Quotessence
Home / Quotes / Quote by Wendy McElroy

Quote by Wendy McElroy

“This is the second way in which women in the industry are said to be victims of violence. They are said to be so brainwashed by white male culture that they cannot render consent. Thus, they are de facto coerced. Consider how arrogant this statement is. Although women in pornography appear to be willing, anti-porn feminists see through this charade [...] If a woman enjoys performing sex acts in front of a camera, it is not because she is a unique human being who reasons and reacts from a different background or personality. No. It is because she is psychologically damaged and no longer responsible for her actions. She must, in effect, become a political ward of radical feminists, who will make the correct choices for her.”

Quote by Wendy McElroy

Work

XXX: A Woman's Right to Pornography

Browse quotes and source details for this work. more

Author

Wendy McElroy
Wendy McElroy

Wendy McElroy is an active writer and activist in the fields of libertarianism and feminism. Born in 1951, she is known for her steadfast support of individual freedom and women's liberation. Her works cover a range of subjects, including political philosophy, economics, and gender studies. more

You May Also Like

“If a man loves a girl who is in the first place young and inexperienced; who in the second place is educated with a background of caveman tradition, a middle-ground of poetry and romance, and a foreground of unspoken hope and interest all centering upon the one Event; and who has, furthermore, absolutely no other hope or interest worthy of the name - why, it is a comparatively easy manner to sweep her off her feet with a dashing attack.”

“What is a “woman”? Who gets to be one? Who gets to decide who “counts”? In our quest for equality, should feminists strive for the right to embody even the toxic aspects of masculinity, or should we focus on dismantling it before reaching for equality at all? Why should women who have traditionally been underserved or exploited by mainstream feminism (women of colour, trans women, sex workers) have that label foisted upon them? What do we do with the uncomfortable truth that many women’s rights pioneers were explicitly, actively racist? How do we honour their contributions without erasing the oppression of women of colour that still taints feminism today? How do we reconcile the tension between celebrating womanhood and rejecting gender essentialism? How do we reconcile the tension between fighting oppressive beauty standards and wanting to express ourselves through makeup and clothes?”

“Nainen, joka ei halua naimisiin! No johan pomppasi! Ainoa mahdollinen selitys: hän on HERMAFRODIITTI. NIIN, NIIN!! Ei kenties ole kummallista, että joku pöpi sterilisaation puolesta puhuva professori kirjoitti näin 30-luvulla, tai edes se, että joku kynäilijä/pallopää popularisoi nämä teoriat joitakin vuosikymmeniä myöhemmin!! KUMMALLISTA TÄSSÄ ON SE, ETTÄ ERÄS HILPEÄ SETÄMIESPOPPOO VUONNA 1965 INSPIROITUI TÄSTÄ NIIN VALTAVASTI, ETTÄ ONNISTUI VIEMÄÄN LÄPI HAUDAN AVAUKSEN!”