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<blockquote>''I'm absolutely convinced that they [the police] are distorting. It's overkill -- the current King Kong of social sensationalism is the sexually abused child while more important and valid child abuse is being ignored. I'm not convinced there is substantive damage to the child, even those posed in sex acts. First off, there just aren't that many involved. The same pictures are used over and over again, and it's a marginal enterprise. The numbers of children, real or mythical, are very small -- too small to justify the hoopla that would once again convey to thousands that sex ought to be repressed and treated like dynamite.''</blockquote>
<blockquote>''I'm absolutely convinced that they [the police] are distorting. It's overkill -- the current King Kong of social sensationalism is the sexually abused child while more important and valid child abuse is being ignored. I'm not convinced there is substantive damage to the child, even those posed in sex acts. First off, there just aren't that many involved. The same pictures are used over and over again, and it's a marginal enterprise. The numbers of children, real or mythical, are very small -- too small to justify the hoopla that would once again convey to thousands that sex ought to be repressed and treated like dynamite.''</blockquote>
Quoted in "Children: The Limits of Porn," by Myra MacPherson in ''The Washington Post'', January 30, 1977, p. 33. (Available to subscribers of ProQuest)
Quoted in "Children: The Limits of Porn," by Myra MacPherson in ''The Washington Post'', January 30, 1977, p. 33. (Available to subscribers of ProQuest)
In 1970, he published (with [[John Gagnon]]) ''Sexual Encounters Between Adults and Children'', a study guide for the Sex Information and Education Council of the United States (SIECUS).<ref>[https://widenersexualityarchives.org/en/permalink/descriptions154 Gagnon and Simon (1970). ''Sexual Encounters Between Adults and Children'', SIECUS Study Guide No. 11, Sex Information and Education Council of the United States (SIECUS), New York]. (External archive link).</ref> The text begins by pointing out [[Research:_Secondary_Harm#Intervention_and_reactions|secondary / iatrogenic harm]].




[[Category:Official Encyclopedia]][[Category: Queer Theory]][[Category:People]][[Category:People: American]][[Category:People: Academics]][[Category:Research]][[Category:Research: Broader Perspectives]][[Category:People: Critical Analysts]][[Category:People: Sympathetic Activists]]
[[Category:Official Encyclopedia]][[Category: Queer Theory]][[Category:People]][[Category:People: American]][[Category:People: Academics]][[Category:Research]][[Category:Research: Broader Perspectives]][[Category:People: Critical Analysts]][[Category:People: Sympathetic Activists]]

Latest revision as of 03:26, 24 July 2024

William Simon (1930 - 2000) was a pioneer in social constructionist theories of sexuality, recipient of the Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality Award for Distinguished Scientific Achievement, and an advocate of liberal sexual policies.

On child pornography, Simon is reported to have said:

I'm absolutely convinced that they [the police] are distorting. It's overkill -- the current King Kong of social sensationalism is the sexually abused child while more important and valid child abuse is being ignored. I'm not convinced there is substantive damage to the child, even those posed in sex acts. First off, there just aren't that many involved. The same pictures are used over and over again, and it's a marginal enterprise. The numbers of children, real or mythical, are very small -- too small to justify the hoopla that would once again convey to thousands that sex ought to be repressed and treated like dynamite.

Quoted in "Children: The Limits of Porn," by Myra MacPherson in The Washington Post, January 30, 1977, p. 33. (Available to subscribers of ProQuest)

In 1970, he published (with John Gagnon) Sexual Encounters Between Adults and Children, a study guide for the Sex Information and Education Council of the United States (SIECUS).[1] The text begins by pointing out secondary / iatrogenic harm.