“… This stuff belongs on PornHub, PornHub belongs in the trash…”- Candace Owens in her YouTube video in (link) response to Sam Smith’s newest music video.
Pornography is everywhere and we cannot escape it. The accessibility of pornography is at our fingertips, and it doesn’t cost us a cent.
All over social media, there are pop-up warnings, flagging, and removal of conservative/anti big-pharma content, but what never gets flagged or taken down? Pornography.
Pornography is the inescapable content of our generation.
But How Many People Really Watch Pornography?
According to Psychology Today there are over 64 million people daily who are viewing porn on PornHub alone. Sixty-Four Million People Daily. Those daily numbers then bring in a grand total of Ninety Billion videos viewed on PornHub. https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/basics/porn-addiction
The number, 64 million, does not include the additional pornography that is being viewed on sites that do not count as “porn sites.” All because something does not fall under the classification of a “porn site” does not mean that someone cannot find porn.
It is naive to think that pornography is only accessible through porn sites alone.
Pornography is accessible on Instagram. Facebook. Netflix. YouTube. And the list goes on.
And porn stars are not the only ones making porn anymore. Insert pop stars.
The Rise Of Pornography Among Pop Stars
“Wrecking Ball”l by Miley Cyrus
“Anaconda” by Niki Minaj
“Industry Baby” by Lil Nas X and Jack Harlow
“Press” by Cardi B
“Womanizer” by Britney Spears
“I’m Not Here To Make Friends” by Sam Smith
These are just a few of the most absurd and vulgar music videos oh so graciously given to us by Hollywood and they are sadly all easily and readily available to us on YouTube.
Even if most of the population do not view these videos as pornography, they cannot be denied as “soft porn.” Say, an introduction to what could become a porn addiction.
Most of us can remember what it was like to be a teenager, and if you cannot remember all the details of what it was like, I’m sure you can remember the raging hormones. What is an easy fix for those hormones? Pornography.
The Scenario:
The Addiction Begins:
A young, teenage boy who cannot get a grip on his hormones is scrolling on Instagram and sees pictures of half-naked women, it makes him feel good at that moment, he’s cooled down. Every so often he may go back for more.
The Addiction Continues:
Soon, the half-naked women aren’t doing it anymore, so he heads to YouTube where he finds music videos of naked women dancing, twerking, etc. Eventually that too wears off, what’s left? PornHub. To PornHub he goes to get his fix. And He keeps going back for more.
And Now? Now, He Is Addicted.
It only takes one spark to ignite the flame.
The accessibility of pornography is one of the biggest issues that faces our culture today. Men, women, teenagers, and young children all have easy access, and that accessibility is causing harm and forming addictions. It is an addiction that leads to ruining relationships, not only with other people but also with how we view ourselves. The effects of porn are many and will only get worse as the accessibility opens and spreads across all platforms.
The accessibility of pornography needs to go. It is not only the accessibility of porn that needs to go. Pornography needs to go.
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