Archive for the 'Freedom of Speech' Category

Show me who to smite, and they shall be smoten

Posted in Evolution/ Creationism/ "Intelligent Design", Freedom of Speech, Religion, Uncategorized on December 6th, 2005 by DoubleMan

Prof. Paul Mirecki got his just desserts this week. The UKansas religious studies professor, who gained some notoriety recently because he isn’t crazy, was attacked and beaten by two men on a rural road early Monday morning. Mirecki claims that the two men made reference to the class that Mirecki was planning to teach about how wrong intelligent design is. The course was “Special Topics in Religion: Intelligent Design, Creationism and other Religious Mythologies,” but Mirecki canceled it after newspapers publsihed an email he sent to a student that took a jab at religious fundamentalists.

Religious fundamentalists were angered by these statements, in which Mirecki referred to them as “fundies.” Fundies is disrespectful? I think it doesn’t go nearly far enough, it’s tantamount to only calling Nazis “brownies.” Retards works better for me, maybe fucking retards, idiots, cocksuckers, cunts, douchebags… feel free to add your own.

I think (hope) that this debate becomes one of the defining issues in politics. The debate could be as heated as that over abortion, but this time there is no way in which defenders of creationism are even close to correct.

I think we know where Mirecki is headed:

Yum yum

And Ann Coulter still likes to claim that liberals are the violent ones.

Who’s looking out for you?

Posted in Freedom of Speech, Politics, The War on Terror on November 6th, 2005 by Pants Of Time

I’ve been sitting on some of these articles for quite a while, but some are more recent. This is a small sample of some of the human rights abuses going on in the name of freedom.

The FBI’s Secret Scrutiny
In Hunt for Terrorists, Bureau Examines Records of Ordinary Americans

“National security letters,” created in the 1970s for espionage and terrorism investigations, originated as narrow exceptions in consumer privacy law, enabling the FBI to review in secret the customer records of suspected foreign agents. The Patriot Act, and Bush administration guidelines for its use, transformed those letters by permitting clandestine scrutiny of U.S. residents and visitors who are not alleged to be terrorists or spies.

The FBI now issues more than 30,000 national security letters a year, according to government sources, a hundredfold increase over historic norms. The letters — one of which can be used to sweep up the records of many people — are extending the bureau’s reach as never before into the telephone calls, correspondence and financial lives of ordinary Americans.

Very in depth article here care of the Washington Post.

An American in chains
James Yee entered Guantanamo as a patriotic US officer and Muslim chaplain. He ended up in shackles, branded a spy. This is his disturbing story

My cell was 8ft by 6ft, the same size as the detainees’ cages at Guantanamo. Barely a week ago I had received a glowing evaluation for my work as the US army’s Muslim chaplain among the “Gitmo” prisoners. Now I was the one in chains.

It was my turn to be humiliated every time I was taken to have a shower. Naked, I had to run my hands through my hair to show that I was not concealing a weapon in it. Then mouth open, tongue up, down, nothing inside. Right arm up, nothing in my armpit. Left arm up. Lift the right testicle, nothing hidden. Lift the left. Turn around, bend over, spread your buttocks, knowing a camera was displaying my naked image as male and female guards watched.

It didn’t matter that I was an army captain, a graduate of West Point, the elite US military academy. It didn’t matter that my religious beliefs prohibited me from being fully naked in front of strangers. It didn’t matter that I hadn’t been charged with a crime. It didn’t matter that my wife and daughter had no idea where I was. And it certainly didn’t matter that I was a loyal American citizen and, above all, innocent.

An American in Chains (thanks to the UK)

Oh and what post would be complete without an all new category of law… MIND CRIMES

Online erotic stories host Red Rose Stories announced on its site Friday that the FBI had forced it to shut down.
According to a posting on the site¡¦s main page, Red Rose Stories is facing obscenity charges for posting stories that allegedly involved bestiality, water sports, scat, bondage and domination, S&M, slavery, threesomes, orgies and sex with children.

According to Rosie, who runs the site, such topics have opened the door to her prosecution.

Trust me on this. I found out the hard way. I never thought I’d be in trouble for the written word,” Rosie told XBiz via email. I had no pictures of a sexual nature on my site, adult or otherwise. [It seems] the only legal sex stories are those that involve a man and a woman consenting to missionary position sex in a dark room.¡¨

Rosie said officials came to her house when she was not home and seized a number of items.

Thats right, text files containing nothing but words are illegal now too. Freedom isn’t free, nor is it available.

The rest is here.

