Everywhere kids are, so is mainstream, violent porn

Hardcore, explicit porn is widely available. It can be easily accessed from any device with an internet connection including phones, tablets, game consoles, and even e-readers.

1 in 3 kids say they’ve seen explicit, hardcore porn by age 12, which equates to roughly 25 million children in the U.S. alone. In the majority of cases, they’ve stumbled upon it accidentally.

Much of this content is misleading, degrading, and objectifying. That’s a dangerous trifecta that shapes kids’ perception of consent, sexual violence, gender equality, sexuality, and intimate relationships at an extremely young age and without any context.

Porn undermines the whole-person health of young people. It impacts every facet of their developmental wellness—social, emotional, cognitive, and physical.

SITE: https://culturereframed.org/the-crisis/

The 3 biggest myths about porn and youth

Myth #1: My child hasn’t seen porn

Chances are, they have. Extremely graphic online porn is widely available, free, and accessible not only from smartphones but also from countless electronic devices that children interact with daily.

The facts speak for themselves: 1 in 3 kids report they’ve seen porn by age 12. And only 50% of parents thought their 14-to-18-year-olds had seen porn as had in fact watched it. Depending on the sex act, parents underestimated what their kids saw by as much as 10 times.

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Myth #2: Porn isn’t that bad

Today there are hundreds of millions of free, easy-to-access hardcore videos that depict misogynistic, humiliating, degrading content at best and contain images of sexual assault, rape, and even incest at worst.

What’s more, virtual reality (VR) porn—where a user can be fully immersed in their surroundings—is already here and rapidly advancing. An increasing number of kids own VR video game platforms, which are connected to the internet.

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Myth #3: There’s nothing I can do about my kids discovering porn

While porn will continue to exist, we absolutely do have control over how we reframe our culture’s messaging with kids.

Young people need trusted adults to help them build resilience and resistance to hypersexualized media and porn. As a parent or caregiver, you play the most critical role in offering your children alternative, healthy messages about sex that instill respect in themselves and others. Our online courses for parents can help you get there, starting right now.

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