Citing connections to human trafficking, a major Scandinavian hotel
chain has announced that it is eliminating pornography channels from its
hotel rooms.
“The porn industry contributes to trafficking, so I see it as a natural
part of having a social responsibility to send out a clear signal that
Nordic Hotels doesn't support or condone this,” said Petter Stordalen,
the owner of Nordic Hotels.
A Norwegian billionaire and philanthropist, Stordalen announced that he
is removing pay-per-view pornography channels from his chain’s 171
Scandinavian hotels and replaced them with contemporary art.
He said he decided to stop selling the material after he started to work
with UNICEF’s campaign to help the child victims of human trafficking
and sexual exploitation, who number over 1.2 million annually, the
British newspaper The Guardian reports.
Stordalen said the move may seem “shocking and unusual,” but he compared it to the initially unpopular ban on smoking.
“We were the first hotel chain in the world to ban smoking and people
thought we were crazy. Now it's totally normal for public spaces to be
smoke-free,” he said.
The move was applauded by Princeton law professor Robert P. George and prominent American Islamic scholar Hamza Yusuf.
“The pornography industry is corrupt through and through—inherently so,”
George and Yusuf said in a Sept. 4 essay for Public Discourse.
“It should come as no surprise that it is connected to something as
exploitative, degrading, and dehumanizing as human trafficking. Bravo to
Petter Stordalen for refusing to continue profiting from peddling the
industry’s wares.”
The scholars wrote a letter to hotel executives in the United States
last summer asking them to consider removing pornography from their
establishments because it reduces women to “a sexual object” rather than
a “precious member of the human family.”
Asking the executives to consider their own sisters, daughters and
mothers, George and Yusuf charged the pornography is “degrading,
dehumanizing, and corrupting,” teaching young people to “settle for the
cheap satisfactions of lust” instead of achieving a love that is “liberating and fulfilling.”
Pornography policies in U.S. hotel chains vary. Omni Hotels and Resorts
stopped selling pornography in 1998. Marriot has said it is “phasing
out” pornography sales, while the Hilton chain has defended its
continued sales.
Geroge and Yusuf are now calling on American hotels to follow Stordalen’s lead.
“If Nordic Hotels can demonstrate this kind of moral and social
responsibility, then there is no reason that Hilton Hotels and the other
large chains cannot,” they said.
“Let them stop trying to deceive the public – and perhaps even
themselves – with rhetoric about respecting or even protecting their
customers’ liberty. Pornography is a social plague with horrific
real-life consequences for real live people – addicts, spouses,
children, communities, girls and women trafficked into sexual
servitude.”