A “Brief” History of the MPAA

Posted in Big Business, Freedom of Speech, Opinion, Politics, Religion, The Economy on September 28th, 2005 by kstevens

Pants of Time’s offhand (and deserved) swipe at the MPAA in the comments a few posts below made me think of this issue. While I am no fan of the MPAA and find even the hint of censorship in art to be offensive on its face, I have to admit that the MPAA is better than the alternative (congress). We see this playing out now with the video game industry in the wake of “hot coffee,” and I am willing to bet that the video game industry takes the same approach as Hollywood did.

Prior to 1930, Hollywood Studios had absolute free reign over the content of their films. However, the explosion of the popularity of film (especially among immigrant populations) lead many to fear the potential effect that immoral films might have on these “illiterate,” “unsophisticated,” groups. As a result, local governments created ratings boards which would enforce local censorship laws.

These boards were generally ineffective, and national public outcry, headed by the Women’s Christian Temperence Union (the fine folks that brought you Prohibition), lead to the creation of the MPAA. The MPAA created a list of guidelines for filmakers which were largely ignored untill the advent of sound in film. The inclusion of sound lead to widespread public concern and the creation of a more formal code.

In 1930, the code was finally given teeth with the creation of the Production Code Administration which required all films to obtain a certificate of approval before being released. As a result, many films were either edited or never made it to the screen and foreign films were prevented from being imported (I will spare you the rediculous details of what content was prohibited; but you should check it out for a good laugh).

All this was working just fine (for the studios, if not for the art) untill the late 1950s when the Supreme Court ruled that the studios were violating antitrust laws in their ownership over the theaters themselves. This resulted in independent theaters which would show films that had not been approved of by the PCA. The success of these movies lead the studios to reovlt against the production code and release movies without the certificate. The overwhelming success of uncertified films lead to the wholesale abandonment of the code.

Congress responded by launching an inquiry into congressional regulation of film content. Responding to this, the MPAA, headed up by Lyndon Johnson aide Jack Valenti, established the rating system. The MPAA rating system went into effect with four ratings: G, M, R, and X. The M rating was changed to PG in 1972. The advent of the rating system resulted in the release cutting edge films (Midnight Cowboy, Last Tango in Paris; Looking for Mr. Goodbar) and also allowed for the importing cutting edge foreign films (e.g. I am Curious Yellow), while avoiding congressional ire.

Although these films were very sexually explicit (at least for their time; although Tango still qualifies IMO) and very popular, the ratings sytem allowed the industry to argue that they were preventing harm by notifying consumers about the content of the film. Unfortunately, for reasons I can’t remember, the MPAA failed to trademark the X rating. This allowed independent film companies (and pornographers) to distribute even more sexually explicit films and use the X rating without actually receiving it from the MPAA. Two famous films to do this were “Deep Throat” and “Behind the Green Door,” both of which enjoyed wide releases and suprisingly good box office numbers. Congress once again decided they were going to get into the act and start regulating the industry. As a result, the MPAA quickly dropped the X rating and substituted it with NC-17.

More importantly, the MPAA began pressuring theater owners not to release movies that recieved an NC-17 rating by threateneing to withold major blockbusters from the offending theater. The result is the system we have today.

Admittedly, the system is flawed. It leads to self-censorship by producers and directors in an effort to avoid the dreaded NC-17, it is absurd and arbitrary (you can say “fuck” only X number of times before your rating bumps up a notch). Additionally, because the ratings are rigidly policed by theater owners, there is even further pressure for self censorship in order to lower the rating and increase the target audience. Further pressures are put on by moralistic distibutors (Wal Mart and Blockbuster) who will refuse to stock the DVD if the movie receives an NC-17.

However, as anyone following the politically (and probably personally–I hate how she is always accused of “positioning” herself) motivated antics of Hillary Clinton regarding the “hot coffee” issue knows, there is aboslutely nothing worse than government when it comes to promoting creativity. I shudder to think of what a govenrment censorship board would have done to movies such as “Farenheight 9-11,” “Three Kings,” “Last Temptation of Christ,” “Dogma,” and my personal favorite, Roberto Rosselini’s “L’Amore.” (which suggests that the Virgin Mary was a completely insane) While the MPAA can accurately be derrided as a censor, I think the genius of the MPAA is that as long as Hollywood has control over the censorship, they can slowly push the envelope (although I must concede that TV seems to have progressed a lot more than film in the last 20 years despite rigid FCC regulation)

I suspect that video games will head in the same direction as movies. They are certianly going to have to commit heavily right now to much more rigid self-censorship. Personally, I have a hard time seeing video games as art, so I have a difficult time getting passionate about this issue (I guess its hard to care about the censorship of what you consider to be pure entertainment: “I am OUTRAGED that they censored three instances of the word “fuck” out of Pearl Harbor!!!”). Even so, here’s hoping the video game industry takes the smart road and re-commits to its own brand of rigid self-censorship and not to congress’.

