• Home
  • About
  • Objectives
  • Membership
  • Donations
  • Activities
  • Research Reports
  • Submissions
  • Newsletters
  • Contact

SPCS

SOCIETY FOR PROMOTION OF COMMUNITY STANDARDS INC.

  • Censorship
    • Censorship & New Technology
    • Film Ratings
    • Films
  • Crime
    • Rape statistics
    • Television Violence
    • Violence
    • Youth Crime
  • Enforcement
  • Family
    • Anti-smacking Bill
    • Families Commission
    • Marriage
  • Gambling Addiction
  • Political Advocacy
  • Pro-life
    • Abortion
  • Prostitution
  • Sexuality
    • Child Sex Crimes
    • Civil Unions
    • HIV/AIDS STIs
    • Homosexuality
    • Kinsey Fraud
    • Porn Link to Rape
    • Pornography
    • Sex Studies
    • Sexual Dysfunction
  • Other
    • Alcohol abuse
    • Announcement
    • Application For Leave
    • Broadcasting Standards Authority
    • Celebrating Christian Tradition
    • Children’s Television
    • Complaints to Broadcasters
    • Computer games
    • Film & Lit Board Reviews
    • Film & Lit. Board Appointments
    • Human Dignity
    • Moral Values
    • Newsletters
    • Newspaper Articles
    • Recommended Books
    • Submissions
    • YouTube

Porn ‘education’ fuels filming of rape of drunk girls by teenage boys

November 4, 2013 by SPCS Leave a Comment

The actions of the Roast Busters, a group of teenagers who film their sexual exploits with drunk girls and post the footage online are “absolutely rape”, [Dr Kim McGregor], the director of Rape Prevention Education says. [Read more…]

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Email
  • Print

Filed Under: Child Sex Crimes, Porn Link to Rape, Pornography, Sexual Dysfunction, Youth Crime Tagged With: Dr Kim McGregor, group sex, Rape, rape prevention, sexual exploits

Teenage boys are getting ‘sex education through porn’ focused on violence against women

November 4, 2013 by SPCS Leave a Comment

‘SEX EDUCATION THROUGH PORN’

Rape Prevention Education works with 40 Auckland schools to promote safe and respectful physical contact through its Body Safe programme, and has encountered some worrying attitudes, she said.

Teenage boys are getting sex education through porn, most of which is heavily focused on violence against women, she said.

And many think it’s fine to have sex with teens who are under-age. In one school recently, when asked to say whether it was OK or not OK for a 14 year old to willingly have sex with a teacher, many thought it was OK, she said. “There’s a big lack of information about the age of consent.” [Read more…]

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Email
  • Print

Filed Under: Child Sex Crimes, Porn Link to Rape, Pornography, Sexual Dysfunction, Youth Crime Tagged With: Dr Kim McGregor, porn link to rape, rape prevention, rape prevention education, sexual violence

More kids committing sexual abuse due to easy access to hardcore porn

July 8, 2013 by SPCS Leave a Comment

Easy access to increasingly hardcore pornography and the sexualisation of childhood are being blamed for a rise in the number of children sexually abusing each other.

Growing numbers of children and teenagers are committing acts of sexual abuse against other children every year, with some as young as 11 being prosecuted for sexual offences.

Experts are calling for compulsory cyber-education programmes in all schools from primary level to stem the impact of explicit material.

Ministry of Justice figures received under the Official Information Act show that, since 2008, there have been 1299 prosecutions for sexual offences brought against young people under the age of 18.

This has risen steadily over the past five years, with 314 prosecutions last year compared to 204 in 2008. These are for offences ranging from rape to indecent assault and sexual grooming, with victims, both male and female, under the age of 16.

The youngest offender was 11. Only one of the offenders was a girl. Police say the jump in prosecutions was due to better knowledge and increased reporting of sexual abuse, rather than a rise in incidents.

To read full story go to:

More Kids Committing Sexcual Abuse – Story by Michelle Duff

8 July 2013

http://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/news/8889144/More-kids-committing-sexual-abuse

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Email
  • Print

Filed Under: Child Sex Crimes, Crime, Porn Link to Rape, Pornography Tagged With: indecent assault, sexual abuse, sexual grooming, sexual offences, sexualisation

Why we should stop teens looking at internet porn – The Telegraph – Opinion by British doctor Max Pemberton

July 11, 2012 by SPCS Leave a Comment

Internet porn is hazardous to teenagers, argues British doctor Max Pemberton. Their brains aren’t built to make the connection between impulse and consequences. Dr Starmer’s comments are timely, coming just after a 14-year old British boy … was found guilt of raping a 4-year old girl. The judge [at sentencing, stated] that the boy had been “sexualised by the corruption of pornography”.

Why we should stop teens looking at internet porn (Opinion piece republished from The Telegraph by The Dominion Post, Opinion, 11 July, 2012, p. A13.

Computers have radically altered the way that humans interact, and inevitably some view the changes with suspicion. That doesn’t make those people Luddites, because there are times when it seems right to question certain changes in society brought about by technology. Keir Starmer, the Director of Public Prosecutions, said last week he was worried about new research that suggests that teenage relationships are becoming more abusive. He blamed this trend on the ready access to internet pornography.

Was he being an old fuddy-duddy? It’s an important question because it has serious ramifications for ideas surrounding censorship and choice on the internet. If correct, the research he referred to means that technology is having an adverse effect on the younger generation, altering aspects of their behaviour towards each other as sexual beings.

Starmer’s comments are timely, coming just after a 14?year-old boy was freed and given a three-year supervised community order after he was found guilty of raping a four-year-old girl. The judge justified the sentence by saying that the boy had been “sexualised by the corruption of pornography”.

