[Editor's note: This story originally was published by the Daily Caller News Foundation.]



By Mary Margaret Olohan

Daily Caller News Foundation

Pornography and sex trafficking are issues that fuel one another, contributing to a high demand for sex and a dangerously sexual culture, activists warn.

TRENDING: In the end, the rioters are Obama's army

Anti-sex trafficking leaders who spoke with the Daily Caller News Foundation said the porn industry fuels demand for violent, obscene, or child-related sexual fantasies, prompting porn consumers to sex, through pimps, from sex-trafficking victims. These advocates also maintain that pimps engaged in sex trafficking blackmail victims through sexually explicit videos and sell victims to producers of pornography.

"It's completely interwoven, porn and sex trafficking, and you find the same characters in both," anti-trafficking activist and SHAREtogether founder Jaco Booyens said. "Many of the women and girls who are in the porn industry are actively being sex trafficked."

"They're being hired and rented by the porn industry from pimps," he said.

Effects of pornography

Pornography has become an increasingly divisive topic throughout the world as anti-porn groups argue that porn has incredibly addictive and destructive qualities feeding an ever-growing and demanding industry.

The popular pornography site Pornhub boasted 42 billion visits to its site during 2019, 39 billion searches performed site-wide, an average of 115 million visits per day, and 6.83 million new videos uploaded.

"To put this in perspective — if you strung all of 2019's new video content together and started watching them way back in 1850, you'd still be watching them today," the Pornhub website stated.

Ninety-three percent of boys and 62% of girls are exposed to pornography during their youth, according to a 2017 research summary on pornography and public health from the National Center on Sexual Exploitation. The summary found that 49% of college-aged males first encountered pornography before they reached their teens, and 64% of people between the ages of 13 and 24 actively seek out porn at least once a week.

The summary found significant negative effects of pornography on young people, including developmental impacts on the brain, poor emotional bonds with caregivers, viewing women as sex objects, sending sexually explicit images, risky sexual behavior, physical and sexual victimization, and likelihood of viewing animal and child porn at an older age.

Porn also exhibits severely negative effects on adults, including strong signs of addiction, according to the summary. One study of 360 undergraduate students in the U.S. that the summary discussed correlated being male and being addicted to porn, with 19% of men in the study found clinically addicted to cybersex.

Pornography, particularly obscene and child pornography, "wets the appetite of the consumer for more extreme and more deviant types of content," Enough is Enough founder Donna Hughes told the DCNF.

Hughes added that obscene pornography depicts extreme sexual acts such as "bestiality, anal sex, multiple abusers abusing one woman, urination or defecation pornography, rape," and more.

Federal law criminalizes the distribution, transportation, shipping, selling, mailing, and producing with intent to sell or distribute obscene matter, including obscene pornography. Those who are convicted of these crimes face fines and imprisonment.

These types of content fuel the desire to act out those fantasies by which they have been aroused because they are "highly addictive," Hughes said.

Those who watch pornography, particularly obscene pornography, become addicted to the arousal they obtain through porn, Hughes continued.

"That embeds that desire for that content and that type of sex act into their brain," she explained. "It's actually hardwired the brain."

Hughes said that as is normal for those experiencing addictions, a person abusing a substance will desire "more and more and more."

"It escalates. It's the same thing with pornography or child sex abuse images," she said.

This is how the demand for content is created, warned Booyens, the anti-trafficking activist and SHAREtogether founder.

"Porn is the feeder drug to sex trafficking. There's no question about it," he said, adding:

"It's unquestionable. Just like an opioid. It's the feeder drug for someone to end up one day with heroin. You don't start with heroin, start with a heavy drug like that. You start with something that's accessible."

There's not a single pedophile that Booyens's organization has tracked down during the past 25 years that was not addicted to porn, he said.

"Porn was in their journey. Am I saying every porn user is going to abuse a child? No," he said.

"But it's feeding the industry. It's feeding demand," he continued.

Effects of sex trafficking

Sex trafficking occurs when someone uses force, fraud, or coercion to engage in sexual activity with an adult or a minor in exchange for something of value. Trafficking of humans for sex has become a massive issue throughout the world: A study from the United Nation's International Labor Organization estimated that 1 million children and 3.8 million adults around the world were victims of forced sexual exploitation in 2016.

