I couldn't reply in any sort of evidence-based way. I worked with the Pauktuutit for more than 20 years overall, and very early on, pornography was identified as a significant priority in the communities. This was before the days of Internet. This was before the days of regularly scheduled flights, mining and resource extraction, and transient workforces. In my time, pornography has been identified. We're talking probably about copies of Playboy. If we look at what has happened to pornography across society, the unbelievably violent nature of pornography, and what we're learning from other places about the normalization and desensitization as a result, absolutely there has to be an impact. We haven't had an opportunity to do any research into it. Given the myriad immediate priorities, that hasn't been identified as a top priority by our membership for the organization. Maybe in some ways the Internet access isn't what we take for granted here. There is no fibre optic, and there are very slow download speeds, which might be a good thing when we think about things like streaming of pornography. I don't even really know what is out there now. I think it would merit some discussion.
On October 26th, 2016. See this statement in context.