Ohio Latest State Victimized by 'Porn Is a Public Health Hazard' Hoax

Ohio Latest State Victimized by 'Porn Is a Public Health Hazard' Hoax

LOS ANGELES — Ohio is among the latest states to jump on the porn-as-public-health-hazard bandwagon, which has seen boilerplate legislation drafted by antiporn zealots shopped to gullible backers, state-by-state.

The newest incarnation of this public hoax takes the form of Ohio House Resolution 180, sponsored by State Rep. Jena Powell, among others, which parrots the tiresome refrain that “pornography is a public health hazard with statewide and national public health impacts leading to a broad spectrum of individual and societal harms.”

Powell sees a link between pornography and violence that many folks more familiar with the topic would scoff at.

“We have hundreds of studies that show the correlation between pornography and its negative effects on men, and it’s leading to the abuse of women,” Powell told CBN News, claiming that 88 percent of pornography shows violence toward women, and of that 88 percent, 95 percent shows a positive or neutral reaction from women, stating, “It’s increasing a culture of violence.”

Among the problematic positions put forth in H.R. 180 are the claims that porn “perpetuates human trafficking and a sexually toxic environment; [that] sex trafficking, prostitution and pornography are all interrelated; [and that] sex traffickers often create pornography depicting victims of sex trafficking for display or sale online as a means of increasing income and control over victims.”

H.R. 180 also states that “the factors that compel men and women to enter into the pornography industry include poverty, homelessness, a history of childhood sexual or physical abuse, which are similar to the factors that make women, girls and boys vulnerable to being trafficked for sex; [and that] the pornography industry is mostly male-dominated by producers and directors who recruit and capitalize off of filming the exploitation, degradation, and sexualization of women.”

Other little gems claim “studies have shown that there is a correlation between men viewing pornography and an increased rate of interest in rape; and [how] pornography provides sexualized depictions of violence towards women and children, which correlates with an increased demand for sex trafficking, prostitution, child sexual abuse images, and child pornography.”

Porn consumption is also blamed for “an increase in low self-esteem, problematic sexual activity and body image disorders” and for its fanciful ability to “negatively impact healthy brain development and functioning, contribute to emotional and physical illnesses, shape deviant sexual desires and arousal, promote problematic or harmful sexual behaviors and addiction, and lead to difficulty in forming or maintaining positive, intimate relationships.”

H.R. 180 condemns the horrors of sexual stimulation, posturing un-cited studies that “prove” porn’s harmful effects, while wallowing in hyperbole and hysteria — but what does it hope to accomplish?

“This resolution does not outlaw pornography — it does not try to say that people cannot view it. That is a personal freedom that the Supreme Court has already affirmed… We’re not trampling on anyone’s constitutional rights,” Powell explained. “We’ve specifically written this resolution so that it brings awareness to church families and businesses and community members and helping at the local level — we’re pushing the cause to say ‘we’re done with this.’ You can’t view porn and not have implications and have them be negative on society.”

While the proclaimed lack of desire to outlaw porn may be reassuring to some, it’s hard to imagine an outcome where a legislative body would fail to take some type of action following the finding of any “public health crisis” — something that the pushers of this proposal no doubt anticipate.

The full text of the resolution is available here.

Download H.R. 180

Copyright © 2025 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More News

Adult Time Releases 2024 'Year in Review' Report

Adult Time has released its Year in Review report, highlighting the studio's audience favorites from throughout 2024.

AEBN Reveals Ariel Demure as Top Trans Star for Q4 of 2024

AEBN has named its top trans stars for the fourth quarter of 2024, with Ariel Demure landing atop the leaderboard.

WOWify.AI Joins ASACP as Corporate Sponsor

WOWify.AI has signed on as the latest corporate sponsor for the Association of Sites Advocating Child Protection (ASACP).

Segpay Adds Gateway Payment Solution

Segpay has added the Gateway option to its direct payments solutions.

Cherry Kiss, Derek Kage Cap AEBN's Top Stars for 4th Quarter of 2024

AEBN has revealed its most popular performers in gay and straight theaters for the fourth quarter of 2024.

A Golden Night in Hollywood: 2025 XMAs Shine on Adult Entertainment's Best

To paraphrase the unofficial U.S. Postal Service motto: Neither rain nor cold nor the chaos of natural disasters can stop members of the adult entertainment community from the completion of their appointed duty every January: to honor the artistic and commercial achievements of their peers.

What Changes in DC Could Mean for the Adult Industry

On November 5, 2024, American voters were called to the polls. The results of that election revealed an unquestionably uncomfortable truth for everyone, regardless of party or ideology: the “united” part of United States does not appear to be holding strong.

Byborg Acquires Gamma Entertainment

Luxembourg-based Byborg Enterprises SA has acquired 100% of Canadian adult conglomerate Gamma Entertainment.

Adult Creative Debuts 'Pornful' Website Management Platform

Web design and marketing firm Adult Creative has launched its new Pornful website management platform.

2025 XMA Winners Announced

Winners of the 2025 XMAs were revealed Sunday night during a ceremony hosted by Vanna Bardot and Ryan Reid at the world-famous Hollywood Palladium.

Show More