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Home > Society > Nation
Americans Urged to Campaign Against Porn Floodtide
Monday, Oct. 29, 2007 Posted: 10:17:42AM EST

Americans concerned about the floodtide of pornography pouring into homes, the workplace and even churches are urged to raise their voices about the harms of sexual addictions that many believe is devastating the country.

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"Our nation also faces a moral crisis, giving rise, among other things, to teen promiscuity, sexually transmitted diseases (including AIDS), abortions, children born to single mothers, divorces, sexual abuse of children, sexual harassment, rape, and trafficking in women and children," said Robert W. Peters, president of Morality in Media, which is spearheading a national awareness campaign. "It is clear that the explosive increase in the availability of hardcore pornography is helping to fuel this moral crisis."

The 20th annual White Ribbons Against Pornography (WRAP) Week kicked off on Sunday as a year-long effort to combat the spread of porn across the American culture and to push for the enforcement of federal obscenity laws.

Conservative groups including Focus on the Family, Concerned Women for America (CWA), American Mothers, Inc., and GirlsAgainstPorn.com have joined Morality in Media this week to raise public awareness of the harmful effects of porn and to call for a respect for sexual virtue.

"Seventy-five percent of convicted rapists admit they were acting out what they had seen in pornography, and 80 percent of child molesters admit their spiral down began with pornography," noted CWA president Wendy Wright.

Over the last decade, employers have cracked down on those view online pornography at work, but with the laptop computers, cell phones and BlackBerrys and other portable devices providing wireless access to the Internet, reports indicate that porn viewing at work is still a major problem.

"Liability is the thing that keeps me up at night, because we are liable for things people do on your premises. It's serious," said Richard Laermer, CEO of the public relations firm RLM, according to ABC News. "I'll see somebody doing it, and I'll peek over their shoulder, and they'll say, 'I don't know how that happened.' It's like 10-year-olds. And it's always on company time."

The majority of U.S. adults say viewing pornographic websites and videos is morally unacceptable, according to a 2006 survey commissioned by Morality in Media. Younger Americans (ages 18 to 34) are more likely to think viewing porn is morally acceptable compared to 35- to 54-year-olds.

"A disturbingly larger number of our nation’s youth and young adults are viewing pornography, and they don’t even see this as a moral problem!" "Our nation has failed miserably in shielding minors from pornography."

Explicit sex scenes bordering pornography have increasingly hit the television airwaves this season, raising eyebrows among critics who say it's too much.

"This season I think cable has pushed the limit of acceptability of sex on television as far as it could possibly go," Mary Murphy of TV Guide commented on CNN. Murphy believes several shows, such as HBO's "Tell Me You Love Me," are bordering on obscene.



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Nathan Black
nathan@christianpost.com
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