'Pornography Is What the End of the World
Looks Like'
By Chris Hedges
February 20, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - A scene
from “Fifty Shades of Grey.” (YouTube)
BOSTON — “Fifty Shades of Grey,” the book and the
movie, is a celebration of the sadism that dominates
nearly every aspect of American culture and lies at
the core of pornography and global capitalism. It
glorifies our dehumanization of women. It champions
a world devoid of compassion, empathy and love. It
eroticizes hypermasculine power that carries out the
abuse, degradation, humiliation and torture of women
whose personalities have been removed, whose only
desire is to debase themselves in the service of
male lust. The film, like
“American Sniper,” unquestioningly accepts a
predatory world where the weak and the vulnerable
are objects to exploit while the powerful are
narcissistic and violent demigods. It blesses this
capitalist hell as natural and good.
“Pornography,”
Robert Jensen
writes, “is what the end of the world looks like.”
We are blinded by self-destructive fantasy. An
array of amusements and spectacles, including TV
“reality” shows, huge sporting events, social media,
porn (which earns at least twice what Hollywood
movies generate), alluring luxury products, drugs,
alcohol and magic Jesus, offers enticing exit doors
from reality. We yearn to be rich, powerful and
celebrities. And those we must trample to build our
pathetic little empires are seen as deserving their
fate. That nearly all of us will never attain these
ambitions is emblematic of our collective
self-delusion and the effectiveness of a culture
awash in manipulation and lies.
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Porn seeks to eroticize this sadism. In porn
women are paid to repeat the mantra “I am a cunt.
I am a bitch. I am a whore. I am a slut. Fuck me
hard with your big cock.” They plead to be
physically abused. Porn caters to degrading racist
stereotypes. Black men are sexually potent beasts
stalking white women. Black women have a raw,
primitive lust. Latin women are sultry and
hotblooded. Asian women are meek, sexually
submissive geishas. In porn, human imperfections do
not exist. The oversized silicone breasts, the
pouting, gel-inflated lips, the bodies sculpted by
plastic surgeons, the drug-induced erections that
never subside and the shaved pubic regions — which
cater to porn’s pedophilia — turn performers into
pieces of plastic. Smell, sweat, breath, heartbeats
and touch are erased along with tenderness. Women in
porn are packaged commodities. They are pleasure
dolls and sexual puppets. They are stripped of true
emotions. Porn is not about sex, if one defines sex
as a mutual act between two partners, but about
masturbation, a solitary auto-arousal devoid of
intimacy and love. The cult of the self — that is
the essence of porn — lies at the core of corporate
culture. Porn, like global capitalism, is where
human beings are sent to die.
There are few people on the left who grasp the
immense danger of allowing pornography to replace
intimacy, sex and love. Much of the left believes
that pornography is about free speech, as if it is
unacceptable to financially exploit and physically
abuse a woman in a sweatshop in China but acceptable
to do so on the set of a porn film, as if torture is
wrong in Abu Ghraib, where prisoners were sexually
humiliated and abused as if they were on a porn set,
but permissible on commercial porn sites.
A new wave of feminists, who have betrayed the
iconic work of radicals such as
Andrea Dworkin, defends porn as a form of sexual
liberation and self-empowerment. These “feminists,”
grounded in
Michel
Foucault and
Judith Butler, are stunted products of
neoliberalism and postmodernism. Feminism, for them,
is no longer about the liberation of women who are
oppressed; it is defined by a handful of women who
are successful, powerful and wealthy — or, as in the
case of “Fifty Shades of Grey,” able to snag a rich
and powerful man. A woman wrote the “Fifty Shades”
book, as well as the screenplay. A woman directed
the film. A woman studio head bought the movie. This
collusion by women is part of the internalization of
oppression and sexual violence that have their roots
in porn. Dworkin understood. She wrote that “the new
pornography is a vast graveyard where the Left has
gone to die. The Left cannot have its whores and its
politics too.”
