💾 Archived View for library.inu.red › file › elliott-dunstan-the-case-against-puritanism.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 09:30:06. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

➡️ Next capture (2024-06-20)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Title: The Case Against Puritanism
Author: Elliott Dunstan
Date: June 2021
Language: en
Topics: sex, puritanism, sexual assault, transphobia, peadophilia
Source: Retrieved on July 17 2021 from https://elliottdunstan.com/2021/06/29/the-case-against-puritanism-its-time-to-give-it-up-and-let-teens-get-off/
Notes: This column discusses underage sexuality, neo-puritan/anti-sex ideology, (briefly) pedophilia, transphobia and sexual assault.

Elliott Dunstan

The Case Against Puritanism

Please note: If you’re not reading this column while sustaining the

ability to both retain your sense of humour with your tongue in your

cheek, and take it seriously, you won’t get much out of it. This column

discusses underage sexuality, neo-puritan/anti-sex ideology, (briefly)

pedophilia, transphobia and sexual assault.

Teens are horny. This is one of those truths that somehow, everyone

knows, and yet, we frequently have to reassert in the face of people

desperately trying to cling to the idea that teenagers are also

children. Teenagers are innocent children until they’re eighteen; the

number of teen pregnancies, mononucleosis and chlamydia epidemics in

schools, free condom drawers in need of replenishing in nurse’s offices

and eleventh-graders caught in the backs of movie theaters is,

obviously, beside the point. Sometimes, the same people will in one

breath talk about how “men can’t help themselves” if teenage girls are

going to wear sexy clothes at school, and then wonder why teen girls

would keep wearing sexy clothing if they’re So Innocent. Clearly it’s a

mistake and they don’t know what they’re doing.

At the beginning of the 2010s, it felt like we were making some progress

against this. ACT-UP’s efforts during the AIDS crisis are precisely why

we have free condoms all over the place (and Planned Parenthood thanks

them mightily). In Ontario, we had a school curriculum go through that

would begin to teach kids the essentials of sex ed as early as Grade 3,

lining up with research that shows that teaching kids about sex early

actually helps them identify abuse to authorities, rather than opening

them up to it, as conservative pundits claim. Then, in what was both a

very sudden and a retrospectively-foreshadowed collapse, it all started

sliding backwards again. Doug Ford’s election in Ontario rewound all

that progress, and laws like SESTA/FOSTA in the USA have shut down

hundreds of sites that previously made sex work, hookup culture and

pornography/erotica safer, more accessible and easier to find. Notables

include the personals section of Craigslist, Backpage, the ban of NSFW

content on Tumblr, and even more and more rigid censors on sites like

Pornhub, XVideos, and others.

Of course, to a lot of people, this doesn’t seem that important. Porn

finds a way, and what’s so bad about making sure teens can’t get to it?

Maybe they should wait until they’re eighteen to bang, or get to porn.

There’s all of this stuff about porn giving teens unrealistic

expectations. Look what happened with Fifty Shades of Grey, after all.

And fanfiction teaches horrible ideas about sex – didn’t one fanfiction

use car oil as lube? No, no, far better that they be kept away from

sexual content until they’re Old Enough.

For a long while, I’ve combated this on other people’s terms. “Yes,

but–” “Yes, I suppose–” “Have you considered–” And frankly, I’m tired of

it. So, fuck it. Let teens get off. Stop trying so hard. And here’s why:

1. Sex Isn’t Bad For You

This one is huge, actually. So much of this is positioned on this idea

that sex is bad for you. We control access to pornography the way we do

anti-depressants and cigarettes! And, counterpoint: it’s not. You can

get pregnant from sex. So, give teens condoms, and access to the

morning-after pill, and access to abortion clinics. And you can get

STDs. So – condoms! And medical access! And good lord, we really should

have PeP and PreP everywhere, shouldn’t we?

The reason we don’t is because we don’t want them having sex at all. And

even besides the fact that we have these tools and these items for safe

sex on hand… We don’t give teenagers enough credit. Recently, there was

a big to-do about kink at Pride parades, and how teenagers being

“exposed to kink” was so terrible for them. All I could think about was

how I did more kinky stuff as a teenager than I have as an adult. See,

teenagers don’t want to get pregnant, or AIDs, or syphilis. If you have

teens educated about how these things work, they’re smart enough to go

“I don’t like that. I don’t want that.” So you know what they do? They

have sex in every other way possible. There’s a reason there’s a trope

about Christian schoolgirls doing anal. There’s also a trope about

schoolgirls sucking dick, and let’s not get into how many teenagers

stumble into their love of chastity and orgasm denial, or sadomasochism,

or bondage — just because they were fooling around and knew they didn’t

want to do the “Real Thing”.

