Washington, D.C.— Donna Rice Hughes, CEO/President of Enough Is Enough®® (EIE), whose mission is making the Internet safer for children and families, is very encouraged with the response to The Children’s Internet Safety Presidential Pledge, developed by EIE. The Pledge was sent to each of the Presidential Candidates, calling upon them, if elected President to make a pledge to defend the innocence and dignity of America’s children by enforcing the existing federal laws and advancing public policies designed to 1) prevent the sexual exploitation of children online and 2) to make the Internet safer for all. EIE is a non-partisan, non-profit organization and does not endorse or oppose candidates for office.
Secretary Hillary Clinton recently sent a letter expressing support for the goals of The Children’s Internet Safety Presidential Pledge. “I am grateful for your leadership and efforts in preventing the sexual exploitation of children online. Please know that you have my commitment in this fight to protect our young people form the threats of pornography, sexual predators and traffickers. As a Senator,” Secretary Clinton writes, “I was proud to co-sponsor and support many pieces of legislation aimed at protecting our children from predators.”
“Secretary Clinton’s letter of support is vitally important” said Mrs. Hughes, a leading Internet safety pioneer since 1994, in a personal statement. “The next President of the United States must make protecting the innocence of children from Internet-enabled sexual exploitation a top priority. Only when our nation’s children are safe and allowed to grow up free from sexual violence will America be truly great and safe again.
“This is a bi-partisan issue in which we can check our political differences at the door. Donald Trump enthusiastically signed the Pledge in July, prior to the GOP convention. I also hope Gov. Johnson will do the same. This is the first time since the advent of the Internet that both the Republican and Democratic Presidential nominees have promised to lead a holistic effort, as outlined in the Pledge, to protect vulnerable children from unscrupulous Internet pornographers, child pornographers, sexual predators and traffickers.”
Mrs. Hughes, who also served on the bi-partisan Child Online Protection Commission, the Internet Safety Technical Task Force of the State Attorneys General of the United States, and who has testified numerous times before Congress regarding protecting children online, went on to say: “Governments can’t parent and parents can’t enforce the law. Parents alone cannot prevent Internet crimes against their children. Government must also do its part and enforce all the laws on the books, not just some of them! Over the last two decades America’s children have paid an unnecessarily steep price for the lax enforcement of federal obscenity laws. Obscenity is not protected under the First Amendment, and the failure to enforce the law is harming children across the nation and around the world.“
“Protecting youth online and making the Internet safer for children and families requires a multi-faceted strategy with a shared responsibility between the public, industry, and government. The need for aggressive enforcement of existing laws and adequate funding for Law Enforcement to do the job is long overdue. For nearly two decades, bi-partisan government commissions, task forces, Internet safety groups, and researchers, who have recognized the significant risks associated with unfettered Internet access by youth, and have called upon the government and law enforcement to take aggressive action.”
The Pledge’s goals include a commitment to appoint an Attorney General, who will make the vigorous prosecution of the federal obscenity, child pornography, sexual predation, child trafficking laws and the Children’s Internet Protection Act a top priority. The Pledge also includes provisions for the necessary resources and tools to prosecute such crimes and calls for the establishment of public-private partnerships to step up voluntary efforts to reduce and prevent Internet crimes against children. Finally, the Pledge asks for consideration to appoint a Presidential Commission to examine the harmful public health impact of Internet pornography and the prevention of the sexual exploitation of children in the digital age.
Last Spring, the Utah legislature passed a resolution declaring pornography a public health crisis, which leads to the “hyper-sexualization of teens” and an “increase in the demand for sex trafficking, prostitution, and child pornography.” The Utah resolution signals an important shift in how a growing body of scientific data is influencing policy. To date, scientific data associates Internet pornography with addiction, aggression, abuse, family break-down, hindered psychosocial development and decreased well-being.
According to Dr. Jill Manning, a researcher, mental health practitioner and EIE Board member, "it is groundbreaking to have corporate and political leaders reexamining the controversial topic of pornography and concluding that the research substantiates a public health approach."
Mrs. Hughes concluded her personal statement by noting: "When the next President of the United States says enough is enough to the Internet-enabled sexual exploitation of our nation’s youth, the tide will begin to turn.”
Enough Is Enough® will be asking other federal and state legislators and candidates to sign the pledge in order to insure their commitment to this critically important issue.
The Pledge is supported by peer-reviewed research showing the severity of the problem including:
The Presidential Pledge and supporting documentation, including the signed Pledge by Donald Trump and the letter of support by Hillary Clinton, can be found at http://enough.org/presidential_pledge.
For more information or to arrange an interview with Donna Rice Hughes, contact Kevin McVicker with Shirley & Banister Public Affairs at (703) 739-5920 or kmcvicker@sbpublicaffairs.com.
Donna Rice Hughes, Enough Is Enough®’s CEO& President has been an Internet safety pioneer, author, and speaker since1994. As a media commentator, she has given over 4500 interviews on Internet safety related issues. She is also the Emmy-award winning Producer and Emmy nominated Host of the EIE’s Internet Safety 101® TV series. She has testified numerous times before Congress, and has served as a COPA Commissioner and as a member of other national and state government task forces. She won the 2013 Women In Technology Award for Social Impact and the 2014 Professional Women in Advocacy Excellence In Advocacy Award for “Veteran Practitioner”.
Information Coming Soon...