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The concept that pornography leads to negative attitudes toward women is pervasive, helping shape obscenity laws, fuelling censorship attempts and also spawning a recent Hollywood movie.

Although the notion may have little actual foundation the truth is, suggests a contentious new Canadian study that concludes a normal porn user holds, if anything, more egalitarian views regarding women than non-users.

Many pornography aficionados might even be “useful allies” in women’s struggles for equality in work, income and public office, the researchers at London’s Western University argue in a paper that is already generating fierce criticism.

At the very least, they say, the study calls into serious question the view that pornography is so damaging that, in one activist’s words, it’s “what the end of the world looks like.”

Just what the end of the world looks like
“I’d rather not are living in a culture where our government, lawmakers opt to regulate, outlaw behaviour or adult material (Visit Webpage) since they assume it’s harmful,” said Taylor Kohut, the post-doctoral fellow in psychology who led the research, about its value. “I’d rather they demonstrate it is, first.”

He and his colleagues analyzed data from 35 years of the general Social Survey, a government-funded U.S. project that interviews about 24,000 people annually on a number of issues.

They reported in the Journal of Sex Research that the 23 per cent who reported having watched an “X-rated” movie in the previous year were no approximately likely than porn abstainers to identify as feminists, or voice support for the traditional family.

As well as the blue-movie watchers expressed usually more positive attitudes toward women in positions of power, and less negative attitudes toward abortion and women within the workforce than people who refrained from pornography.