Doctor Scratch wrote:Over on the ironically named Mormon Dialogue board, a thread has been locked and a poster has been suspended for voicing concern over the Church's rather draconian stance on porn. This was the OP:
Good to see you're now pro-porn, Scratch. It'll be interesting to see you defend this position in future.
In characteristic fashion, this video propogates the commonly-held stereotype in the LDS Church that the typical porn user is a man:
(1) who has a hot, loving, and sexually available and interested wife;
(2) who choses porn in place of sex with his hot, loving, and sexually available and interested wife, leaving her rejected;
(3) who abandons his adorable family of his own volition because of his sinful addiction.
The video says that the typical LDS males wife is "hot?" It then tries to define this term? It says that all LDS men's wives are "sexually available" and then defines this concept? It makes a connection between this alleged "hotness" and sexual availability and porn addiction in some manner?
It's time we get honest and fair about this, and set the record straight. I think a few critical points are in order here, including, without limitation:
Good. I'm glad we have an expert on the world of pornography and its psychological, emotional, spiritual, and social meaning/effects to guide us through this miasma of misinformation and ignorance and to "set the record straight."
(1) I believe that the scenario presented in the video is extremely atypical, and virtually all real-life situations are far more complex and nuanced;
What do you mean?
(2) The majority of active, believing LDS men are probably looking at porn,
CFR
but are simply not getting caught (and though they may privately be racked with unspeakable guilt, many continue to function well in their marriages and daily responsibilities);
As with all destructive carnal indulgences and addictive syndromes, numbers of users are "functional" addicts/indulgers, withreally clear symptoms of spiraling deterioration of functioning not setting in until later in the progress of the addiction.
(3) Even LDS men who do not look at porn are generally still having pornographic fantasies in their minds (and keep them to themselves);
CFR (note: this kind of claim is always dangerous because it threatens to tell us more regarding what is in the mind of the one making the claims than of any actual state of affairs in the world).
(4) The "porn destroys families" argument fails to adequately account for the many couples in which porn is not taboo, and is accepted and/or viewed by both partners.
This assumes that such hypothetical relationships are in any sense really healthy or stable, in any substantive or positive way, and that a couple watching porn together is not a symptom of serious psychological and developmental distortion and dysfunctional life negotiation strategies. Scratch provides no reason to believe that such behavior should be thought of as healthy, or such relationships as viable.
This ought to prompt us to ask the question, "Does porn inherently destroy marriages, or is it possibly the insecurity and/or needless offense taken at it which causes the discord?";
This question begging can be with utility ignored until Scratch comes back with a logically connected body of argument.
(5) The video's scenario ignores the critical and widespread issue of what men in sexless marriages are supposed to do- de-facto celibacy would only be imposed by a cruel God which is utterly inconsistent with the loving God I believe in;
This assumes, yet again, far more than it feigns to claim. Really, this is just a new reworking of the old Hefter mindset that has driven the psychology of the culture of pornography since the sixties. All the poor men in sexless marriages with fat, frumpy, chocolate consuming wives and all the hot, repressed, desperate housewives in sexually stale, boring relationships who crave a "sexual awakening" and to "lick it up" as the song says. Of course, it couldn't - just couldn't - be the case that the subjective psychological reorientation of perception and expectation that pornography creates is the primary factor in both its allure and its destructiveness, could it? No, as usual, it must be that
resistance is futile; it is resistance to pornography that creates the social pathology closely associated with it, not its inherent characteristics that create negative consequences which eventually produces social/philosophical/ethical resistance.
(6) It is a gross mischaracterization to assume that the average porn user is turning down their willing-and-available spouse for intercourse in order to substitute porn for real sex;
A quite well known and common state of affairs among sex addicts, and hardly different than the manner in which drug and alcohol users "turn down" much more satisfying life situations and experiences for the "high" of choice.
The issue is NOT whether it would be possible to spend a few more minutes of your time with your family if you would abstain from looking at porn- the issue is, are you maintaining a reasonable life balance and generally fulfilling your responsibilities? If so, then I don't see the problem.
This is just another value relativist kicking of the can down the road. Pornography substantially reorients and reconfigures the perception of the meaning, purpose, and proper context of human sexuality, and, as such, cannot be a part of a larger "balance" of otherwise morally and psychologically neutral personal cathartic indulgences. Its a thorough reorientation of perspective regarding a core human attribute, and can, because of this, in no sense be morally, socially, or spiritually neutral.
Put another way: Bishop hardly sees his kids because he is always working or fulfilling church calling? No problem. Man spends 15 minutes looking at women in lingerie? Problem. I don't think that's very consistent or reasonable.
I see no relation between these whatsoever, and the central question of pornography's moral and social nature is still being kicked down the road and that central question begged.
I don't expect my post will do much to help TBMs contemplate these issues thoroughly.
Most have already done that, and at a far deeper and more exhaustive level than you are even willing to approach, if this thread is any indication.
But I feel a duty to speak my mind,
Oh no...
as it may help at least some open-minded people re-think this. I sincerely believe that the LDS Church's overbroad condemnation of pornography destroys more LDS families than use of porn itself ever did.
I'll be waiting to see a cogent, evidential connected augment showing why I should beleive this claim to be anything but a modern liberal psychological trope.
It has nothing to do with a substitute for sex or even an attractive spouse. It has everything to do with instant gratification and excape behavior.
You have no idea whatsoever what you're talking about. You are going to need a long crash course in sexual addiction and its dynamics before you're going to be able to speak intelligently on this subject beyond early seventies sexual revolution slogans. Pornography is, after all the window dressing and props have been removed, about
masturbation, and masturbation is a substitute for real sex. When the profoundly powerful fantasy world of pornography takes hold of the psych and imbues it with its own system of perceptions, values, and priorities, masturbation becomes primary. The result of this is, ultimately, impotence outside the fantasy realm of the
Pornscape.Clearly, our very own Why Me is a huge fan of discussing porn.
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Except for those who discuss it and sex (you know who you are) and start entire threads on the subject. You know, people like Scratch.