Headlines began emerging on Monday that Donald Trump had declared a jihad against smut. Across social media, people started sharing headlines that the Republican nominee plans to either ban porncrack down on porn, or is just simply anti-porn.

As usual with the most media outlets, these headlines were either totally untrue or just clickbait.

The outrage began when Trump signed a pledge by a bipartisan group called Enough is Enough. The organization aims at cracking down on child pornography and minors being able to consume x-rated material in public places like libraries and schools that offer free internet.

Trump signed a pledge that promised these five commitments:

"If elected President of the United States of America, I promise to uphold the rule of law by aggressively enforce existing federal laws to prevent the sexual exploitation of children online, including the federal obscenity laws, child pornography laws, sexual predation laws and the sex trafficking laws."

"Aggressively enforce the Children’s Internet Protection Act (CIPA) requiring schools and public libraries using government eRate monies to filter child pornography and pornography by requiring effective oversight by the Federal Communications Commission."

"Protect and defend the innocence of America’s children by advancing public policies that prevent the sexual exploitation of children in a manner that is consistent with the government’s compelling interest in protecting its most vulnerable citizens, within the limits set forth by the First Amendment."

"Give serious consideration to appointing a Presidential Commission to examine the harmful public health impact of Internet pornography on youth, families and the American culture and the prevention of the sexual exploitation of children in the digital age."

"Establish public-private partnerships with Corporate America to step up voluntary efforts to reduce the threat of the Internet-enabled sexual exploitation of children by the implementation of updated corporate policies and viable technology tools and solutions."

None of these are demands to rid the nation of pornography. They are all toughening existing laws to prevent child pornography.

The U.K. just passed similar legislation to make it harder for minors to view pornography, demanding age verifications on all x-rated websites.

Hillary Clinton did not sign the pledge because their campaign has committed not to sign any pledges, but according to Enough is Enough President Donna Rice Hughes, "Clinton agrees with the goals of the pledge. It's a good step."

Had Trump refused to sign the pledge, these same publications would have pushed the headline that the billionaire declined to take a stand against child pornography. The media has ensured that he's damned if he does and damned if he doesn't.