Of course, once you start talking about kink, you’re talking about

different dangers. I definitely did a few things as a teen where I’m

glad nobody got hurt. But once again, the issue isn’t the sex. (And

really, just telling me How to do the things would have solved stuff

pretty quickly. Google was my friend on numerous occasions.) Sex is not

inherently bad for you. It’s not addictive. It’s not toxic. It’s not

corrosive. So why are we so worried about teens having sex with each

other? Frankly, some of the things we do let teens do – go to school

high on energy drinks, drive cars, double-ride bicycles and scooters,

pull all-nighters to finish homework – have significantly worse

long-term effects than getting a good orgasm in here and there.

2. Even If It Was, Sex Isn’t Porn

“Yes, but they’re not only having sex with each other,” is the obvious

reply to the above. And you’re correct. Once you have sexually active

teenagers, you have opportunistic adults. There’s a rising trend of

teenagers identifying themselves as “AAMs” (adult-attracted minors), a

term usually given to them by pedophiles who are only too happy to tell

them it’s somehow exceptional or strange for them to be attracted to

adults. For teens reading this, by the way, it is not. It’s completely

normal, and anybody who tells you otherwise is being exceedingly creepy.

But certainly teenagers having sex with adults is dangerous; I also tend

to lean the direction of saying that while casual hookups with adults

(for older teens) lives in a grey zone of risk, relationships are where

the true danger lies. If you’re getting your rocks off with a random

grown-up, it’s at least anonymous – relationships and emotional

investment are where the gaps in maturity and the vulnerability come in.

(To be clear, this isn’t me espousing the first. Not worth it, kids, you

don’t know where he’s been. Although you can say the same for a lot of

teenagers.)

But here’s the thing. A lot of this paranoia ends up circulating around

the Internet… which is where that differentiation suddenly becomes

pretty important. The common response from adults in NSFW spaces on the

internet is “no kids, ever, period, full stop” – which I fully

understand! But it somewhat elides the actual issues and harm involved,

and conflates harm w/ legal issues. Teenagers viewing and enjoying porn

of adults is not and should not be viewed as a boundary issue, not when

we’re talking about public accounts and sexual services; it’s a boundary

issue when it turns into a relationship, because either the adult is

doing it with eyes open (yikes) or the teen in question has lied about

their age (YIKES). It’s also a huge issue when teens start sending pics

of themselves, because unintentionally or otherwise, they’re creating

child pornography; this is an issue legally – under US law, they can

actually be prosecuted for this – and ethically, where the nature of

circulating images means they’re likely to end up in a collection by

dint of being underage, whether they “look it” or not. And finally, the

issues with US law mean that – horrifically – more than once, adults

have been prosecuted for “supplying pornography to a minor” even when

that direct relationship didn’t really exist. So the over-protectiveness

and the building of a fence around this spaces makes sense. It’s

entirely logical, at least from that perspective.

The issue is that in doing so, a lot of the assumptions around teens and

sexual urges get reinforced, and a flip happens where the teens are

often portrayed as the predators for wanting access at all; reactions of

“ew gross” or calling them freaks are far more common than they should

be, and the fear of Being A Predator overrides the sense of relation

that people might otherwise have. It’s entirely natural for teens to

seek out pornography! Curiosity, sexual urges, you name it — there’s

nothing wrong with it. The laws that punish people so strongly and

unfairly for what in the past amounted to teens clicking the “yes, I am

18” button and cackling behind the screen are the issue, not teenagers

being… teenagers.

And both the law and the people afraid of it forget a crucial point;

while things like sexting and sharing nudes blur the line, for sure,

pornography is not sex. If I watch porn with someone in it, I’m not

having sex with that person. If I have a private conversation with them

that turns sexual, then yes, that’s a different conversation. But I’m

not fucking them by watching them in a porn video. Teenagers watching

porn are watching porn. And honestly, if in the moral panic, you take

away teenage access to pornography, you’re really just making it more

likely for them to have unsafe and early sex. (For porn’s issues, I

actually did figure out what condoms were and how they worked from a

latex fetish video. So, you know.)

3. Who Else Gets Hurt?

Alright, so teens are horny, but they shouldn’t fuck adults. We can

agree on that.

So can you tell a teenager from an adult by looking at them?

I’m sure somebody’s saying yes. You’re also definitely wrong. Trans men

frequently look far younger than our age, for one; petite women are

frequently taken as younger than their age, too. Black folks are read as

older, Asian folks as younger, and teens with big chests are always read

as adults first.

This isn’t, to be clear, a justification for adults seeking out

teenagers for sex. The issue with that is a matter of emotional

maturity, and the question of “why aren’t you having sex with adults”?

The very fact that teenagers are physically indistinguishable from

adults in their 20s is a point against, not for this; it scuppers the

idea of there being any visual or identifiable thrill based on a

“teenage” body.

