Thursday, April 19, 2012

Promote the Los Angeles porn industry LIES & ABUSE to University Students or YOU'RE FIRED!

This toon has almost manifested 100% into reality.
Monica Foster commentary: I've come to the conclusion that we're officially in the "End Times" as of today. The woman in this article, a professor, tried to educate her students as to the truth about the potential detrimental effects of pornography on one's life, and she was suspended for it. 


Meanwhile you have sextoy companies (who are of course Free Speech Coalition members) like the Screaming O sponsoring college campus events at USF (I'm convinced that their front man works directly for Satan), and Wicked Pictures screening their movies to students at UCSB.


Why even TRY to give young people the knowledge they need to make educated healthy decisions in life at this stage? Being that pornography is the psychological drug to enslave the masses of this generation why stop there? Maybe the United States should go ahead and legalize not just marijuana, but cocaine too and start distributing it to middle school kids (highschool age kids just aren't young enough now days).


Once the middle school kids are hooked on both the porn and the cocaine - after they make it to Highschool (the ones that live that is), call in the porn companies to recruit the 16 year old girls during lunch break (the kids won't be eating lunch anyways being that cocaine takes away your appetite). It'll be like a job fair!  Hell, I've been saying for a while that the age limit to be in porn should be raised to 21, but being that it's the END OF DAYS lets go ahead and lower it to 16. Why not? Come on psychos, if you're going to transform Earth into HELL lets do it RIGHT!


courtesy AdultFYI.com

Gail Dines writes at www.counterpunch.org - As colleges become more corporate, we are hearing more and more stories of academics being sanctioned for having the audacity to speak out against corporate malfeasance. Not only does this limit the free speech of academics, it also serves to scare teachers into adhering to the hegemonic discourse.

The latest example is quite stunning. Jammie Price [pictured], a full professor at Appalachian State University, was suspended last month for showing the documentary The Price of Pleasure: Pornography, Sexuality and Relationships. 

Distributed by the Media Education Foundation, one of the most respected producers of progressive documentaries in the country, the film sets out to look at how mainstream pornography has not only become more violent and misogynistic, but is actually in bed with major financial institutions such as credit card companies, venture capitalists, cable companies and hotels (they make more money from porn than mini bars).

After showing the film to 120 students, three evidently complained to the university administration that Dr. Price was showing “inappropriate material” in class. Dr. Price was not allowed to learn the names of the students or to meet with them, was denied a hearing, and was immediately suspended and told that she could not enter any offices or classrooms in the Arts and Sciences buildings. Should she want to obtain “materials, computer files, pick up mail …” she needed to make arrangements to be escorted by a member of the faculty.

How interesting that a university decides that an academic analysis of one of the most profitable industries in the world is “inappropriate.” 

What exactly are we supposed to teach about? Maybe if Jammie Price had been in a business school and taught a case on how to make a killing in porn, she might have been given a pass. Or maybe, to be on the safe side, Dr. Price should have instead invited a pornographer to class to promote their products. 

In 2008, the porn press was abuzz with the great news that Joanna Angel, owner of the porn site Burning Angel, had been invited to speak to a human sexuality class at Indiana University. No pretense was made that this was going to be an educational event by the porn news site X Critic, when they wrote, “She will be showing the students clips from her movies, handing out sex toys and enlightening them with a positive view on pornography.”

I wrote a letter of complaint to the president of Indiana University pointing out that the role of a university classroom was to educate the students, not provide a captive audience for capitalists to push their products. 


continue reading this article on AdultFYI.com while I go throw up.

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