Open publication - Free publishing
Sexposé
Exploring the culture of sexuality in Toronto
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
A year without sex: a comedian's adventures in abstinence
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Open publication - Free publishing
Monday, December 13, 2010
Child sexual abuse: Canada vs the U.S.
By Vanessa Brown
Graham James, who was convicted for 350 charges of child sexual abuse in the '90s, was granted bail last week and released from jail on unrelated child sexual assault charges. James is a former Winnipeg minor hockey league coach now infamous for molesting ex-NHLers Sheldon Kennedy and Theo Fleury in the 1970s and '80s.
He initially served two-and-a-half years (from 1997 to 2001) for sexually assaulting Kennedy and an unnamed minor hockey league player. James was arrested in October on an additional nine counts of sexual assault. According to the Globe and Mail, Fleury said that Canadians "pride ourselves on being one of the safest countries in the world and a decision like the one that was made today doesn't really say a lot, make a statement that we're protecting our children, because we're not."
Graham James, who was convicted for 350 charges of child sexual abuse in the '90s, was granted bail last week and released from jail on unrelated child sexual assault charges. James is a former Winnipeg minor hockey league coach now infamous for molesting ex-NHLers Sheldon Kennedy and Theo Fleury in the 1970s and '80s.
He initially served two-and-a-half years (from 1997 to 2001) for sexually assaulting Kennedy and an unnamed minor hockey league player. James was arrested in October on an additional nine counts of sexual assault. According to the Globe and Mail, Fleury said that Canadians "pride ourselves on being one of the safest countries in the world and a decision like the one that was made today doesn't really say a lot, make a statement that we're protecting our children, because we're not."
Art and pornography in homosexual culture
Chris Ironside |
Ironside as a long weekender |
By: Victoria Gray
Chris Ironside explores masculine identities through his photography. Sometimes it’s very sexualized and could be considered pornographic, but he is dealing with a tough subject with Hard Candy: sexuality.
“I’m never about blatant pornography, he said. “I think pornographic images are lovely and I think they are lovely because of the oddest thing… it becomes a lot about muscle worship and less about ass and cocks.”
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