What does happen, however, in that in the mad rush to stop teenagers

from accessing pornography at any cost, an awful lot of people get

caught in the blowback. Take the above example, with adult spaces

cracking down on there being any under-18 presence in their spaces. It’s

good that adult spaces are taking this seriously. It’s not so good when

it starts taking the form of policing what people look like; more than

once, sex workers have had to go to ridiculous lengths to prove that

they are, in fact, over 18 and just small-framed, or even more

ridiculously, have a penchant for things like lolita fashion. Or when

fandom spaces begin requiring everyone to be over 18, even for events

that are partially or exclusively SFW, out of the fear that someone

Might Say Something Horny. Or, horrendously, when NSFW discords and

social groups start requiring ID for adults to enter and remain within

the discord – at risk of, apparently, being accused of being a minor

lying about their age.

The last one is one I want to dwell on for a little while, in particular

because SESTA/FOSTA has made the world so much less safe for sex workers

– and the world’s never been particularly safe for sex work! It’s also

not particularly safe for trans people (who, statistically, are also

very likely to be sex workers or at least consider it) who already have

to go through the everyday trials of our IDs not matching up with “us”.

It’s one thing for places like OnlyFans to require ID; that’s

reasonable, if frustrating. It’s quite another for online strangers to

essentially blackmail people into sharing IDs with the threat of telling

everyone they’re underage if they don’t feel comfortable doing so!

Nor is it effective – even slightly. The request for ID, every time I’ve

run into it, has been couched within the language of “well, we have no

other option”. It loses every bit of its power the moment you recall

that teenagers have been using fake IDs to drink, fuck, drive and vote

since the forties. And now we have Photoshop! It’s a shockingly

short-sighted requirement, one that asks adults to doxx themselves and

open themselves up to harassment, spam, misgendering, and other unwanted

attention… purely so a teenager doesn’t talk about sex with adults.

We’re not talking about a bathhouse; nor, in the vast majority of these

cases, are we talking about sexting rooms. They’re NSFW chats, where

people talk about their kinks, often in relation to fantasies and

fiction. Somewhere along the way, we’ve lost sight of how “bad” that

actually is. Should it be avoided? Sure. Is it worth endangering

everyone else to avoid? Absolutely not. Let’s get some reality checking

in here.

This is without getting into how quickly someone can be accused of being

a pedophile for so much as following a minor by accident on NSFW

Twitter, dating someone 17 when they’re 19, or other similar things that

just do not deserve the kind of vitriol they get. Every time, the people

who get hurt are not the people responsible for whatever imagined harm

is coming to mind. And what is that harm, anyway. See point one! Sex is

not a bad and evil thing. Sex is sex.

4. Let Teens Fuck And Fuck Up

A ton of this also comes back to an essential piece of parenting advice

that, in an increasingly interconnected world, is something everyone

ends up needing to hear: let people make their own mistakes. Obviously,

scale matters. Information matters. Always try. Tell your friend their

boyfriend is a bad dude. Tell the kid you found appealing to pedophiles

that they’re playing with fire. Tell your little brother that he needs

an antivirus if he’s gonna keep going to weird porn sites.

But at the end of the day, if we can relax and put in the safeguards

necessary, it will be okay to let teens fuck up. There is no force on

earth that’s going to stop someone adolescent from making bad decisions.

That’s the entire point of being a teenager. Puberty dials up the

impulse part of your brain without all of those brakes and hard lessons

and “FUCKSHITNO” buttons that you get from experience. But the

experience is necessary. Our job as adults isn’t to take away the

experiences; it’s to turn the broken legs into skinned knees. If someone

gets pregnant by mistake, it’s our job to give them options beyond

having their life ruined; to have things like abortion and the morning

after pill on offer, and to be someone they can talk to. If someone gets

involved with someone too old for them, what’s better: them being too

scared to tell anyone as the situation gets worse, or them being able to

turn to a friend, a parent, anyone and saying, “I made a mistake”?

The more pressure we put on teenagers to consider sex a taboo thing, to

make first times some sort of Sacred, Immutable Object and pornography

something to hide and be ashamed of, the more we risk the next

generation having all the same hang-ups that the rest of us do. There’s

no reason we should continue the tradition of lying to girls that their

first times should hurt, or letting teenagers circulate myths like

Glee’s infamous hot-tub pregnancy because nobody will tell them the

truth. But if we continue to buy into the idea that teenage sexuality is

something to fear and hide and avoid, that’s exactly what we’ll do.

So: get over it. Stop thinking that acknowledging that

fourteen-year-olds hump pillows and get horny when they make out makes

you a pedophile. (For one, it’s an insult to how bad pedophilia is.)

Fight to let teenagers access things like sex toys and vibrators along

with all the free condoms. Focus on teaching teens the actual “dos and

don’ts” of online, like not getting into relationships while lying about

their age and not posting nudes of themselves, rather than trying to

tell them that porn will rot their brains and then being shocked when

they 1. find out you lied and 2. promptly stop listening to you. And

stop worrying so damn hard about if a fifteen year old sees a pair of

tits online. They were probably looking for them, they’re probably

enjoying them greatly, and at the end of the day, panicking about it

causes far more problems than it solves. The world will still turn. The

human race will continue. (With gusto, probably.) And as a bonus, the

inventor of Cornflakes will be spinning in his grave.