In believing that men will watch pornography and then perpetrate what they saw on women, Mackinnon ignores the enormous divide between thought and deed. In this sense, it is no different than assuming that because one watches a rated R movie they are more prone to commit a violent crime. In her essay entitled The Censorship of Pornography, feminist sociologist Thelma
McCormack dismisses “the uninformed claim that pornography is in any way a factor" in producing sexually violent men, who seek to abuse and harm women. McCormack repudiates this theory and dismisses it as: "an insult to social scientists and the broader intellectual community for whom structural equality is the crux of social justice and who have labored to develop the knowledge that would clarify and deepen our understanding of it"(75) Throughout the essay Mackinnon assiduously reminds the reader just how insidious pornography is. She states that pornography "turns a woman into a thing to be acquired and used." And that it is primarily concerned "with whether women bleed."(199) She maintains