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posted by martyb on Thursday November 30 2017, @02:26PM   Printer-friendly
from the internet-will-route-around-it dept.

French porn star piqued over Macron's desire to crackdown on X-rated films

A star of French porn films has challenged President Emmanuel Macron to meet with him and female porn actresses after France's leader aroused his anger by linking the porn industry to violence against women and inequality. Manuel Ferrara was furious over the president's speech at the weekend which outlined his plan to tackle violence against women and ensure equality between the sexes. According to Macron pornography makes women "an object of humiliation" and that action needs to be taken because porn films are now so widely watched among school children.

Ferrara hit back on Twitter and invited the president to discuss the issue. "I am involved in this industry that you are trying to demonize by making this kind of remark. I am ready to sit down with you and discuss a topic that by all accounts you know nothing about. I'm waiting for your call!" In an interview with France Inter radio the porn star continued to criticize the president saying he found his remark "shocking". "He demonizes the porn industry and is jumping to conclusions (faire un amalgame). It's the same with video games. It's like saying 'a teenager who plays Call of Duty is going to pick up a gun and kill everyone in his school'."

[...] On Saturday Macron announced his plan to extend the powers of France's broadcasting regulator CSA to cover X-rated films as well as launch an awareness campaign on pornography in secondary schools. "The CSA plays an indispensable role in regulating audiovisual content everywhere and stopping the most undignified behavior becoming a form of tacit propaganda," said the president. "Today we do not regulate access to video games, internet content and pornographic content that is increasingly available."

Also at BBC and Reason (archive).


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  • (Score: 5, Insightful) by janrinok on Thursday November 30 2017, @06:33PM (4 children)

    by janrinok (52) Subscriber Badge on Thursday November 30 2017, @06:33PM (#603570) Journal

    I suspect that you are judging France by the laws applicable in your own country. You may like your own laws and think they are wonderful - and indeed they might be - but rest assured that not every country agrees with that premise. The age of consent in France is 15 years. Macron's wife did not commit an offense under French law, and therefore should not be judged by you as though she has done something wrong. Had she done the same thing in your own country then she should be judged by your laws. However, the French President hasn't be caught boasting about how he sexually assaults women, unlike at least one President we can name.

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  • (Score: 2) by takyon on Thursday November 30 2017, @06:58PM

    by takyon (881) <takyonNO@SPAMsoylentnews.org> on Thursday November 30 2017, @06:58PM (#603586) Journal

    To compare to the U.S., IIRC some U.S. states have an age of consent of 16 but consider it to be 18 if the older party is a teacher or other authority figure.

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday November 30 2017, @09:39PM (2 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday November 30 2017, @09:39PM (#603666)

    She was his teacher. She was grading his tests and homework. She could demand sex for a good grade. That improperly influences him, and it is unfair to the other students.

    Is that really OK in France? What about superior officers in the military? What about prison guards? What about a judge hearing your criminal trial?

    And as for your last comment, "they let you" is consent.

    • (Score: 2) by takyon on Friday December 01 2017, @04:09AM

      by takyon (881) <takyonNO@SPAMsoylentnews.org> on Friday December 01 2017, @04:09AM (#603795) Journal
    • (Score: 2) by janrinok on Saturday December 02 2017, @10:18AM

      by janrinok (52) Subscriber Badge on Saturday December 02 2017, @10:18AM (#604202) Journal

      Had Mrs Macron tried to exert influence over her students by such threats she would have committed a crime - the student could have reported it and she would likely have received a serious sentence as punishment. Again, French law is probably different to your own laws. In fact, in each of the other cases that you mentioned there is always the possibility raising a complaint that will be investigated fully under the law. You also have no idea whether the relationship was initiated by the student or the teacher. As it resulted in marriage, you will probably find that both parties were willing to get together and, as both parties were also legally entitled to have a relationship what would you suggest should have been done? Should they have been forbidden to meet - despite having done nothing wrong - simply because it _might_ result in inappropriate pressure being brought by one of them against the other despite there being legal safeguards against such events being in place? Again, stop looking at this matter with your own laws in mind because elsewhere they may have completely different views to yourself on how to prevent such things.

      "they let you" is consent

      Wait a minute, here we have a powerful man sexually assaulting women and, perhaps because they felt intimidated or threatened in some other way, they have given 'consent'? NO THEY HAVEN'T. How is this different to your allegations that a teacher cannot have a relationship with a legally consenting student? Who knows what the victims of the sexual assault were thinking. The fact that they were also of legally consenting age does not make this a slam-dunk case. They might have had fear of physical personal danger, of danger to their spouse, of threats to their financial future because 'contracts might be threatened' or jobs held in the balance. Do you think that that is acceptable? It isn't acceptable for a famous film director to do such things, nor an actor, but for a business man it is an entirely reasonable thing to do? Perhaps you ought to have a closer look at your own laws to see if better protection can be afforded to the people it is supposed to be helping. As the heading that you initially selected states: "What about the power relationship?". Et tu, Brute!