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Real-World Consequences for the Porn Industry

Break Point / John Stonestreet
The Truth Network Radio
June 23, 2025 12:00 am

Real-World Consequences for the Porn Industry

Break Point / John Stonestreet

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June 23, 2025 12:00 am

The exploitation of minors through online pornography is a growing problem that requires serious attention and consequences. Lawmakers and police must stop treating the internet as a space where rules don't apply and take action against websites that knowingly host and profit from child abuse material.

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Welcome to Breakpoint, a daily look at an ever-changing culture through the lens of unchanging truth. For the Colson Center, I'm Shane Morris. If a man exposed himself to children on a street corner, he would be arrested and charged with assault.

However, when essentially the same thing happens online, there are no consequences. Instead, lawmakers and police assume that if children come across predatory pornography or strangers attempting to recruit them into porn, it's a problem of parental supervision. It's well past time to stop treating the Internet as a space where the rules don't apply and to take seriously the sexual exploitation of minors that occurs online. In fact, it's even more urgent in light of the recent revelations about the world's largest pornography website. Last month, Nicholas Kristoff described in the New York Times internal memos from Pornhub.

These memos were supposed to remain sealed, but were released due to a filing error in an Alabama federal district court. In these memos, Pornhub employees admitted to knowing of and even joking about child sexual abuse on their website. In one message from May of 2020, employees at Pornhub were aware of over 700,000 videos on their site that users had flagged for depicting rape or assaults on children or for other problems. One employee wrote, I hope I never get in trouble for having these vids on my computer, laugh out loud. Another argued against banning a user who posted an underage video because the user made money.

Yet another memo noted that videos apparently showing child sexual abuse had been viewed 684 million times. The population of the United States, for reference, is 340 million. These revelations shed more light on the website's practices and how aware they were of the problem leading up to Christophe's 2020 expose titled The Children of Pornhub. That article documented the cesspool of child abuse and non-consensual material on so-called adult websites and how these companies remorselessly profited from it. Within days of the article, Pornhub removed 10 million videos, nearly 75% of its content, because it could not verify that these videos showed consenting adults.

But this is far from a solution. Kristoff pointed to these recently leaked memos as proof that, quote, we should never trust tech companies to police themselves. On the contrary, their past behavior and ongoing acceptance of abuse and child porn-related search terms, and the fact that many of the same people still work there, show that only legal and economic consequences will curb their exploitation. This is an ongoing and worsening problem. A recent study found that one in eight of the video titles on the largest pornography sites in the UK described activities that constitute sexual violence.

Even when no laws are being broken, children are still being directly harmed. The National Center on Sexual Exploitation argues that porn normalizes sexual violence and abuse for young users by design. All of this is why it's time to treat online exploitation exactly as we would treat it in the real world. Both Christoph and the NCSE offer the following recommendations. The full weight of civil and criminal penalties should be Be leveled against pornography websites.

States should pass and implement age verification laws, and wherever politically feasible, full bans on porn. We should support legal action being brought against the giants of the industry for past and ongoing abuses. For instance, supporting the NCSC's lawsuit against Pornhub and demanding the Department of Justice investigate the website OnlyFans for sex trafficking and child sexual abuse material. A good first step is the bipartisan Take It Down Act that President Trump just signed into law aimed to help victims of digital exploitation. We should also attack the porn industry's bottom line.

Christoph highlights the company Prune, which pressures web hosts, payment systems, ad networks, and domain registrars to cut ties with offending websites. We can demand that credit card companies stop facilitating payments to OnlyFans and other sites and put pressure on mainstream advertisers, which account for about half of profits for porn sites. Finally, Christians must recognize and make the case that the problem isn't merely abusive or non-consensual porn. It's porn. Only a cultural transformation that goes deeper than mere consent, that offers a positive, God-honoring vision for sexuality and family, will be able to uproot this horrible evil.

The Colson Center's Identity Project was created to champion that holistic view of sex and the human person, with over 200 biblically grounded videos from trusted Christian voices on topics like identity, parenting, and gender. Find out more to help equip you, your family, and your community at identityproject.tv. I'm also thrilled about a new movement called Fidelity Month. It's a positive grassroots challenge to Pride Month that seeks to heal division and restore unity in our nation. celebrating June as a season of recommitment to God, our spouses, our families, our communities, and our country.

It's exactly the kind of consensus building we'll need if we hope not only to impose real-world consequences on the porn industry, but to point the broken to something better. Find out more at fidelitymonth.com. For the Colson Center, I'm Shane Morris. If you're a fan of Breakpoint, leave a review on your favorite podcast app. For a version of this commentary that you can print out and share with others, and for more resources to live like a Christian in this critical cultural moment, go to breakpoint.org.

Hey, John Stone Street here from the Colson Center. Registration is now open for a free live stream event Thursday, July 24th, entitled Truth, Love, and Humor: Faith Without Fear. For this special conversation, I'll be joined by Seth Dillon, the CEO of the Christian satire publication The Babylon Bee, and Jim Daly, president of Focus on the Family. In this wild cultural moment where speaking common sense truth can get you canceled, we need to have a conversation about what our responsibility is to speak the truth. how we have to be faithful and leave the results up to God.

Seth Dillon and Jim Daly will join me to talk about these things, as well as how speaking the truth is actually an act of love. The event is absolutely free. If you're in the Bay Harbor, Michigan area on July 24th, you can join us in person or you can join us online via live stream. Register today at colsoncenter.org/slash truth. That's colsoncenter.org/slash truth.

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