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A scene from the "Fifty Shades of Grey" movie trailer.



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fifty shades of grey



planned parenthood



8/27/14



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It turns out that Planned Parenthood staffers love “50 Shades of Grey” — so much that they proclaim the series and its dubious philosophy to teen girls looking for guidance.
“Fifty Shades” tells how how hyper-controlling Christian Grey subjects 21-year-old Ana Steele (who, it must be noted, talks like a 13-year-old) to an endless series of physically harmful and degrading sexual situations.
Some consider it liberating (or at least titillating), but you can also call it sadomasochistic porn . Of course the mentality here, and its popular success, isn’t new.
Recall Robin Thicke’s “Blurred Lines”: With its unending repetition of “I know you want it” while (on the video) mostly naked girls dance around fully clothed Thicke and his male friends, it’s hard not to see the song as pro-rape .
When “Blurred Lines” has more views on YouTube than the United States has citizens, and when the “50 Shades” trailer had 19 million views in its first week, it’s hard to ignore the common feminist assertion that a “rape culture” plagues our society.
Which makes it so bizarre to find what’s normally seen as a feminist institution, Planned Parenthood, promoting that culture.
We at Live Action (a new-media pro-life group) were thinking of Thicke when we set out to investigate Planned Parenthood’s sex-counseling agenda.
We sent investigators posing as 15- and 16-year-old girls into Planned Parenthood facilities across the country — as it happens, just as the “50 Shades” trailer came out.
It turned out that Planned Parenthood counselors consistently recommended the “50 Shades” series to what they thought were minor girls.
“You need to read it,” an enthusiastic staffer said in Indiana. “It’s pretty good,” we heard in Colorado.
Another called the series “extreme,” but “if it’s consensual, again, completely normal.” Even a counselor who personally disliked “50 Shades” advised that “it would be a big eye-opener for you.”
The staffers’ script was much the same everywhere. All of the employees went on to insist on “trust” and elevating the “safe word” (a word that sex partners who are intent on extreme behavior agree to use as code for “no, stop, and I mean it”) to set-in-stone status.
In short, Planned Parenthood counselors told our investigators that “no” doesn’t mean “no” anymore.
It, and everything else, means “yes” — or at least it does to those looking for a quick sexual fix.
Note that in one “50 Shades” scene, Grey explicitly ignores the safe word and even punishes Ana for trying to use it. In several others, he shows outright contempt for the girl’s limits and has his way with her, to the point where the sex scenes read like rapes.
In the world of fiction, an author can conveniently just have the character enjoy this treatment. In reality, behavior like this — and promoting it — is a recipe for disaster.
This is what makes Planned Parenthood’s dogmatic adherence to the cult of the “safe word” so disturbing. According to the group’s trained counselors:
What mother wants her daughter to go through her interactions with boys thinking that no “can get… mixed up”?
What father wants his son to hear a girl protesting and wonder if she really means it . . . and if, maybe, he should just have his way with her anyway? How much more blurred can these lines get ?
With girls made into abuse victims and boys made into monsters, whom does the “no means yes” culture help?
Well, it helps Planned Parenthood, which is standing by with STD testing (for a price) and the suction machine for any “accidents.” (Will that abortion be cash, check or charge?)
According to Planned Parenthood, “no” can’t mean “no” anymore; the word “can get mixed up.” So learn the “safe word,” and pray that your partner doesn’t decide t hat it’s not so safe anymore .
When Planned Parenthood counselors train our girls not to expect that “no” means no, they disable a crucial form of protection for all women in a violent world.
And when boys get that same message, those who we’d most expect to decry “rape culture” — feminists, so-called women’s-rights groups and even Planned Parenthood — make men into predators, and foment the very abusive sexual ethos they claim to oppose.
A world of compliant Ana Steeles and repulsive Christian Greys is nothing short of nightmarish. We all should turn away from any road that leads there.
Lila Rose is president of Live Action, a new-media pro-life group.

The trailer for the six-part series eschews the sad stories for a more nuanced look at the industry.

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WHAT: The trailer for Netflix’s Hot Girls Wanted: Turned On , a six-part documentary anthology about the porn industry that follows up on the 2015 documentary feature Hot Girls Wanted .
WHO: Rashida Jones, Jill Bauer, and Ronna Gradus, who produced the original doc, return for this one as well.
WHY WE CARE: Stories about the porn industry often lack nuance. There are the trashy ones that offer a vicarious thrill to viewers with shots of sex and debauchery, and there are the more somber ones that show the lives ruined by an industry that’s often exploitative. Neither of those views of the industry is wrong , exactly–women are exploited, and debauchery does happen–but they also don’t show the whole picture. In just two minutes, though, the trailer for Hot Girls Wanted: Turned On offers a glimpse of what else there is to say about that world: There are interviews with porn producers who acknowledge the responsibility they have in providing what is, essentially, the main source of sex ed that a lot of young viewers will get; there are clips of cam girls who talk about the emotional services they provide to their fans, and footage of those fans explaining why those relationships are important to them; there are explorations of the dark side of porn that have less to do with exploitation and more to do with the performers’ need to chase the rush of validation from fans watching in real time; performers explain the frustration that comes with living in a culture that judges them for what they do even as they relentlessly consume the product they make.
Porn in 2017 is a very different thing than it was even 10 years ago, and a documentary that digs into the way it’s evolved in a world where performers and producers can enter the industry on their own terms is one that can tell a pretty different story than the one we’ve seen before.
Dan Solomon lives in Austin with his wife and his dog. He's written about music for MTV and Spin, sports for Sports Illustrated, and pop culture for Vulture and the AV Club
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Looks like they're trying to get a charge that applies to the USA/NZ extradition treaty from 1970. Article II, section seven: "Unlawful sexual acts with or upon children under the age specified by the laws of both the requesting and requested parties." I think the production of child pornography would apply, but I'm no expert on extradition treaties.



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Timothy B. Lee
Timothy is a senior reporter covering tech policy and the future of transportation. He lives in Washington DC.

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Timothy B. Lee
- 11/9/2019, 1:30 AM

Michael Pratt, the principal owner of the GirlsDoPorn website, is already facing criminal charges for sex trafficking involving adult women. A new indictment, unsealed Thursday, has added child pornography charges .
For years, Pratt has been recruiting young women to San Diego to shoot pornographic videos. Dozens of women say that Pratt and his colleagues lied to them and used physical coercion to induce them to participate—claims that led to federal sex trafficking charges last month.
Now prosecutors say that Pratt flew a 16-year-old girl to Southern California to have sex on camera. That would be a violation of federal laws against production of child pornography as well as sex trafficking of minors.
It's not clear if Pratt will ultimately stand trial for his alleged crimes. Pratt, a New Zealand native, reportedly left the United States in September in the midst of a long-running civil trial that is still ongoing.
Criminal charges were filed against Pratt and three others in October. Two of Pratt's co-defendants are now in federal custody, while a third is out on bail. But Pratt is believed to be in New Zealand.
Courthouse News reports that the new indictment was unsealed at "a hearing attended by Pratt’s co-defendants, GirlsDoPorn videographer Matthew Wolfe, actor Andre Garcia, and administrative assistant Valorie Moser." The judge entered a not guilty plea for the trio.
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