But still, 80%, that is alot. If that number is indeed true (IS IT?), then there has got to be a correlation between girls being sexually abused as children, and women working in porn.
Looks like we´re gonna have to do some research on this subject.
Hmmmm. One of the videos on Crissy Moran´s myspace actually says 90%.
I just realized that "The sex industry" includes prostitution. I don´t know, but you guys probably already thought of that.
It also includes any number of other occupations -- strippers, peep show girls, etc.. I doubt the 80% figure is correct, but even if it is, it's only indirectly suggestive of the correlation between childhood sexual abuse and careers in porn. I'm certain there's a correlation, but I'm not sure how high it is. If it's a relatively small correlation, then I'd say this is a non-issue. However...
What exactly is your interest in this. Why should only women in the porn industry who were abused as children be the focus of your interest as opposed to the kids out there who are being abused as children.
If you wanna help, help the ones who need it most, the ones who are suffering it and leave the ones who have been through to write a book about it or get therapy.
You're missing the point. Plausibly, sexual abuse victims choose to do porn as an ineffective alternative to therapy. Plausibly, the availability of work in the porn industry discourages them from getting real help. If so, then people who purchase porn -- and who thereby provide the funds that enable the industry to hire more sexual abuse victims and discourage them from getting real help -- are doing harm. IF these premises are true, then people who say that porn is immoral are in some sense right.
An interesting wrinkle here, though, is that people who consume porn without paying for it are (again, assuming the premises are true) actually doing good by reducing the profits of the porn industry and making it more difficult for them to hire more sexual abuse victims.
Arguably, also, people who specifically only buy porn made by people who haven't been abused are also doing good by discouraging the industry from hiring sexual abuse victims. (This makes me a good guy BTW, because the only porn I pay for is
with IsobelWren in it.) The problem with that argument, though, is that it may be impossible to tell who has been sexually abused, when many people (how many exactly is controversial) have repressed memories of sexual abuse.