn addiction if we didn't have such odd views about sex and the body.

Just my two cents.
 
Being overweight, something considered an international issue, can reduce both one's sex drive and a man's ability to perform. Do you suppose that might have been part of the issue? Losing a bunch certainly helped the ol' bear.
 
PORN ruins families?

Oh my God!

Since when does porn ruin a family? I believe someone already brought up that the man leaving his wife could have been because he fell out of love with the woman. I mean, that happens. Why is the fact that he fell for someone that looked like a porn star caused an ending to his marriage?

WTF?

Why is America so damn hypocritical about every damn thing???

People find sex enjoyable! They like watching it, doing it...what is wrong with that?

I watch porn, hubby watches porn...it does not ruin our marriage! In fact, I watch more than he does.He knows I watch gay porn and it doesn't bother him that I do.

This country really needs to grow some thick skin.
 
I think porn might have ruined my ability to find and be with a real woman.
 
Addiction seems to be the new buzzword. In addition to pornography addiction, we have clinics for sex addiction, and news stories about caffeine addiction, chocolate addiction, etc.

There was recently a story about a couple addicted to internet games who neglected their baby to the point it died.

I will go out running in the rain with an ankle so sore that I'm afraid it may rupture -- that is probably a sign of addiction, or at least compulsive behavior.

If we enjoy something, we tend to keep doing it, often to excess. It is part of human nature.

On the other hand, we don't ban coffee, chocolate, or running just because they may become addictive (or at least compulsive). Attempts to ban more potent forms of pleasure -- alcohol, tobacco, various drugs, even sex, have failed miserably.

The other thing about porn is that there so many people recording themselves and posting the results that it is not really an just an industry an longer.

It would be interesting to know what this woman actually looks like. Maybe there is an obvious reason her hubby lost interest in her.
 
Ho hum. *yawn* Another threat to the sanctity of the heterosexual American family.

I've seen this crap before about Communism, comic books, Rock n' Roll, short skirts, weed, video poker, drive-ins, rock concerts...blah, blah, blah.

Somehow America survived these 'threats' and prospered.

I suppose Little Miss Pucker Butt wants porn out of the mainstream and back into the gutter where it belongs. :D
 
The real problem is not porn at all. The real problem, the source of virtually all marital discord, indeed nearly all of American's vast supply of underachievement can be found in the nutrition-free zone of manufactured "desserts" called by such names as Twinkies, Ho-Hos, and Lil Debbie Cakes.

All other presumed sources of American failure can suck a lifeless zombie dick.
 
The real problem is not porn at all. The real problem, the source of virtually all marital discord, indeed nearly all of American's vast supply of underachievement can be found in the nutrition-free zone of manufactured "desserts" called by such names as Twinkies, Ho-Hos, and Lil Debbie Cakes.

All other presumed sources of American failure can suck a lifeless zombie dick.

Don't forget Hostess Cream Filled Cupcakes with the petroleum-based faux chocolate topping. http://i264.photobucket.com/albums/ii177/1volupturary_manque/4.gif
 
The real problem is not porn at all. The real problem, the source of virtually all marital discord, indeed nearly all of American's vast supply of underachievement can be found in the nutrition-free zone of manufactured "desserts" called by such names as Twinkies, Ho-Hos, and Lil Debbie Cakes.

All other presumed sources of American failure can suck a lifeless zombie dick.

Damn! I suppose that includes Ring-Dings, Fluff r' Nutter, Screaming Yellow Zonkers and Moon Pies?

Time to clean out the pantry...one box and bag at a time. :D
 
I'm sure they are an integral part of the problem. I used only a few well-known labels to identify the type. Those of you who are more familiar with the type can fill in the details.

I know quite little about these things. No Twinkie has ever passed my lips.

Trust me, you haven't missed a thing. I shudder to remember the day but for years I would get periodic cravings for Cream-Filled Cupcakes. They come in a two-pack and I'd buy one and rip it open. The first I'd devour like a starving wolf. Then I'd take one bite of the second and throw the rest away in disgust, revolted by what I had just done. Finally I rid myself of the curse and thank my lucky stars that I have done so.
 
Huh.

Ponders new information.

Wonders if her new red bustier makes any damn difference at all.
 
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