I guess the notion of "porn" is so broad in this context, that it's easy for us to be thinking of completely different scenarios. There are certainly areas in which the likelihood of the actors doing something against their will is high, but I don't think that's representative of the industry as a whole. This could be factually incorrect mind you.BloatedGuppy said:I can't imagine it's entirely unrelated to it. Most pornography consumers seem set on a certain price point (free) and boundaries have been getting pushed for decades now. Even the most sex-positive person on the planet would likely balk at some of what gets portrayed in modern porn. That's driven by consumer demand.
I don't necessarily disagree with this view, I just think it's unnecessary to distribute blame so thoroughly, depending on the situation of course, and whether or not it's reasonable to expect the consumer to be aware of the potential abuse going on.BloatedGuppy said:I think if you help create a market, you bear some tangential responsibility for what occurs in that market. As I said in my OP in this thread, I'd lay primary blame at the feet of a hostile/judgmental public, then at the feet of pornographers who care more about the bottom line than the health or well being of their employees, then at the actors themselves, who most probably entered knowingly into an extremely troublesome industry. Yes, there are often unfortunate circumstances that might surround such a decision, but the buck still stops with us as adults at some point. You can never completely abdicate personal responsibility.
And then somewhere towards the bottom you have the porn consumer. Who just wants a fap and doesn't want to consider the shady underbelly of what they're consuming. Chief suspect? No. Some culpability? I'd continue to argue yes.