Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Pornograph­y is not funny

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week’s allegation­s suggests there are plenty of folk who think it’s all just a bit of a laugh.

You couldn’t move on Twitter for “hilarious” memes on Wednesday night.

And when asked about the claims, one MP joked he couldn’t even get a wi-fi signal.

Porn is out in the open – and changing the way we think about sex

It’s fair to say the formerly secretive and under-protective­covered content has long since lost its taboo.

We know it’s not just consumed by men, for example.

And it’s more widely available than ever thanks to technology and hand-held devices.

Previous research suggests there have been tens of thousands of attempts to access pornograph­ic websites from parliament­ary computers.

The Priory offers support on pornograph­y addiction.

And gone are the days when your only chance of seeing anything even slightly risque was to steal it from your dad, or find it in a bush on the way to school.

A recent report stated that by the age of seven or eight, children will have seen pornograph­y.

And as a mother of boys, it has certainly brought up awkward discussion­s for me.

Writing in the Times Educationa­l Supplement in 2012, teacher Chloe Combi said teenage boys in her class no longer realised pubic hair was a thing, since their reference point was pornograph­y where the models are shaved and waxed to within an inch of their lives.

In a recent survey carried out by Dignify 55% of 1,000 14-18 year-olds said they had seen porn, and 32% admitted to “acting it out.”

We now understand that many of the people in this industry will have been exploited, even trafficked, into it, so I really don’t want to hear about female empowermen­t.

But hey, why not watch some porn, next to a woman, while you’re at your work?

It’s not as if we are facing the biggest cost of living crisis in living memory or working to help thousands of families flee war-torn Ukraine or anything.

If the rumours are true, this incident in the House of Commons can’t have been accidental. It’s a televised, close quarter chamber.

And that makes it inappropri­ate at best, and abusive at worst.

So I hope this is a case of a desperate person suffering from an addiction. Doing something in public as a cry for help.

And I hope it becomes a trigger for a wider discussion on the availabili­ty of porn and the harm it’s causing.

But spare me the jokes because I really don’t find any of this funny.

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 ?? ?? Pornograph­y in or out of the House of Commons is not funny.
Pornograph­y in or out of the House of Commons is not funny.

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