Misfit
Lawful neutral
Oxbow Academy: Desert boot camp helps teens beat addiction to internet porn | Mail Online
As the internet begins to exert more and more control over our lives, it brings with it an increasingly destructive problem - the rise of online porn.
The issue is perhaps most damaging when it affects the lives of teenagers, who can be at risk of ruining their adolescence with an addiction to hardcore material.
And some parents are taking drastic steps to reform their porn-addict sons - by sending them off to a desert 'boot camp' to help them overcome their troubling behaviour.
Oxbow Academy, in Utah, is a rehabilitation facility dedicated to teenage boys who have exhibited 'sexual behavioural issues'.
These 'issues' can include a wide variety of problems - some of the boys there have been accused of voyeurism or even assaulting other children.
But perhaps the fastest-growing category of offender is the online porn fanatic - leading some to dub the academy 'Porn School', according to the Sunday Mirror.
The pioneering facility is in a converted church, with inmates sleeping in bunk beds situated in two large dormitories.
As the internet begins to exert more and more control over our lives, it brings with it an increasingly destructive problem - the rise of online porn.
The issue is perhaps most damaging when it affects the lives of teenagers, who can be at risk of ruining their adolescence with an addiction to hardcore material.
And some parents are taking drastic steps to reform their porn-addict sons - by sending them off to a desert 'boot camp' to help them overcome their troubling behaviour.
Oxbow Academy, in Utah, is a rehabilitation facility dedicated to teenage boys who have exhibited 'sexual behavioural issues'.
These 'issues' can include a wide variety of problems - some of the boys there have been accused of voyeurism or even assaulting other children.
But perhaps the fastest-growing category of offender is the online porn fanatic - leading some to dub the academy 'Porn School', according to the Sunday Mirror.
The pioneering facility is in a converted church, with inmates sleeping in bunk beds situated in two large dormitories.