Sesame Street is for Commies.

Posted in Bush Alert!, Freedom of Speech, News, Other Media, Society/Culture on July 15th, 2005 by DoubleMan

The abysmal Kenneth Tomlinson’s reign at the Center for Public Broadcasting ends, thankfully, in September. Unfortunately, the front-runner to replace Tomlinson is the equally abysmal Cheryl F. Halpern.

Halpern, a big-time donor the the Repugs, “…once suggested that public broadcasting journalists should be penalized for biased programs…” according to the Post. Looks like we are in for more dismantling of public broadcasting.

Blah.

Can’t leave it alone…

Posted in Freedom of Speech, Uncategorized on April 15th, 2005 by Milly

Bush: not satisfied with destroying other cultures. Has to take our own down too.

http://www.firstamendmentcenter.org/news.aspx?id=15112

Y-chromosome = I don’t give a shit.

Posted in Freedom of Speech, Higher Education, Society/Culture, Women's Issues on March 15th, 2005 by DoubleMan

What’s the big deal with Larry Summers?

It’s not like he discounted social and institutional impediments that lead to women’s level of unsuccess in the sciences. When an academic raises questions, however unseemly, he/she is doing his or her job. Men and women are different in so many ways, maybe scientific aptitude is just another example. Just look at racial differences (i.e. black men vs. white men as far as penis size and basketball skills or white men vs. asian men in regards to penis size and table tennis skills), if those aren’t innate differences, I don’t know what are.

I hate Summers for a host of other reasons, including his adherence to Neoliberal economic policies and his nonhuman consumption Diet Coke, but his recent gaffe is just plain boring.

I hope people keep complaining about leaders at Harvard. Maybe if they keep forcing people out for ridiculous and overblown reasons (asking questions, making too much money for the endowment), Harvard will lose its undeserved prestige as the be-all and end-all of American Academia.

Good riddance; I fucking hate Harvard.

Morans!

Posted in Freedom of Speech, Higher Education, Politics (Opinion) on March 7th, 2005 by kstevens

From the March 14th Time Magazine article on legislative attempts to regulate free speech:

“If the system were fair, Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity would be tenured professors somewhere.” -Larry Mumper (Ohio State Senator)

This is unbelievable!

You would think that conservatives, lovers of the free market that they are, would not be in favor of affirmative action for conservative professors. But apparently they only have a problem with diversity when brown people benefit. I think it’s pretty clear that conservatives don’t want to be professors because there just isn’t any money in it.

Note: There’s a joke to be made here about Hannity and Limbaugh as professors, but I can’t make it since I just threw up in my mouth.

First they came for the…

Posted in Freedom of Speech, Gay Rights, Religion, Schools on March 6th, 2005 by kstevens

Over the last several years, an increasing number of intellectuals and historians have begun to warn about the gradual descent of America into fascism. While America, at present, is far from a fascist state (as the term is commonly understood), it is becoming increasingly clear that the roots of incipient fascism are beginning to take hold. This is commonly understood to be a result of 9-11, its aftermath, and this administration’s subsequent grabs for power. In the aftermath of 9-11, Americans were willing to allow unprecedented levels of state control in the name of safety and security (this expansion was justified by the common belief that “9-11 changed everything.” In this way, 9-11 planted the seed of fascism in this country. Since that day fascist ideology has slowly grown. At its current pace, it would seem that fascism is still far off. However, should another 9-11 (or worse) occur, there is little doubt that it would be used and accepted as a justification for a complete fascist takeover.

I hesitate to use the word “fascist,” because it is such a value-laden word which conjures up specific images of Hitler, Nazis and the like. When you think of it this way, it seems impossible that America could ever descend into such a state. Aside from this imagery, the average American has no idea what forms fascism might take, has no idea that Americans toyed with the idea of fascism in the 1930’s, and consequently will laugh off the suggestion that fascism has any sort of hold on American soil.

The reason I bring this up now is that a current news story conjures up the type of fascist imagery that might hit home to the average American. It seems that a UNC “fraternity” has just won a preliminary injunction allowing them to exclude gays and Jews. By itself, this story may not seem all that important (it is only a preliminary injunction), but in the larger context it is critical. Americans need to stop pretending that fascism is some kind of exotic disease which affected a few Germans several decades ago. It can happen here.

I’m reminded of the famous poem by Pastor Martin Niemoller.

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