The most common age a child enters sex trafficking is between the ages of 14 and 16, according to the anti-sex trafficking institute Shared Hope International, when victims are too young and naive to realize what is going on. (RELATED: Child Sex-Trafficking Is More Common In The US Than People Realize, Activist Says. Here's What You Should Know)

Traffickers are commonly intimate partners or family members of victims, and cases of trafficking often occur in the home, according to anti-sex trafficking institute the Polaris Project.

In one example Shared Hope International leader Linda Smith shared with the DCNF, a man allegedly took sexual photographs and videos of a 5-year-old girl in her own home and distributed them, an instance that counts as both sex trafficking and the distribution of child pornography.

The practice thrives because of serious demand, according to Shared Hope. Buyers fuel the market with their money and the trafficker or the pimp exploits victims to earn revenue from buyers. The traffickers find victims through social networks, at home, in neighborhoods, in clubs or bars, on the internet, or at school.

They then lure the victims with promises of love, protection, a home, adventures, or opportunities, according to Shared Hope, and then the traffickers use fear, violence, intimidation, or threats to ensure that the victims are compliant and meet demands.

Booyens suggested a hypothetical scenario wherein a pimp discovers a 16-year-old girl who grew up in an underprivileged community in the Bronx, New York.

"Maybe she's on the street," Booyens said. "Maybe her dad's in jail."

"So there's a need for essential goods. They will give that girl the goods, give her clothes and give her a shelter," he continued. "They'll give her 'protection from the street.' Dangerous, right? But now they're completely manipulating her and turning her into a slave."

That girl will eventually have to pay that debt back, Booyens warned.

"She's going to have to work it off. She's going to have to pay it back," he said. "And so a form of paying it back is, hey, we can get paid good money. You're going to go do this porn flick. And whether it is a guy raping her in a motel or a guy raping her in front of a camera, to the girl it's all the same thing. And then the porn producer will pay the pimp."

Fueling demands on both sides of issue

Sex trafficking is not the only industry thriving from serious demand, according to Hughes.

"Attempting to stop sex trafficking without prosecuting the illegal porn industry (obscenity) is like attempting to stop water pollution without prosecuting the industries that dump toxic waste into the water supply," she warned.

The Enough is Enough founder said obscene porn fuels the demand for women and children to be sold commercially for sex.

"The content itself is fueling the desire for the consumer to act out those fantasies with someone," she explained. "Either a child or an adult. So it's actually fueling the demand for a trafficked victim."

Shared Hope leader Smith also noted that accounts from victims who survived sex trafficking highlight how violent or obscene pornography influences the demands that buyers and traffickers make of victims.

"It's not uncommon for buyers to exploit victims in a way that reenacts what they have seen through child sexual abuse material (CSAM) or pornography," she explained.

Another way in which pornography and sex trafficking intersect is for traffickers or abusers to take photographs or videos of victims, sell these items to porn producers, or use these photos or videos as blackmail, the anti-sex trafficking activists explained.

"We know that exploiters regularly record such exploitation for purposes of trading or selling it, amounting to the creation and distribution of 'pornography,' or, more appropriately, child sexual abuse material (CSAM): pictures and videos of rape and violation of children," Smith added, noting that the traffickers will also film the children dancing or stripping.

According to Booyens, every victim of sex trafficking is filmed.

"It's a form of manipulation," he explained.

The activist said pimps will film girls in compromising positions, such as engaging in drug deals or performing sex acts in order to manipulate them to do what the pimps wants. He gave the example of a girl being filmed accepting $500 worth of cocaine from a drug dealer while the pimp photographs the incident. Now that the pimp has that video, Booyens said, she must do what he wants.

Issue of culture?

Smith warned that today's sexualized culture is at the root of both these issues.

"In many ways, our society fosters a culture that normalizes sexual harm against children," she explained. "Our sources of entertainment inarguably play a large role in conditioning consumers to tolerate the sexualization of youth, gender-based violence, and objectification of women and girls."

Smith said it is critical that everyone do their part to "ensure that we are not, even unconsciously, fueling a culture that permits exploitation to occur" by refusing to support artists whose music normalizes violence against women, refusing to passively listen to conversations that downplay the effects these types of harm, or voting for candidates who prioritize anti-trafficking policies.

Society would rather not acknowledge this dark side of pornography, Booyens said.

"When you talk to people about these things, it's almost like they don't want to know," he added. "They don't want to believe the industry is that dark. They want to believe it's just a random guy that grabs a girl and rapes her."

"That happens of course. But the porn industry is very, very organized," he said.

[Editor's note: This story originally was published by the Daily Caller News Foundation.]