1. Pornografía La Droga del Nuevo Milenio Advertencia Contenido Sexual Expl ícito
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3. “ En la actualidad, la Pornografía es la mayor amenaza al bienestar psicológico.” Mary Anne Layden Co-director of the Sexual Trauma and Psychopathology Program at the University of Pennsylvania's Center for Cognitive Therapy
9. 26 Entonces dijo Dios: Hagamos al hombre a nuestra imagen, conforme a nuestra semejanza... 27 Y creó Dios al hombre a su imagen, a imagen de Dios lo creó; varón y hembra los creó.
30. Pornograf í a Masturbaci ón compulsiva Promiscuidad “ Cyber-sex” Sexo telef ónico Parafilias Exibicionismo Fetichismo Froteurismo Pedofilia Voyerismo Transvestismo
48. ¿Qué tan Serio es el Problema ? $1.5 billion Other $1.0 billion Novelties $1.5 billion CD-Rom $2.5 billion Internet $2.5 billion Cable/Pay per view $4.5 billion Phone sex $5.0 billion Sex clubs $7.5 billion Magazines $11 billion Escort services $20 billion Adult videos $57.0 billion world-wide $12.0 billion US Size of the industry
53. “… estudios científicos demuestran la similitud que existe entre la adicción a cocaína y la adicción a la pornografía…” “… siendo que las imágenes pornográficas se archivan en el cerebro y, por lo tanto pueden revivirse en cualquier momento, los expertos piensan que la adicción a la pornografía es más difícil de vencer que la adicción a heroína…” "The Science Behind Pornography Addiction," U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation Web site, (expert witness testimony), http://commerce.senate.gov/hearings/witnesslist.cfm?id=1343 (18 May 2005).
Through much of our nation’s history, Americans have intuitively understood the danger to family and community posed by pornographic and obscene material. But things have changed. Starting in the early twentieth century, increased automation, communication, and entertainment options brought about a more materialistic view of the world. Movements promoting eugenics became popular and influential. These developments set the foundations upon which our current fascination with pornography stands. Human beings began to be seen less as unique creations with inherent dignity and more as objects to be manipulated to further personal aims. These ideas of the mere utility of people blossomed during the sexual revolution and have steadily grown to reap their disastrous reward today. To win the battle against the consumption and disposal of human beings so common to pornography, we must rediscover what it means to be human—and live with the purpose of treating others—and ourselves—as such.