The matrix time I saw Gail Dines stand up for, at a convention in Boston, she moved the audience to tears with her portrait of the problems caused by means of obscenity, and provoked chortling with her spicy observations about pornographers themselves. Activists in the audience were newly inspired, and men at the end – sundry of whom had never viewed smut as a complication before – queued up afterwards to pawn their support. The scene highlighted Dines's iffy charisma and the deed data that, since the expiry of Andrea Dworkin, she has risen to that most scabrous and spellbinding of free roles: the community's foremost anti-pornography campaigner.
lebiansex