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16/01/04
Child porn is
being 'normalised' by panic merchants
Mick Hume
The Times
Like most of you, I have never seen any explicit images of adults having sex
with children. Of course, the idea is repulsive. But I am also sickened by those
seeking to prey on our emotions by turning child pornography into an all-purpose
moral panic for our times. In a report published yesterday, the children’s
charity NCH announced a 1,500 per cent increase in child pornography crimes
since 1988, blamed the internet for spreading child porn everywhere, and said
that internet-connected mobile phones could make things even worse.
If anybody claimed such an increase in any other crime, the statistics would
be considered suspect. Yet such is the concern about child porn that most took
the 1,500 per cent figure at face value. NCH compared the 35 people against whom
police proceeded in 1988 with the 549 charged or cautioned in 2001.
Given that 1988 was the first year in which it became a specific offence to
possess child pornography, it is hardly surprising that the numbers convicted of
the newly-invented crime were so low. And given the cultural and legal fixation
with child porn in recent years, the only wonder about the later figures is that
they are not much higher.
So is child pornography really such a major, and growing, social problem?
Campaigners always claim that the relatively few prosecutions are “only the tip
of the iceberg”. Yet even those who specialise in researching child porn admit
they don’t know that much about it. Professor Max Taylor, director of the
respected Combating Paedophile Information Networks in Europe (Copine) project,
told an international conference that “it is difficult to find another area of
substantial policy development that has been based on such little empirical
evidence”.
Instead, the crusade against the spectre of child pornography reflects
society’s obsession with regarding children as potential victims of abuse, and
adults as potential paedophiles. So parents worry about taking pictures at the
school play for fear of what others might think, and anybody trying to
photograph a child at the local swimming pool risks being sentenced to summary
drowning. One effect is to taint the innocent pleasure of looking at pictures of
our offspring. Perhaps the police should set up checkpoints to search men’s
wallets for photos of little boys and girls.
The author of the NCH report insists that “we’ve got to stop thinking about
paedophiles or people who use child pornography as the dirty old man in the
raincoat”. The assumption is that anybody with a computer or a mobile phone is
just a click away from slithering down the slippery slope, from spam to child
porn pay sites to sexual abuse.
Campaigners also suggest that the internet has made child pornography seem
more normal. But who needs vile websites to raise public curiosity when
salacious stories about child porn are continually splashed across the
mainstream media? The suggestion that child porn is everywhere, and that anybody
could be using it, has done more to “normalise” it than any sleaze merchant
could do.
The underlying issue here is not how we deal with hardcore child pornography.
It is how we view our children — and ourselves. Innocence or indecency is
increasingly in the eye of the beholder. Thus the Home Office’s Sentencing
Advisory Panel can propose that “images depicting nudity or erotic posing, with
no sexual activity” could be criminal kiddie porn (don’t dare download that
Donatello!), as could pictures of children “naked or semi-naked in legitimate
settings”, such as the bath. In which case it seems legitimate to ask, who has
the dirty mind?
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