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Friday, March 07, 2008
Brent Bozell :: Townhall.com Columnist
Rape Films at Yale
by Brent Bozell
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Newsweek magazine recently celebrated the latest trend in elite Northeastern colleges: sex magazines, complete with highbrow titles -- like "Boink." In applauding the shifting sexual mores of American youth, reporter Jennie Yabroff noted that these enterprising students "no longer see a distinction between their bedroom behavior and their publishing activities," and consider their sex-magazine careers in college to be building blocks for the business world.

"I continually tell my mom this is a great resume builder," says Alecia Oleyourryk of her career publishing "Boink" magazine at Boston University. Newsweek now needs a sociologist to affirm the wisdom of these "young sexperts." Cue Pepper Schwartz, a sociologist at the University of Washington. "Maybe their generation will take this a lot less seriously than we do," she says.

Isn't it strange how some sociologists (and, one assumes, some writers at Newsweek) applaud this generation for its liberated views toward sex, especially compared to the last generation? So what if the last generation danced naked at Woodstock? How far do today's college students have to go to be less serious? It's not a pretty picture.

Newsweek tries to have fun with the reader-titillating premise of young elite-college co-eds writing endlessly about their sex lives, and how "in the age of MySpace and Facebook, sex may be just one more way to network." But the ethics end up sounding pretty twisted. "To me, talking about sex and one-night stands is superficial. What I keep out of the column is the intimate stuff," says Jenna Bromberg, a sex columnist at Cornell University, adding that she wouldn't write about a serious relationship.

Doesn't Newsweek wonder about how young people swim in a culture where superficial one-night-stand sex is championed and the value of intimacy isn't fit to print?

But let's consider what our media trend-sniffers don't want to talk about, a story that might ruin the celebration of deliciously naughty amorality on campus. Newsweek mentioned the magazine (and the tradition of) SWAY, for Sex Week at Yale, but didn't mention how the spirit of Anything Goes can go very wrong.

The Yale Daily News reported that at about the same time Newsweek was putting its saucy story on the presses, the organizers of Sex Week at Yale were throwing a porn-movie screening in the law school auditorium. Hardcore pornographer Paul Thomas was invited to show films and have a question-and-answer session (and plug sales for his Vivid Entertainment DVDs). Unfortunately for Yale, Thomas brought footage of graphic rape fantasies and the labeling of a woman as a "slut" who "deserved" violent sexual degradation.

Oops. Apparently, when you run Sex Week, you don't think of pre-screening anything. After all when does the concept of "inappropriate" porn arrive with this crowd? Everyone wants to be "cavalier," because anything less makes you Jerry Falwell. But there's a force at Yale far more powerful than Christianity.

Enter the feminists at the Yale's Women Center, who were not pleased. Presca Ahn, who is the "fellowship coordinator" there, declared: "In porn, sex is not a normal, healthy part of normal, healthy lives; it's fetishized, exaggerated or embellished. Porn isn't honest. We need to talk honestly about it: It hurts women."

The film clips were abruptly ended, and the session went right into the Q&A. Sex Week coordinators made it very clear to the Yale Daily News they do not support the practices displayed in the film. Colin Adamo, Sex Week event coordinator, called the screening a grave mistake. "We really dropped the ball on this one," he said. "No one watched the movie before Paul showed it to the audience."

Unsurprisingly, that was not the pornographer's opinion. The Daily News reported that Adamo described the images as sexually unhealthy and disrespectful to women. But the pornographer's response "insinuated that he was a prude and just needed to watch more porn, Adamo said after the screening." Thus the solution to having any moral qualms about pornography is to drown yourself in more pornography.

No one in this controversy asked: Where are the grownups? Isn't there a one questioning his return on the annual $45,000 investment in "education"? Where are the administrators? Is there anyone at Yale who can provide students with a more rational voice than a hardcore pornographer? This whole controversy gives off a whiff of the inmates running the asylum.

To expect the Ivy League to reflect traditional values is to dabble in fantasy. But it's a sad cultural signpost when it's considered a prudish traditional value to object to films that seek to encourage men to build fantasy scenarios about violent sexual assault.

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About The Author
Founder and President of the Media Research Center, Brent Bozell runs the largest media watchdog organization in America.
 
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©Creators Syndicate
So what?
Yale is a private institution and as long as everyone in the "rape film" were legal adults and consented to it and as long as everyone watching the film were legal adults and consented to watching it (was anyone held against their will?) why should you care?

If you don't like "rape films," don't watch them.

To counter the usual tripe that is soon to follow--"well this kinda film will cause someone to go out and rape someone." Really? Then does it follow that films that show murder cause people to murder too? Brent should call for Law and Order to be banned then.


On the subject of consent
Did ALL the students, whose student fees paid for this, consent to the screening? Apparently not. Money changed hands to get this film to the campus, and if someo of the people paying for it disapprove, then they have a right to complain.

Student fees should be used for educational activities, not pornographic ones. If the event were paid for from private funds, then the consent argument would hold water, but in this case, it does not.