I met Gail Dines,
one of the most important radicals in the country,
in a small cafe in Boston on Tuesday. She is the
author of
“Pornland: How Porn Has Hijacked Our Sexuality”
and a professor of sociology and women’s studies at
Wheelock College. Dines, along with a handful of
others including Jensen, fearlessly decry a culture
that is as depraved as Caligula’s Rome.
“The porn industry has hijacked the sexuality of
an entire culture and is laying waste to a whole
generation of boys,” she warned. “And when you lay
waste to a generation of boys, you lay waste to a
generation of girls.”
“When you fight porn you fight global
capitalism,” she said. “The venture capitalists, the
banks, the credit card companies are all in this
feeding chain. This is why you never see anti-porn
stories. The media is implicated. It is financially
in bed with these companies. Porn is part of this.
Porn tells us we have nothing left as human beings —
boundaries, integrity, desire, creativity and
authenticity. Women are reduced to three orifices
and two hands. Porn is woven into the corporate
destruction of intimacy and connectedness, and this
includes connectedness to the earth. If we were a
society where we were whole, connected human beings
in real communities, then we would not be able to
look at porn. We would not be able to watch another
human being tortured.”“If you are going to give a
tiny percent of the world the vast majority of the
goodies, you better make sure you have a good
ideological system in place that legitimizes why
everyone else is suffering economically,” she said.
“This is what porn does. Porn tells you that
material inequality between women and men is not the
result of an economic system. It is biologically
based. And women, being whores and bitches and only
good for sex, don’t deserve full equality. Porn is
the ideological mouthpiece that legitimizes our
material system of inequality. Porn is to patriarchy
what the media is to capitalism.”
To keep the legions of easily bored male viewers
aroused, porn makers produce videos that are
increasingly violent and debasing. Extreme
Associates, which specializes in graphic rape
scenes, along with JM Productions, promotes the very
real pain endured by women on its sets. JM
Productions pioneered “aggressive throat fucking” or
“face fucking” videos such as the “Gag Factor”
series, in which women gag and often vomit. It
ushered in “swirlies,” in which the male performer
dunks the woman’s head into a toilet after sex and
then flushes. The company promises, “Every whore
gets the swirlies treatment. Fuck her, then flush
her.” Repeated and violent anal penetration triggers
anal prolapse, a condition in which the inner walls
of a woman’s rectum collapse and protrude from her
anus. This is called “rosebudding.” Some women,
penetrated repeatedly by numerous men on porn
shoots, often after taking handfuls of painkillers,
require anal and vaginal reconstructive surgery.
Female performers may suffer from sexually
transmitted diseases and post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD). And with porn mainstreamed — some
porn video participants are treated like film
celebrities by talk show hosts such as Oprah and
Howard Stern — the behavior promoted by porn,
including stripping, promiscuity, S&M and
exhibitionism, has become chic. Porn also sets the
standard for female beauty and female comportment.
And this has had terrifying consequences for girls.
“Women are told in our society they have two
choices,” Dines said. “They are either fuckable or
invisible. To be fuckable means to conform to the
porn culture, to look hot, be submissive and do what
the man wants. That’s the only way you get
visibility. You cannot ask adolescent girls, who are
dying for visibility, to choose invisibility.”
None of this, Dines pointed out, was by accident.
Porn grew out of the commodity culture, the need by
corporate capitalists to sell products.
“In post-Second-World-War America you have the
emergence of a middle class with a disposable
income,” she said. “The only trouble is that this
group was born to parents who had been through a
depression and a war. They did not know how to
spend. They only knew how to save. What [the
capitalists] needed to jump-start the economy was to
get people to spend money on stuff they did not
need. For women they brought in the television
soaps. One of the reasons the ranch house was
developed was because [families] only had one
television. The television was in the living room
and women spent a lot of time in the kitchen. You
had to devise a house where she could watch
television from the kitchen. She was being taught.”
“But who was teaching the men how to spend
money?” she went on. “It was Playboy [Magazine].
