PORNOGRAPHY PERVERSION
Pornography -- The Real
Perversion
By Dinesh D'Souza
Townhall.Com
Tuesday, January 16, 2007
On a recent trip to Istanbul I encountered a group of Muslim students who
insisted that American culture was morally perverse. They called it
"pornographic." And they charged that this culture is now being
imposed on the rest of the world. I protested that pornography is a universal
vice. "Yes," one of the students replied, "but nowhere else is
pornography in the mainstream of the culture. Nowhere else is porn considered so
cool and fashionable. Pornography in America represents an inversion of
values."
As I returned home to the United States, I wondered: are these students right? I
don't think American culture as a whole is guilty of the charge of moral
depravity. But there is a segment of our culture that is perverse and
pornographic, and perhaps this part of American culture is the one that
foreigners see. Wrongly, they identify one face of America with the whole of
America. When they protest what they see as the glamorization of pornography and
vice, however, it's hard to deny that they have a point.
Pornography has become big business in the United States. You no longer have to
go places to find it; it now finds you. Once confined to "dirty old
men" and seedy areas of town, pornography has now penetrated the hotel room
and home. The Internet and cell phone have made pornography accessible
everywhere, all the time.
The spread of porn is not surprising, and neither is its popularity. It is not
the appeal of sex, but the appeal of voyeurism. After all, the actors in porn
films seek to gratify not themselves but the viewer. The spectator finds himself
in an unnatural position of being witness to a sexual act which is conducted
fully for his benefit. It's hard to deny that there is something degrading in
the continuous exposure to increasingly hard-core pornography.
In a manner that the older generation of Americans finds scandalous, porn has
become socially acceptable and lost its moral stigma. A good example of this
cultural cache is that today a porn star like Jenna Jameson appears on
billboards and on the cover of magazines like Vanity Fair. In some liberal
intellectual circles, the advocacy of porn is now viewed as a mark of
sophistication. Recently the New Yorker reported on an event held at the Mary
Boone art galley in Manhattan where "artists, collectors, literati, and
other art world regulars mingled seamlessly with adult-movie producers and
directors and quite a few of the performers themselves." The purpose of the
event was to celebrate the publication of the book "XXX: Porn Star
Portraits." The pictures in the book are accompanied by appreciative essays
by leading figures on the left like Gore Vidal, John Waters, and Salman Rushdie.
The liberal defense of obscenity and pornography began many decades ago as a
defense of great works of literature and of free speech. It began as a defense
of books like James Joyce's Ulysses, Flaubert's Madame Bovary, and D.H.
Lawrence's Lady Chatterly's Lover. But now some liberal advocates insist that
all forms of sexual explicitness are equally deserving of legal protection and
that no restriction of obscenity or pornography should be allowed.
This is the position defended in former ACLU president Nadine Strossen's book
Defending Pornography. As liberal pundit Wendy Kaminer puts it, in her foreword
to the book, "You don't need to know anything about art-you don't even need
to know what you like-in order to defend speech deemed hateful, sick or
pornographic." Kaminer even takes the view that child pornography should be
permitted because "fantasies about children having sex are repellent to
most of us, but the First Amendment is designed to protect repellent
imaginings." Actually this is pure nonsense: the framers were concerned to
protect political speech and not depictions of pedophilia. But Kaminer's view is
a good reflection of what some liberals would like the Constitution to say.
Groups like the ACLU have taken the approach that pornography rights, like the
rights of accused criminals, are best protected at their outermost extreme. This
means that the more foul the obscenity, the harder liberals must fight to allow
it. By protecting expression at its farthest reach, these activists believe they
are fully securing the free speech rights of the rest of us.
It is a long way, for instance, from James Joyce to a loathsome character like
Larry Flynt, the publisher of Hustler magazine. There would seem to be an
obvious distinction between fighting to include James Joyce in a high school
library and insisting that the same library maintain its subscription to
Hustler. For the ACLU, however, the two causes are part of the same free speech
crusade. In a sense, the ACLU considers the campaign for Hustler a more worthy
cause because if Hustler is permitted, anything is permitted, and therefore free
speech has been more vigorously defended.
In recent years, leading liberals have gone from defending Flynt as a despicable
man who nevertheless has First Amendment rights, to defending Flynt as a
delightful man who is valiantly fighting against the forces of darkness and
repression. "What I find refreshing about Larry Flynt is that he doesn't
pretend to be anything other than a scumbag," Frank Rich writes in the New
York Times. "At least Flynt's honest about what he's doing."
These liberal virtues-honestly and openness about being a scumbag-are on full
display in Milos Forman's film The People vs. Larry Flynt. The movie sanitizes
Flynt in order to make him a likeable, even heroic figure. In reality Flynt is
short and ugly; in the movie he is tall and handsome, played by Woody Harrelson.
In life Flynt was married five times. His daughter accused him of sexually
abusing her, a charge that Flynt has denied. All of this is suppressed in the
movie, where Flynt has one wife and is portrayed as an adoring and supportive
husband.
Hustler features a good deal of gross and repellent material, such as its parody
of Jerry Falwell having sex with his grandmother, or its picture of a woman
being processed through a meat grinder. The movie, by contrast, features mostly
tasteful erotica; if Flynt goes over the line, it is always presented as
mischievous fun. If there is anyone who is despicable in the movie, it is
Flynt's critics, who are unfailingly shown as smug, hypocritical, vicious and
stupid.
The pornographer generally knows that he is a sleazy operator. I have read
interviews with men like Larry Flynt and Al Goldstein, the publisher of Screw
magazine. Typically such men do not even try and defend the social value of what
they do, other than to point out that there is a demand for it. It is only the
ACLU and its supporters who celebrate the pornographer as a paragon of the First
Amendment and a contemporary social hero. Social liberals like Frank Rich seem
to have a much higher view of Flynt than Flynt himself. If we confine ourselves
to liberal culture and its apologists, my Muslim interlocutors would seem to
have a justified complaint. The liberal defense of pornography is even more
perverted than the pornography itself.
http://www.townhall.com/columnists/DineshDSouza/2007/01/16/pornography_--_the_real_perversion
Dinesh D'Souza's new book The Enemy at Home: The Cultural Left and Its
Responsibility for 9/11 has just been published by Doubleday. D'Souza is the
Rishwain Fellow at the Hoover Institution.