Honestly, MLs tend to do this with a lot of convos, I feel.

  • ComradeSalad@lemmygrad.ml
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    1 year ago

    Firstly, who said that the porn I was consuming included women at all? Even so, if they were, over-sexualized, and over-fetishized depictions are very disgusting to me and I do not enjoy them. Hence why I like to consume comics depicting normal or healthy relationships, or unproblematic and consensual kinks.

    I feel like you are still looking at this from the lens of drawn or written porn being in the same vein as generic porno-film quality with cheesy or problematic dialogue, with exaggerated moans and emotionless sex.

    I feel like this speaks more about the problematic nature of what porn depicts, rather then the medium itself. This would be like saying that consensual sex is bad, because rape exists.

    • Life2Space@lemmygrad.ml
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      1 year ago

      I guess…that doesn’t sound too bad? Your suggestion seems fine to my ears, but others might disagree.

      Regardless, pornography will most likely be banned in all socialist countries anyways; just like how it’s banned in China, for instance.

      • ComradeSalad@lemmygrad.ml
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        1 year ago

        Pornography is not banned in China. Selling, purchasing, transporting, or producing it for PROFIT is banned. If you want to draw or write some smut and put it on an 18+ forum, no one cares or is going to stop that. Self made porn is also not banned if you aren’t disseminating it for profit (something like Onlyfans). Artistic, educational, and medical depictions also have exemptions under Chinese law, and a lot of drawn pornography sites use the artistic exemption.

        If you make a website selling pornographic art or films or open a film studio, that’ll get taken down and is very illegal. For example the site Erotica Juneday required users pay around 20-500 dollars a year for their service. That was taken down and the administrators were imprisoned. The Chinese version of DeviantArt and Rule34 however are free and run no advertisements, and they have remained up for years.

        Peer to peer dissemination is also not illegal, which is why services like Baidu offer that as a service.

        Further, the vast majority of Chinese people use VPN’s, and it is estimated that a large percentage of that traffic is to foreign pornographic sites.

        • Life2Space@lemmygrad.ml
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          1 year ago

          Very interesting! I was under the impression that all forms of pornography were prohibited from being published and circulated in Chinese internet domains, and that the only way to access them was through the use of a VPN. It’s cool to know that Chinese internet rules are much more sexually fluid than I had thought.