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Does Viewing Porn Corrupt Teens?

Male High School Students Using Mobile Phones On School Campus

Male High School Students Using Mobile Phones On School Campus

Despite free Internet porn, today’s teens have become more sexually responsible.

Many parents have trouble discussing sex with their children, and even the most comprehensive school sex-education programs have no measurable impact on teen sex [4.15.13]. Meanwhile, porn is just a few taps or clicks away from most teens and many view it regularly. This worries porn critics no end.

Detractors insist that adolescents experience unwanted exposure to sexually explicit media, and that porn sexualizes young people too early, ruins them for long-term relationships, and pushes young men toward sexism and sexual violence. On the contrary, here’s what the best studies show:

More reasons that teen porn exposure is no cause for alarm

Since the Arrival of Internet Porn, Teens Have Become More Sexually Responsible

So some studies suggest teen porn viewing is harmful, while many others conclude it’s innocuous. When faced with dueling studies, it’s instructive to look beyond academia and explore what’s actually happening in the world. Current teen sexual behavior shows the porn bashers are mistaken. Porn has not corrupted adolescents.

If porn spurred teen sexual irresponsibility, then since the late 1990s when porn exploded on the Internet, teens should have become more sexually active. Actually, teen sex has declined. A team led by San Diego State University researchers surveyed 26,707 Americans, some born in the 1960s and ’70s, who came of age before Internet porn, and others born in the ’80s and ’90s, who grew up in a world glutted with it. The latter reported less sex.

In addition, according to the National Center for Health Statistics, the teen birth rate peaked in 1991, years before Internet porn. Since then, it has fallen 70 percent. Abortion and emergency contraception explains some, but far from all of this. Compared with their parents and grandparents, today’s teens are also having less sex.

From the CDC’s annual Youth Risk Behavior Surveys:

Sexual intercourse, ever

1997: 48%

2015: 41%

Change: -7%

Sexual intercourse, previous three months

1997: 35%

2015: 30%

Change: -5%

Condom use, most recent intercourse

1997: 57%

2015: 57%

Change: none

Birth control pills prior to most recent intercourse

1997: 17%

2015: 18%

Change +1%

Alcohol or other recreational drug use immediately prior to most recent intercourse

1997: 25%

2015: 21%

Change: -4%

Teens raped

2001: 8%

2015: 7%

Change: -1%

 The fact is that despite the easy accessibility of free porn on all web-connected devices, today’s teens are less sexual and increasingly sexually responsible.

Does Discussing Porn with Adolescents Encourage Them to View It?

If a friend mentions a great new restaurant, you’re likely to try it. Similarly, some parents believe that if they mention porn to their adolescent children in hopes of deterring them from watching, teens may become more likely to view it. Two studies have explored this issue:

There’s no need to wring hands over teen porn consumption. As that geezer rock band, The Who, sang more than 50 years ago about a previous generation of teens, “The kids are all right.”

You may also be interested in reading – The Real Problem with Pornography: It’s Bad for Sex

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