More than two in five sexually active under-18s in the UK have either been strangled or strangled someone during sex, research has found, despite the serious dangers of the practice.
Are you kidding me? What sort of person is making these wild claims!?
“Choking”, as it is commonly known, has become normalised in young people’s sexual habits, the study by the Institute for Addressing Strangulation (Ifas) showed, with 43% of sexually active 16- and 17-year-olds having experienced it.
Ah. Now the penny drops!
More than half of people under the age of 35 have experienced it, with nearly a third wrongly believing there are safe ways to strangle someone.
That's pretty believable, at least, the number of dimwits in society is clearly increasing exponentially....
In recent years, “choking” has become part of a dangerous drift towards increased violence in mainstream pornography, which was cited as the biggest source of information about the practice among the respondents.
Clare McGlynn, a professor of law at Durham University and the author of Exposed: The Rise of Extreme Porn and How We Fight Back, said strangulation in pornography was a recent phenomenon. “Depictions of strangulation and suffocation are brutal and graphic, often involving belts tied around necks, plastic bags over women’s heads, and two hands gripping the neck.” She called for a national campaign to raise awareness of the real risks and harms of the practice, which could occur even when there was no visible injury.
What she's calling for is a national campaign to raaise awareness of her book and her availability for talk shows...
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