I think that argument's a bit faulty.
My arguments are usually a bit faulty. If they were ready made and perfectly pristine I wouldn't see much point in posting here at all.
Earlier you mentionend guys getting aroused by national geographic or muslims getting aroused by a little bit of female shape or skin. You might notice, that both these societies were/are a lot less respectful towards women in general than today's porn-ridden west. So there seems to be no correlation between more porn -> less respect/freedom for women.
This is true. To some extent. That is, if you're comparing Muslim cultures (and others) to secular Western ones. Except that 1) a lot of muslims would disagree with you - and quite vehemently too, including many muslim women 2) you ignore most of the sex industry in the West.
The thing is, in parts I agree with you. A lot of porn is really disturbing, and many women in that business are being treated bad (to put it mildly). But your solution strikes me as throwing out the baby with the bathwater, so to speak. Instead of saying porn bad, mkay? and try to restrict it as much as possible (to the point of trying to ban it in some places - hello, Iceland) we should try to find ways to help those women, and stop/lessen their exploitation.
After all, we all know that some sneakers are manufactured under horrible circumstances, including child labour, etc. Do we, in turn, demand that sneakers be banned? No! What we do is try to stop those bad work practices, etc. I don't know, I'm sure there's some things we could do (especially since most porn is produced in western countries, thus easily reachable through our laws, unlike many sneaker manufacturies...). Maybe some quality label, Max Havelaar Porn, or something
I'm sure that if we were to direct our efforts towards actually helping exploited porn actresses instead of running around with our hands raise explaiming 'OMG, won't somebody please think of the children, etc, etc. we must ban this all...' we'd get ahead much better
but more to the topic, my main grievance with this isn't even that they try to filter out porn, but that they try to filter, period. I fear porn is just the excuse to introduce filter technologie to all ISP's under the guise of 'protecting the children' because nobody can possibly object that, right? why do you hate children? etc...once that tech is in place it can be, conveniently, used to filter other 'undesirable' stuff too (why not filter news? a lot of news are deeply distrubing, especially for children...). Btw, who controls what gets on the 'bad list' and what not?
I agree.
I have been talking about pornography in general not being a desirable product. Not that it should be banned.
Similarly, for example, I consider tobacco to be an even more harmful product, and yet I wouldn't consider a ban of that to be helpful either.
As for restrictions on tobacco, they seem to be only sensible. I wouldn't be at all in favour of babies in prams lighting up. (Incidentally, I remember seeing a baby's grandfather deliberately blowing tobacco smoke into its face - presumably in an effort to amuse the infant in some way - with the parents smiling benignly on; that was a strange family altogether! I was somewhat appalled, but didn't do or say anything.)
Turning back to restrictions on pornography, and sexual behaviour in general, they too seem to exist already. I don't know anyone who would sensibly suggest an absolute free-for-all. Outside of one or two mental libertarians, maybe? (He wrote, provocatively.)
In the end, let's face it, the sex industry is at best extremely tacky, and seems very resistant to any form of regulation. Which is why, I suggest, it tends to be highly exploitative of people who are employed at the "sharp" end. As it were.
All industries are exploitative, but pornography is especially so, and prostitution even more.
Reducing people's need, or taste, for the stuff might not be such a bad idea?
While treating it as just something completely acceptable - normalizing it - might be a step in the wrong direction? Possibly?
Incidentally, I agree a lot of news is seriously disturbing. A lot of the most graphic images are filtered by the news media, to some extent, I think. So that, if you feel you really must see them, you do have to go to some effort to do so.
Once again, I've not seen any proposal to remove anyone's ability to access "mainstream" pornography totally. Would anyone argue that child pornography should be freely available on the internet? But, you might say, that stuff is illegal, and quite rightly.
Again, the proposal was to change the default from porn to no-porn.
I've, honestly, yet to see any coherent argument against this.