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We Tried “Just Say No.” It Didn’t Work Then—And It Won’t Work Now.

There was a time when America believed a slogan could solve a crisis. The Just Say No campaign told people: Just say no to drugs. Simple. Clear. Re

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There was a time when America believed a slogan could solve a crisis.

The Just Say No campaign told people:

Just say no to drugs.

Simple. Clear. Repeatable.

And it failed, failed, failed. Then wakes up in the morning and fails again. 

People were substances to the point of self harm and wearing t-shirts that said “Just Say No” on the front. 


Because the problem was never that simple

People were not using drugs because no one told them not to.

They were navigating:

  • pain

  • poverty

  • pressure

  • trauma

  • environment

  • lack of access to opportunities (intentionally placed obstacles)

A slogan could not touch any of that.

Because the campaign didn’t address:

  • why people turn to substances

  • how environment shapes behavior

  • what support systems are missing

  • how trauma and instability play a role

It did not ASK the people, their families, the communities, or healing and treatment providers on the frontlines …..enough questions.


And we are at risk of repeating that same mistake

Today, the conversation sounds different, but the pattern feels familiar:

“If we remove porn, women will be safer.”

It sounds decisive.
It feels like action.

But it is still a surface-level solution to a layered problem.


We Do Not Defend Porn

Let that be said clearly.

We see harm.
We see exploitation.
We see distortion.

But we are not going to pretend that removing content removes the mindset behind it. We have been here before. 

If porn disappeared tomorrow,
women would not suddenly be safe and out of range of destruction.

Because the danger was never just the content.
The danger is the mindset carried into the world.


Because we have already seen this play out

“Just Say No” focused on desired outcomes. 
while ignoring the conditions that produced it.

And when the conditions remained,
the behavior adapted.


The same risk exists here

If porn disappeared tomorrow, but nothing else changed—

  • entitlement to women’s bodies

  • expectation of access

  • disregard for “no”

  • lack of consequences for harm (especially if the judge believes he/she is looking at a “bright future”. As if the victim was not.)

—women would not suddenly become safe.

This is because the belief system would still be intact.


This is the part we cannot afford to skip

Safety is not created by removing one outlet.

It is created by confronting:

  • power

  • control

  • permission

  • accountability

Across homes.
Across institutions.
Across cultures.


Especially for the women most often overlooked

Because surface solutions rarely reach:

  • women who are poor

  • women with disabilities

  • women across the Black diaspora

  • women from many Asian cultures

  • Indigenous women

  • women taught to endure quietly

  • elderly women and young women too

  • women whose cultures taught them to carry pain quietly
  • women whose “strength” has been used as an excuse to deny them care
  • girls sent from one home to be a “wife” to a far too old man in another.
  • girls held down and operated on without anesthesia for the benefit of some man in the future.  
  • girls sent to period huts because they are menstruating. 

If safety only improves for some,
then it has not been built. Constructed. With a framework and everything. 

It has been rationed.


What actually makes women safer

Not slogans.
Not avoidance.
Not reduction alone.

But transformation:

  • teaching that “no” is final

  • removing the expectation of access (for each and every male)

  • listening when women speak

  • respecting boundaries without punishment

  • enforcing consequences for harm

Across all communities.
Not just the visible ones.


The truth we already learned once

We’ve already tried solving deep problems with simple slogans.

It didn’t work then.

It will not work now.

The real issue is what some men (and women) believe they are entitled to

  • Access to women’s bodies

  • Control over women’s choices

  • Authority over women’s lives

  • The right to ignore “no”

  • The expectation that women should absorb harm and violence quietly

Porn can reflect these beliefs.
It can amplify them.

But it did not invent them. 

“You don’t solve harm with a slogan. 
You solve it by changing the conditions that allow it. 

**Content warning (descriptions of abuse that may be upsetting)

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