Saturday, September 05, 2015

P0*n Site Offering $25,000 Scholarship To Students Who Can Answer The “How Do You Strive To Make Others Happy?” Question

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One of the world’s most-viewed p****graphy Web sites is offering a new $25,000 college scholarship for a student who will be judged partially on a homemade video submission answering a single question: “How do you strive to make others happy?” P0*nhub.com, which touts 78.9 billion online video views each year, recently began accepting submissions for the scholarship as part of the site’s expanded philanthropic efforts. Washington Post reports:

“We work hard to help make millions of people feel happy every single day,” according to the scholarship Web site. “In turn, we would like to help support the recipient of the first annual P0*nhub Cares Scholarship to realize their goal of doing the same.” The scholarship offer from a prominent P0*n site immediately drew fire from feminism activist groups, which said they have concerns that the campaign is a thinly veiled ploy to exploit young women who are struggling to pay the rising costs of higher education.
Dawn Hawkins, executive director of the National Center on s*xual Exploitation, described the scholarship as a “an amazing and deceptive marketing tactic,” aimed at a vulnerable demographic: cash-strapped college students. “A lot of younger people don’t realize the consequences and harm of p****graphy,” Hawkins said. “These videos follow them the rest of their lives and affect their jobs and relationships in the future to have this out there. … It’s really unfortunate we’re forcing our kids to sell their bodies to get an education.”
A woman known professionally as Belle Knox, a p****graphy performer and Duke University student, made headlines around the world after another student at her school outed her. Knox, whose real name is Miriam Weeks, later took part in a documentary describing her path to p****graphy in part to help pay her crushing college tuition debt.
Corey Price, vice president of P0*nhub, acknowledged that the scholarship could be considered controversial, as p****graphy’s rampant spread across the Internet has long drawn debate about its role in society and how people view women. Price said that “if you’re against p****graphy and an anti-p****graphy crusader, this is probably not the scholarship for you.”

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