Hotels and the pornography plague

A bit more than a year ago, we wrote on Public Discourse a letter we had sent to the chief executive officers of our nation’s largest hotel chains, respectfully asking them to stop offering pornography in their hotel rooms.

“We are, respectively, a Christian and a Muslim, but we appeal to you not on the basis of truths revealed in our scriptures but on the basis of a commitment that should be shared by all people of reason and goodwill: a commitment to human dignity and the common good.

“As teachers and as parents, we seek a society in which young people are encouraged to respect others and themselves—treating no one as an impersonal object or thing. We hope that you share our desire to build such a society.

  • “Pornography is degrading, dehumanizing, and corrupting.
  • It undermines self-respect and respect for others.
  • It reduces persons—creatures bearing profound, inherent, and equal dignity—to the status of objects.
  • It robs a central aspect of our humanity—our sexuality—of its dignity and beauty.
  • It ensnares some in addiction.
  • It deprives others of their sense of self-worth.
  • It teaches our young people to settle for the cheap satisfactions of lust, rather than to do the hard, yet ultimately liberating and fulfilling, work of love.”

One hotel chain, Marriott, informed us that they were “phasing out” offerings of pornography in their hotel rooms.

Another, Hilton, defended its participation in the pornography business by appealing, dubiously in our view, to libertarian principles.

Others, so far as we can tell, have ignored our plea.

We wish to reiterate that plea here, however, by holding up to the American hotel executives the highly laudable actions of Petter Stordalen, owner of Nordic Hotels, one of Scandinavia’s largest chains.

Mr. Stordalen, after becoming involved in international efforts to fight the horrific practice of trafficking women and girls into sexual slavery, announced that pornography would no longer be offered to his customers. In a public statement explaining his decision.

“The porn industry contributes to trafficking, so I see it as a natural part of having a social responsibility to send out a clear signal that Nordic Hotels doesn’t support or condone this, he said.

He’s right.

The pornography industry is corrupt through and through—inherently so. It should come as no surprise that it is connected to something as exploitative, degrading, and dehumanizing as human trafficking.

Bravo to Petter Stordalen for refusing to continue profiting from peddling the industry’s wares. Continue reading

Image: Communio

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