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I will not go out of my way to try to think like an American grandmother. But if now I am going to be asked to make them, or many of my edits will be scrutinized ad nauseum, then truly, why bother to begin with? For risk of sounding angry or irritated, this level of interference is asinine. And it was okay, as long as the NSFG curtain existed so I didn't have to make these culturally subjective judgment calls. I didn't always question if it was considered pornographic or not - most of the time, I didn't even care, and was interested on its merits. I have been heavily involved in numerous work and trope pages that involve content of this type. I'm really not sure what to suggest, or to say, or even do. I don't blink an eye at organic nudity and sexuality in a serious work, even if one culture somewhere (such as Americans) consider it "explicit" - that doesn't mean it necessarily is to every person of good faith who creates or writes about it. To say that is pornographic may yield Unfortunate Implications, but that doesn't change that people "know it when they see it", and they apply cultural prejudices to those definitions.
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I've met so many people who consider anything conspicuously gay in appearance as pornographic. I'm too grounded in the assumption that all eroticism and sexuality is non-pornographic until it is prostitutive, and only then does it become pornography. I can't go by "you know it when you see it", because I can't predict it. This ◊ (entire worksafe today) was 1902 pornography. Such definitions blow in the winds of societal change, and involve much social prejudice and stigma. I seldom have any intuitive sense of what a typical American will consider explicit or NSFW. I'm an independent international thinker. I have a definition of pornography that tends to be very different from most Americans'. I'm not entirely certain I can be objective on this. Just discovered the recent issue (I've been lagging behind), and this discussion - after Bara Genre was heavily trimmed.