'No Angels' Song Addresses Vicious Porn Addiction Plaguing Society; Rapper Gives Girlfriend Face-to-Face Confession (VIDEO)

Hip-hop artist Jason Chu is stirring up real life emotion with his latest video for "No Angels" in which he details his own personal struggle with pornography and shows the damage it causes in a very important relationship in his life.

Chu is known for telling stories about friends and families wrestling with fear, joy, greed, hope, hurt, and healing with a wish to speak hope and healing in a broken world as stated on his website. In his latest video he spoke about his own personal struggle.

"I wrote 'No Angels' because I needed to break this silence. This song is both a confession, as well as one step (of many) toward taking responsibility for my thoughts and actions," Chu wrote on his blog.

The video shows Chu and a girl who plays the role of his girlfriend, as he confesses to her his vicious sexual addiction.

"It all started when I was 11," the LA based rapper said as he detailed the first time he fantasized about women.

"One picture turned to two, two turned into four, the next thing I knew I was way out of control," he confessed.

Chu went on to say that growing up his perception of women was shaped by what he was told, "So young but already I've been told the major part of a woman is her body not her soul, plus the hormones in my body were not just to help me grow, so girls replaced the toys I'd outgrown," he chillingly rapped.

He walked the listener through the process he experienced that led to his full on addiction. "A sexual addiction in its early stages, attracted to the picture and links on those web pages," he rhymed, "You can't buy me love but I can sure pay for lust."

"I'm battling myself and boy I'm getting massacred, this girl on my computer will do what ever I ask of her," he detailed, "Once it was fun, now I cant stop."

In his next couple of lines Chu explains the enticement. "For the moment I can own her or worship at her throne but once it's over and I'm sober, now I'm back here on my own," he said, admitting his brokenness adds, "It makes me sick to just think about it, a couple hours later, all I'll do is think about it."

"Broken women idolized by broken men, when I idolize the image the cycle starts all again," he declared.

He then acknowledged that his girlfriend became a casualty of his evil habits.

The song and video ends with Chu stating that he will make an effort to turn from his wicked ways. "You are not a toy, you're a woman, and I am not a boy I'm a man, in this cold world we're all broken, I can't fly but I can try to stand," he echoed.

Some feel that pornography has become a plague on this generation and studies show that it is on the rise. An analysis of 400 million web searches concluded that 1 in 8 of all searches online are for erotic content. Covenant Eyes reported that more than one million hits to Google's mobile search sites, over 1 in 5 searches, are for pornography on mobile devices. By 2015, it is estimated that mobile adult content and services are expected to reach $2.8 billion, with mobile adult subscriptions reaching nearly $1 billion, and mobile adult video on tablets tripling worldwide.

The revenue for the porn industry now exceeds more than 10 billion dollars a year from the United States alone, and 300 new pornographic websites come online each day.

Paul Fishbein, founder of Adult Video News, said that no one is safe from the sex industry, "Porn doesn't have a demographic-it goes across all demographics," he said.

Christian ministers have been known to struggle with the addiction as well. Hotel television records years back revealed that 50% of men involved in a meeting for the popular men's ministry Promise Keepers viewed pornography a week before attending one of their major events.

The American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers stated that 56% of divorce cases involve one party having "an obsessive interest in pornographic websites."

The Christian Post reported that according to Clay Olsen, Executive Director of Fight the New Drug, said, "Research is increasingly showing us that there are incredible similarities between drug and porn addictions."

Olsen went on to say, "The more harmful effects occur [in porn addiction] with its relation to our intimate relationships and our overarching society," adding, "Studies have shown us that individuals that regularly consume pornography can end up preferring the computer screen to a human being to get their sexual fix."

Various efforts and ministries have risen up to help support and bring an end to the sexual addiction that affects both men and women. For information on how to get help or advice visit  www.xxxchurch.com 

View "No Angels" below: (WARNING features some explicit language)