Child s*x abuse dolls found on ecommerce platform Shopee
Ecommerce platform Shopee was recently exposed for selling child sex abuse dolls, some even in school uniform.
Read moreCollective Shout speaks out on hyper-sexualised mural
Controversy has arisen in Northbridge due to a mural featuring a sexualised, anime-inspired character that is being criticised for the way it presents women. Collective Shout Youth Advocate and Educator Daniel Principe spoke with Oly Peterson on 6PR’s Perth Live.
Read moreWIN! Thrivent divests from strip club shares
US-based investment firm Thrivent Financial for Lutherans has quietly sold off over one million dollars in shares in strip club company RCI Hospitality Holdings (RCIHH) after Collective Shout called on them to divest.
We were surprised when we discovered Thrivent - a company with particular appeal to faith-based and ethically motivated investors - was propping up and profiting from the sale of women’s bodies as men’s sexual entertainment.
Over the weekend it was reported that Thrivent divested in all remaining shares for RCIHH. This is a massive victory for our movement!
Collective Shout works with social media platforms in mass child sex abuse doll take down
Update: 71 accounts now gone from Twitter.
*Content warning*
We are celebrating a big win with more child sex abuse doll promoters being removed from the platform. Collective Shout have been instrumental in bringing these accounts to the attention of Twitter heads who then have fast tracked the process of suspending the accounts.
Read morePlease DM me with a few of the user handles.
— Ella Irwin (@ellagirwin) April 7, 2023
Federal Government must release eSafety’s report on porn and age verification to protect children
It is well established that many children in Australia are accessing pornography online and that exposure harms them.
Despite growing awareness of and concern about these harms there has been little meaningful action at government level. It is time to put the wellbeing of the community over the vested interests of the porn industry. It is time to stop children’s exposure to online pornography.
Exposing children to porn harms their healthy sexual development and contributes to children acting out in inappropriate ways, including by sexually abusing other children. Australian children need protection. You can’t buy alcohol or tobacco or play the pokies without proving you are over 18. Yet there is no proof of age requirement for our kids to access hard-core porn sites. Porn harms children – it trains boys to see girls and women as objects to be used not as equals to be respected. Age verification (18+) for online pornography is a must.
- In 2019 Collective Shout wrote a submission for the Inquiry into Age Verification for Online Wagering and Online Pornography.
- The House of Representatives Standing Committee on Social Policy and Legal Affairs released their report 'Protecting the Age of Innocence' on age verification for online wagering and online pornography in Feb 2020.
- The parliamentary committee published a media release in March 2020 recommending age verification.
In its report the Committee has recommended that the eSafety Commissioner and the Digital Transformation Agency take the lead on further work towards implementing a system of mandatory age verification for online wagering and pornography in Australia.
- In April 2021 the government had still not responded. We launched our campaign for the government to act.
- In March 2023, eSafety submitted a roadmap on age verification to the Australian Government for consideration. It allegedly included complementary measures to prevent and mitigate harm to children from online pornography.
1) Ask the Minister for Communications Michelle Rowland MP and the Australian Prime Minister Hon Anthony Albanese MP to release the eSafety report
2) Contact your Federal Member to also ask the Communications Minister to release the eSafety report.
Tips for Engaging your local Member of Parliament (MP)
Your local member is your representative in Parliament. You are entitled to contact them to ask them where they stand on important issues and to ask them to represent your interests.
Below are some tools and guidelines for contacting your MP.
Who is your MP?
If you are uncertain who your MP is, you can find out through the Parliament of Australia website. Visit this link and enter your postal code or electorate >> https://www.aph.gov.au/Senators_and_Members
Contacting your MP
Clicking on the name of Senators and Members who appear in the search results from the above link will produce their contact details. You can email your MP, send them a letter by post, phone the office to have someone relay a message for you or to arrange a time to meet with your MP.
Many of our supporters ask for pre-written emails or letters to send to MPs but these are not effective. MPs are more likely to take notice of your correspondence if it is personalised, respectful and short.
You may use any content on our website if it lends weight to your letter - please see in particular, our key issues outlined below - but including your personal experience conveys how the issues we write and campaign about personally impacts you.
It is also important to keep correspondence as succinct as possible. You want to make it as easy for your MP to understand who you are, where you are from, the issue you are concerned about and most importantly, what you want them to do about it as your representative in parliament.
How to address your MP
There are protocols on how to address your MP which will assist you in making contact with them. Click here to find out details on how to address Senators and Members
Ad Standards endorses 'most complained about' porn billboard
A porn billboard just three blocks from a Perth primary school has received a thumbs up from the ad industry self regulator. The Ad Standards Community Panel ruled in favour of the advertiser to the detriment of community members - vulnerable kids included - dismissing hundreds of complaints about the gargantuan streetside suburban porn ad.
Read moreHow porn undermines consent ed: Daniel Principe in SBS Insight
As published at SBS
From the age of 11, porn distorted my image of women. Now, I’m a consent educator
Daniel is a youth advocate and consent educator. He says before we talk about consent, we need to address pornography’s pervasive message that women should and can be disrespected.
Read morePerth Mum of 4's petition to pull porn billboard
Mother of 4, Lyn, from Perth has started a petition calling for a billboard at a busy intersection advertising an OnlyFans porn account to be pulled down.
Sign Petition
Read moreTell WA Billboards to pull porn ad
Mystery 'land owner' controls billboard contents
Take action
Email: [email protected]
Website: http://www.wabillboards.com.au/contact-us/