Some of America’s biggest media companies, including HBO, Verizon and Amazon, have been named to a “dirty dozen” list of firms that profit off pornography and sexual exploitation.
The National Center on Sexual Exploitation on Thursday unveiled its “2016 Dirty Dozen List” of firms they are pressing to stop making money off sex through their retailers and outlets.
The group has scored many victories in forcing corporate changes, such as getting hotel chains like Hyatt and Hilton to stop offering porno movies in guest rooms.
“There is clearly a cultural shift taking place, where corporations and organizations are beginning to get the message that no profit or agenda is worth facilitating sexual exploitation,” said Dawn Hawkins, executive director of the National Center on Sexual Exploitation.
In the list, shown below, Verizon was ripped for offering “teen, incest, racist, and slavery-themed pornography” through FIOS TV.
HBO was hit for showing violence and nudity.
And Amazon was put on the list because it offers porn and sex objects. YouTube was also slapped for nudity and sexual exploitation.
The full list, in alphabetical order:
Amazon – Amazon, the world’s largest online retailer, is known for lightning-fast shipping, its Kindle e-reader, and selling virtually anything online. Regardless of their corporate policy, which prohibits pornography from being sold, Amazon is a worldwide facilitator of sexual exploitation. They distribute pornography and sadomasochistic paraphernalia; their Kindle e-reader exposes children to sexually explicit images and content with incest, rape, and child themes; and Amazon Web Services is used to host pornography and prostitution websites.
American Library Association – The ALA zealously continues to encourage public libraries to keep all public-access computers unfiltered, thereby allowing patrons, including children, to view illegal, obscene material. This has turned the once safe community setting of the public library into a XXX space that fosters child sexual abuse, sexual assault, exhibitionism, stalking, and lewd behavior in libraries across the country.
Amnesty International – Amnesty International has developed a policy document supporting full decriminalization of prostitution. Full decriminalization of prostitution is one of the world’s most disastrous approaches to the sex trade because it allows sex traffickers and sex buyers to carry out their activities as mere “sex business operators” and “customers,” and it normalizes the sexual violence and exploitation inherent to prostitution as a form of “work.”
Backpage.com – Backpage.com is a classified advertising website that serves as “the hub” for prostitution advertising through its “adult entertainment” section and provision of free basic posting of such ads. Facilitating such advertising enables sex traffickers to remain anonymous, while simultaneously granting them access to a wide audience to market adults and children for illegal commercial sex acts. According to 51 State Attorneys General (including Guam and American Samoa), many cases of sexual trafficking involving children are directly related to the posting of these ads.
Cosmopolitan Magazine – This staple of the supermarket checkout line is a porn magazine. Cosmo hyper-sexualizes fashion, and glamorizes things like public, anal, and violent sex, as well as use of pornography in nearly all their issues and web content. As long as Cosmo persists in normalizing pornography and sexually risky behavior, it’s time for it to be covered like all other pornography magazines in retail stores.
Department of Justice – The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) refuses to enforce existing federal obscenity laws against pornography despite the fact that these laws were previously enforced and upheld by U.S. Courts. From the time Obama took office in 2008, no enforcement actions against illegal obscenity have been initiated by DOJ, and in 2011 former Attorney General Eric Holder dismantled the Obscenity Prosecution Task Force.
HBO – HBO, a division of Time Warner, is an American premium cable television network. For years HBO has pushed boundaries in its programming, by providing increasingly graphic depictions of pornography and sexual violence as entertainment. Its popular series Game of Thrones has pushed these boundaries to the extreme with gratuitous nudity and extreme sexual violence.
“Sexpresso” Coffee Shops – These coffee stands originated in Seattle with a business model based on sexual objectification. Young women wearing only pasties, thong underwear, other lingerie, or bikinis ostensibly serve coffee. However, the pornified working conditions result in frequent sexual harassment of staff, have been associated with indecent exposure and prostitution, and are an affront to public decency and health. Sexpresso cafés bring strip club atmosphere to the neighborhood coffee shop.
Snapchat/Snapcash – Arguably the most popular smartphone app used by Millennials and teens, Snapchat is frequently used for sexting and the sharing of child sexual abuse images. Additionally, the built-in feature Snapcash enables users to monetize and profit from the exchange of sexual content.
Starwood Hotels and Resorts Worldwide – This global hotel chain was a 2016 Dirty Dozen List target for its sale of hardcore pornography via on-demand television offerings. However, Starwood has mandated elimination of pornography from all of its hotels globally. We applaud Starwood for its exit from the business of sexploitation, and it is therefore removed from the Dirty Dozen List.
Verizon – Verizon Communications, the largest U.S. wireless communications service provider, profits from sexual exploitation each year through pay-per-view movies and dedicated pornography channels on its Fios TV services, as an Internet service provider, and wireless carrier. Verizon has defended their decision to offer incest, child, and trafficking themed pornography as a benefit to their customers.
YouTube – The most popular video-sharing site in the world has become a place where pornography and other explicit content is easily accessed and often promoted – despite YouTube’s strict terms of use. Google’s YouTube does little to monitor or restrict this content and makes it very difficult for users to report it.
Paul Bedard, the Washington Examiner’s “Washington Secrets” columnist, can be contacted at [email protected].