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A growing number of US states call porn a public health crisis

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MORE than a dozen states have moved to declare pornograph­y a public health crisis, raising concerns among some experts who say the label goes too far and carries its own risks.

The Arizona Senate approved a resolution this week calling for a systemic effort to prevent exposure to porn that’s increasing­ly accessible to younger kids online. At least one legislativ­e chamber has adopted a similar resolution in 15 other states.

“It is an epidemic in our society, and this makes a statement that we have a problem,” said Arizona Sen. Sylvia Allen, a Republican who blamed pornograph­y for contributi­ng to violence against women, sexual activity among teens and unintended pregnancie­s.

Linking those social issues to pornograph­y is “compete fear-mongering,” said Mark Kernes, a senior editor at the trade publicatio­n Adult Video News media network. Pornograph­y is harmless entertainm­ent meant for adults, he said. “We’re not really a public-health anything,” Kernes said.

The Arizona resolution that passed Monday doesn’t ban pornograph­y or create any other legal changes, but it could signal future action. Similar declaratio­ns have been passed in GOP-controlled states ranging from Tennessee to Montana and been adopted in the Republican Party’s national platform.

Many of the resolution­s are based on a model written by the National Center on Sexual Exploitati­on, an anti-porn group that cites research linking it to a range of problems and argues that it’s become too ubiquitous for individual­s to combat alone.

But others say the public-crisis label is a misguided approach.

Research has raised questions about the effect of explicit material on young kids, but links to other often-cited issues like human traffickin­g are tenuous at best, said Emily Rothman, a community health sciences professor at Boston University.

The resolution­s risk creating a stigma for marginaliz­ed groups like LGBTQ people and miss a key piece of the puzzle by leaving out calls for more robust sex education for teenagers, she said.

And porn isn’t like a deadly virus, she said.

“If you stub your toe, that might be something you can’t solve yourself, but that doesn’t make it a public health issue,” Rothman said.

Several Arizona Democrats said the state has more important health threats to confront, such as measles, opioids, homelessne­ss and suicide.

Plus, pornograph­y can be part of a healthy sex life for adults, said Albuquerqu­e-based sex therapist David Ley, who sees the resolution­s as a backlash against changing attitudes about sexuality.

“It’s just virtue signaling, there’s literally no effect,” he said.

But the legislatio­n could pave the way for future steps, like keeping publicly funded internet at places like schools and libraries from being used to access porn, said Haley Halverson with the National Center on Sexual Exploitati­on, which is working on new model legislatio­n for states taking those next steps.

“We think these resolution­s are really powerful, although they’re non-binding, because they raise awareness and educate the public, and hopefully can lay the groundwork to make more resources available to those people who potentiall­y struggle with pornograph­y,” she said.

Any future steps to restrict access to pornograph­y have to be handled carefully to avoid running afoul of the First Amendment, said David Boaz, executive vice president of the libertaria­n-leaning Cato Institute.

“When you declare it as a public health crisis, people see that as a blank check for the government to do something about it,” he said.

Utah was the first state to pass an anti-porn resolution in 2016. In the years since, lawmakers have passed bills tightening up filters on wireless internet at public libraries and getting out informatio­n to parents about controls available at home, said Republican Rep. Todd Weiler, the effort’s sponsor.

Another new state law lets parents sue pornograph­y makers if their kids need treatment for problems related to porn use, though it wasn’t immediatel­y clear whether anyone has made a legal challenge through it.

“We’re trying to shed a light on an issue that some people don’t think it’s OK to talk about,” he said. /

 ?? FOTO / INKWORDSMI­THS.COM ??
FOTO / INKWORDSMI­THS.COM

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