Brain Damage
Is there better evidence that masturbation -or any other vagrant sex- causes brain damage? People, especially college people, promoting this stuff are brain atrophied. Even some feminists sound intelligent contrasted to them.

Actually...
in this case, the inmates are running the asylum, Brent. Yale is not sponsoring this event, it is being funded by outside organizations and planned by students. Please visit the Yale website and tell me if there is any official mention of it there. Now tell if you found any school sponsored, sanctioned, or funded religious organizations.
It was the pornographer calling the students 'prudish' for not wanting the 'rape film' aired, not the school or administration. The kid actually admitted the mistake of not prescreeing the film. You also failed to mention that the organizers invited Dawn Eden to speak. You not liking the event does not a controversy make.

Ps- I tried posting this earlier and I did not see it up, so I apologize if it ends up being a double post.

But it does
Since the event wasn't paid with student fees.

Also, there are plenty of things I may find not to my liking--religions I am not a member of get the use of student fees too, I am not too keen on the mainlanders having a student association supported by student fees...just like with taxes, you don't have a right of veto just because you don't happen to like "your fees" being spent on something.


Akagi
That's exactly what I was trying to get at. Bottom line, if you don't like it, don't go, complain all you want to, but don't expect the event to be stopped or banned. And if there is even one organization that makes it impossible for you to attend the school and pay the fees, fine, Yale will survive without you. What was even the point of this article, anyway? It might as well have been titled, "Porn Bad, Me Good: Yale Dumb, Me Smart" Come to think of it, why was I even reading this? Must have been all the reefer I smoked coming up with responses for the Hawkins thread earlier combined with the Ivy League education that killed my free will and made me a prisoner to fantastic titles like this one.

And at Yale
These are the intellectually superior ones?

You know, I went to Southern Illinois, a party school. They basically showed us The Three Stooges, Marx Brothers and any other comedy classics on film.


Sure we do Akagi,
If these groups have the right to express themselves however they want, we have a right to express ourselves in the form of a veto if we choose. You're like a bunch a children who must have their way. Tell you what, you all can do what you want with no complaint from me as long as you bear all the responsibility for your actions. We're tired of having to pay for your idiocy.

Vivid Films & Yale:
It's all about the freedom of speech, if you don't like it don't watch it. However, this particular event was to legitimise Paul Thomas and Vivid Films.
Instead of fans of porn like myself telling him about his hokie films with their five forty minute sex scenes, and twenty minute close ups of genitalia is and has been boring for some time now, he gets the Ivy League afficionados to help him sell more crap.
Porn is a billion dollar industry a little legitimacy can't hurt.

What Bozell is really doing
Bozell is really adding another chapter to his obsessive quest to purify American society with respect to human sexuality. No one forced anyone to attend this Yale event; the university neither funded nor sponsored it. I found no evidence in Bozell's column of any discernible harm to anyone resulting from this event.

Bozell is one of those conservatives who just wishes that any and all public talk, media images, and anything else having to do with sex would disappear from our society. This is a genuinely conservative position, but Bozell is tilting at windmills. This column has attracted almost no postings; by now most TH readers know Bozell's stale obsession and have decided to ignore it.


What a standard!
If you don't like it, you don't have to watch it; you don't have to attend!

Right out of the liberal pervert's handbook. Anything goes, eh? I guess that includes movies of kids being raped as well - after all, there's a market for that already.

"Well, we don't advocate that!" Yes you do, because your standard is, if you don't like it, you don't have to watch it.

The anything goes crowd wants it both ways, and we're left with trusting them to draw the line, only to see the line keep receding into the distance.

grubby - Standards?
Well let me just ask you --

What standards do you want to have, and what do you propose to do about it?

I for one, agree with Gestell 100% this time. If you don't like it, don't watch it. Don't bother the people who *do* like it and *want* to watch it.

If it comes on TV, change the channel. If you can't find a channel playing acceptable programming, turn it off.

If you've got kids, monitor what they watch. If you can't figure out how to operate the parental controls, give the TV to charity and have your kids play outside and get some fresh air and exercise.

After all, this is supposed to be a "free" country right? What part of LIBERTY don't you understand? Or did you think it was only the "freedom" to do the things that get *your* approval?

shifting baseline
The primary issue is the shifting baseline of respectful and disciplined behavior.

Sure no one had to attend...the issue is not your freedom to attend or not to attend...the issue is: The university and the students should be encouraged to lean toward a healthy and respectful life style.

Instead, the university and those who support these activities are helping to increase sexual disorders, abuse of woman, STDs, etc.

There is no honor in supporting destructive behavior.



Boink's Unprincipled Behavior
While the ethics of starting a college sex magazine can be debated, these cannot: Boink co-founders and -editors Alecia Oleyourryk and Christopher Anderson have reneged on their promise to pay the writers for issue 6 of Boink magazine and won't respond to any attempts at communication. Several of the writers weren't even aware that Boink had used their stories in the magazine. Whatever you think of Alecia's choice of business endeavor, breach of contract and copyright infringement are not wholesome activities. These are some seriously unprincipled people. Please support the writers by NOT supporting anything to do with Boink.
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