This was the brilliance of Hugh Hefner. He
understood that you don’t just commodify sexuality,
you sexualize commodities. The promise that Playboy
held out was not the girls or the women, it was that
if you buy at this level, if you consume at the
level Playboy tells you to, then you will get the
prize, which is the women. The step that was crucial
to getting the prize was the consumption of
commodities. He wrapped porn, which sexualized and
commoditized women’s bodies, in an
upper-middle-class blanket. He gave it a veneer of
respectability.”
The VCR, the DVD and, later, the Internet allowed
porn to be pumped into individual homes. The glossy,
still images of Playboy, Penthouse and Hustler
became tame, even quaint. America, and much of the
rest of the world, became pornified. The income of
the global porn industry is estimated at $96
billion, with the United States market worth about
$13 billion. There are, Dines writes, “420 million
Internet porn pages, 4.2 million porn Web sites, and
68 million search engine requests for porn daily.”
[To see excerpts from Dines’ book,
click here.]
Along with the rise of pornography there has been
an explosion in sex-related violence, including
domestic abuse, rape and gang rape. A rape is
reported every 6.2 minutes in the United States, but
the estimated total, taking into account unreported
assaults, is perhaps five times higher, as Rebecca
Solnit points out in her book
“Men Explain Things to Me.”
“So many men murder their partners and former
partners that we have well over a thousand homicides
of that kind a year — meaning that every three years
the death toll tops 9/11’s casualties, though no one
declares a war on this particular kind of terror,”
Solnit writes.
Porn, meanwhile, is ever more accessible.“With a
mobile phone you can deliver porn to men who live in
highly concentrated neighborhoods in Brazil and
India,” Dines said. “If you have one laptop in the
family, the man can’t sit in the middle of the room
and jerk off to it. With a phone, porn becomes
portable. The average kid gets his porn through the
mobile phone.”
The old porn industry, which found its profits in
movies, is dead. The points of production no longer
generate profits. The distributors of porn make the
money. And one distributor, MindGeek, a global IT
company, dominates porn distribution. Free porn is
used on the Internet as bait by MindGeek to lure
viewers to pay-per-view porn sites. Most users are
adolescent boys. It is, Dines said, “like handing
out cigarettes outside of a middle school. You get
them addicted.”
“Around the ages of 12 to 15 you are developing
your sexual template,” she said. “You get [the boys]
when they are beginning to construct their sexual
identity. You get them for life. If you begin by
jerking off to cruel, hardcore, violent porn then
you are not going to want intimacy and connection.
Studies are showing that boys are losing interest in
sex with real women. They can’t sustain erections
with real women. In porn there is no making love. It
is about making hate. He despises her. He is
revolted and disgusted by her. If you bleed out the
love you have to fill it with something to make it
interesting. They fill it with violence,
degradation, cruelty and hate. And that also gets
boring. So you have to keep ratcheting it up. Men
get off in porn from women being submissive. Who is
more submissive than children? The inevitable route
of all porn is child porn. And this is why
organizations that fight child porn and do not fight
adult porn are making a huge mistake.”
The abuse inherent in pornography goes
unquestioned in large part by both men and women.
Look at the movie ticket sales for “Fifty Shades of
Grey,” which opened the day before Valentine’s Day
and is expected to
take in up to $90 million over the four-day
weekend (which includes Presidents Day on Monday).
“Pornography has socialized a generation of men
into watching sexual torture,” Dines said. “You are
not born with that capacity. You have to be trained
into it. Just like you train soldiers to kill. If
you are going to carry out violence against a group
you have to dehumanize them. It is an old method.
Jews become kikes. Blacks become niggers. Women
become cunts. And no one turns women into cunts
better than porn.”
Chris Hedges, spent nearly two decades as a
foreign correspondent in Central America, the
Middle East, Africa and the Balkans. He has
reported from more than 50 countries and has
worked for The Christian Science Monitor,
National Public Radio, The Dallas Morning News
and The New York Times, for which he was a
foreign correspondent for 15 years. -
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