Can this be correct? Can we really blame pornography? As uncomfortable as it makes me, I agree with the judge’s decision and Starmer’s concerns – and it’s all because of a bit of brain just behind our forehead called the prefrontal cortex. This blob of neurones is what makes us more than just animals. It’s involved in a dizzying range of functions that most adults take for granted. It is the seat for impulse control and delaying gratification; foreseeing and judging consequences of behaviour; predicting outcomes; forming strategies and planning; modulating emotions; inhibiting inappropriate behaviour and initiating appropriate behaviour. It’s involved in expressing our personality and orchestrates our thoughts and actions.

It is, in short, not just the part of the brain that makes us human and integrates us socially, but it also makes us, us. And when considering the impact of viewing graphic pornography on youngsters, this bit of the brain becomes very important.

Over the past few years, there have been various scare stories claiming that the internet alters the developing brains of children. This is largely piffle – no such clear, objective evidence exists. Playing Super-Mario isn’t going to turn a child’s brain to mush.

But that doesn’t mean all is well in cyberspace. The very danger of youngsters being exposed to sexually graphic films and images actually has nothing to do with the internet changing their brains, but with the fact that their brains are changing of their own accord anyway. If you’re under 25, you’re not going to like the next bit. But don’t blame me, blame your brain. The prefrontal cortex is the last part of the brain to develop fully and is still developing well into a person’s twenties. That is why teenagers behave the way they do.

With an immature prefrontal cortex, they can understand that a type of behaviour is dangerous or wrong, but they lack the neural circuitry to modulate these thoughts and process them the way an adult does. If parental instruction is missing and their only point of reference is gratuitous pornography, many youngsters will develop a warped, distorted understanding of sex – sometimes with tragic results.

While an adult can view such images and, usually, understand that they are a fantasy and not a blueprint for human relations, children and teenagers struggle with this. It’s actually not their fault; their brains simply aren’t fully formed. We’d never expect a newborn baby to tell us what it wanted for supper, and that is because those parts of its motor cortex and the speech areas of its brain haven’t developed yet. It’s the same with complex social and moral development in older children. Just because teenagers look and sound like adults, we should not assume they think like them.

There is therefore a genuine, scientific reason why we should ensure that graphic – both sexual and violent – content is carefully restricted. This isn’t about being puritanical, reactionary or patronising. It’s just accepting the science. The inevitable conclusion is that there should be an opt-in clause to view adult content on the internet. Though I loathe the idea of restrictions, in the case of pornography we do teenagers a disservice if we don’t place constraints on what they can view online.

I know this won’t make me popular with teenagers. But when their prefrontal cortex develops, they’ll understand.

Source:

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/women_shealth/9385158/Whatever-Victorias-Secret-model-Miranda-Kerr-says-dont-be-a-pain-about-epidurals.html

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Email
  • Print

Filed Under: Porn Link to Rape, Pornography, Sexual Dysfunction Tagged With: internet porn, the corruption of pornography

Moral welfare of young girls at risk from high risk porn offender

October 27, 2011 by SPCS Leave a Comment

Paedophile may remain a risk

The Crown is having second thoughts about its decision not to seek an open-ended preventive detention sentence for a 39-year old man [name removed] who disclosed more sex offences involving children, while he was undergoing treatment in prison.  He disclosed 16 sex charges against eight young girls while doing the Kia Marama sex offenders’ programme in Christchurch Men’s Prison.

After his guilty pleas, the Crown decided not to seek preventive detention but it has been rethinking that decision after access was barred to reports on his treatment at the programme.  Without those reports, the Crown faced a difficult assessment of any future risk to the community that the offender might pose.

In court today, the offender agreed to allow access by the Crown and his defence counsel to reports prepared on his treatment after the crown prosecutor sought a direction on the matter from Christchurch District Court Judge David Saunders.

The offender has a history of offending stretching back 20 years and the latest offences for which he now faces sentencing were committed from the 1990s to 2005 in Timaru.

He is seen as having a deeply entrenched sexual attraction to children, and is assessed as a high-risk pornography offender.

He is serving a two-year four-month term imposed in May last year for possession of objectionable material including images of bestiality and child pornography.

 For more see: http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/crime/5862862/Paedophile-may-remain-a-risk

Story by David Clarkson, Dominion Post, 27 October 2011.

 

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Email
  • Print

Filed Under: Child Sex Crimes, Crime, Porn Link to Rape, Pornography, Sexual Dysfunction

« Previous Page
Next Page »
SPCS Facebook Page

Subscribe to website updates:

The Pilgrim’s Progress

Getting "The Pilgrim’s Progress" to
every prisoner in NZ prisons.

Recent Comments

  • John on The term ‘Homophobia’: Its Origins and Meanings, and its uses in Homosexual Agenda
  • SPCS on Corporate corruption in New Zealand – “Banning badly behaving company directors”
  • Anne on Corporate corruption in New Zealand – “Banning badly behaving company directors”
  • Jake on John Clancy: Troubled Global group costs Christchurch City Council another $37,000
  • Jake on John Clancy: Troubled Global group costs Christchurch City Council another $37,000

Family Values & Community Standards

  • Coalition for Marriage
  • ECPAT New Zealand
  • Family Voice Australia
  • Parents Inc.

Internet Safety

  • Netsafe Internet Safety Group

Pro-Life Groups

  • Family Life International
  • Right to Life
  • The Nathaniel Centre
  • Voice for Life
(Click here for larger image)

Copyright © 2025 · News Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.