Teen cell phone ‘sexting’
High school boys no longer require the internet to view pornography because their female classmates are texting sexually explicit pictures directly to their cell phones. It’s a practice some are calling ’sexting’ and “includes the act of text messaging someone in the hopes of having a sexual encounter with them later; initially casual, transitioning into highly suggestive and even sexually explicit,” as explained by some urban culture specialists. Here is a recent story about the practice:
PORTLAND, Ore. — The popularity of cell phone text messaging has led to a new and controversial trend for students and parents on Portalnd-area high schools. Teens told Portland TV station KPTV that many of their classmates are using cell phones to take and send explicit photos. They said “sexting” is a major problem at most campuses in Portland. Anton Bogan, a local high school student, said “9.7 times out of 10, it’s a nasty photo.”
In the news story I watched, teens admitted that it was mostly girls sending photos to boyfriends, for example. The sexually explicit photos are often later distributed throughout the school with the use of the forwarding feature.
Many parents will find this alarming, but it reveals the need for moral formation, forged within the context of real intimacy, to engender the moral virtue not to participate in activities that others have no qualms about. The Enemy’s “parasite kingdom” continues to attach itself to technology that could also be used for so much good. The same photo and text messaging feature that allows students to take spontaneous shots of their friends having fun, pictures for an auto accident insurance claim, and so on, is also open to gross perversions like most things.
What are parents to do? Prevent their children from having camera phones? Not allow them to be around other students with camera phones? Not allow them to have the text messaging feature on their cell phones at all?
For those parents of children under five-years-old it can be frightening to think about what will be available technologically for your kids that will tempt them into immorality in ways unthinkable today. Who would have imagined, even 10 years ago, that there would come a time when high school students would send sexually explicit pictures of themselves back and forth to one another, on their cell phones, even during school hours? What’s next?




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back to top17 Comments to “Teen cell phone ‘sexting’”
“Nasty” photos transferred by cell phone by under-aged kids I’m guessing is a felony. It’s a really stupid idea.
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It will take something like a crackdown on call phone porn to get a handle on this trend.
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Time the parents took action and took the phones away.
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I agree with Joe B. I doubt most teens “need” a phone. (Availability doesn’t equal need. I got my first cell phone five years ago, only because I’d be doing more long-distance driving than I used to do.) If they need a phone, get one that’s just a phone, as much as they might squawk.
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Gives “Call Girl” a whole new meaning.
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Here in our area the assistant DA made a presentation in our local high school (and probably other area schools) talking to parents first (evening meeting) and students (school hours) about internet safety in general, but also about how this is a crime and how locally people are being caught.
Just last week a boy was sentenced adjudicated as a youthful offender and sentenced to 10 years probation for forwarding pictures he had received from female school mates to minors.
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A friend of mine got a letter from a guy she had been dating and who was now in the service. He had written to her about another girl who had sent him a photo of herself. The implication was that she should also send him a pin up girl type photo. She put on a granny nightgown, did her hair in rollers and cap, smeared her face with cream etc. I took the picture. That relationship didn’t last too long. I’ll bet she is glad there was no internet to post it on!
How sad that girls think this is normal and necessary!
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I wonder how many current young women will spend many years (from the time they are expecting their own children to the time they die) wondering if their children or grandchildren will find the raunchy photos of them on the internet.
They may not think about it, or care, now. In a few years, they may change their minds.
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Don’t kids just do the darndest things!?!
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By the way, there was a recent case I saw reported about a teenage girl being successfully prosecuted for child pornography for posting pictures of herself on the internet. The same could easily happen in this sort of context.
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Enemy’s “parasite kingdom” continues to attach itself to technology that could also be used for so much good.
Technology has so much potential, but it does seem that most of the time it furthers corruption and shallow behaviour and does nothing to strengthen either our relationship with God or with other men/women. (WOW being an exception, of course.)
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I’m sure they will find a way to crack down on the latest way to transmit pornography.
Teens do need cell phones, if there is a problem when their out with friends, activities at school, a quick call to mom or day or the police is important. When kids cars break down on the road, a call to someone for help can save their lives,….. who knows who might drive by and decide to harm a young girl or guy with a flat tire, etc. at least the police or parents know exactly where their child is and do what they can ASAP.
I have had a cell phone since they came out, it has saved me many times from a very bad situation, which if I or WE hadn’t had a phone it would most likely have turned out badly.
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Bad behavior has been a driving economic force in a lot of tech innovations through history.
For example, porn funded a lot of the advances from the printing press to photography to movies to VCRs to computer/internet developments.
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No one has ever sent me a picture on my cell phone. If I ever get one, it better be a nude llama. Llamas with clothes on just doesn’t seem right
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If amateur cell phone porn gains popularity, the consequences could be devestating. Gals with cell phone cameras– and guys with the ability to forward those pix– could in fact spell the end of Hugh Hefner’s empire. By making porn so common place it does rob it of any kind of illicit surreptitious appeal, no?
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I never understood why they put cameras on cell phones in the first place. That’s kind of like putting a TV and a toaster together. If it were an Olympic event, it would be like trying to combine cross-country skiing and shooting a rifle…oh, nevermind.
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TJ,
Many times people photograph an accident, or they video a crime which is taking place, be it abuse, or a person being beaten, etc. Anything can be misused for the wrong purpose, but it has been a tool to prove a crime many times.
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