April 9, 2009
Personal note:
In recent days, we published a story entitled: "Showing adult films
on campus debases both men and women."
Quoting from the April 5 article:
"So the porn industry is now in the business of educating our youth.
A spokesman for Digital Playground expressed disappointment with the cancellation
of a public screening of one of the company's porn movies at the University
of Maryland, College Park, claiming that showing such a movie 'opens up a
discussion, a discourse on sexuality and gender roles.' ..."
Despite the cancellation, predictably the concern does not end there. Pat
Trueman, former head of the Child Exploitation and Obscenity Enforcement Section
in DC shares the following insight:
"Many of the so-called 'First Amendment attorneys' are rushing to
support U of Maryland students for showing a porn film on campus claiming,
wrongly, that such conduct is protected by the U.S. Constitution. They use
the same arguments that every porn defendant in every case has unsucessfully
has used, that the film has artistic value. When forced to watch similiar
films, juries don’t buy that argument. Juries know the difference between
art and porn even if 'First Amendment attorneys' are confused."
Patrick Trueman
Pat Trueman provided the following article
http://www.examiner.com/x-6428-Baltimore-Legal-News-Examiner~y2009m4d8-UMD-claims-First-Amedment-protects-pornographic-screening
UMD claims First Amendment protects pornographic screening
April 8, 5:03 PM
College Park, Md. – Officials at the University of Maryland are defending
students who wish to host a screening of a pornographic movie. The movie,
entitled “Pirates II: Stagnetti’s Revenge,” is produced
by Digital Playground, which calls itself “the leader in adult film-making.”
Students and school officials cite First Amendment protections as a justification
for the movie screening. My guess is that most of the students think that
is a sufficient argument, but the United States Supreme Court has held that
the First Amendment does not protect all speech. Among the unprotected classes
of speech is obscenity.
The Court, in Miller v. California (1973) set forth the current standard.
In order to be characterized as obscene, and thus not afforded First Amendment
protection, material must:
1) Appeal to the prurient interest;
2) Offend contemporary community standards; and
3) Taken as a whole, lack serious artistic, literary, political, or scientific
value.
University officials and various interest groups are citing the third prong
as a blow to the obscenity argument. I could not disagree more, and I hope
you will concur after reading my analysis.
Let’s look at this proposed screening thoroughly while applying the
governing standard set forth by the nation’s highest court.
The movie clearly appeals to the prurient interest. After all, that is the
central and solitary aim of pornography. The pornography industry depends
on the prurient interest of consumers. Its very existence is a result of,
and future viability depends on, such an interest.
The movie clearly offends community standards. It is worth noting that “community
standards” should be analyzed on a local, state-level basis. This was
the court's instruction in Miller. Evidence of what communities in San Francisco
and Vermont view as offensive are irrelevant. Residents of Maryland have not
surrendered all morals, and they still view public screenings of pornography
as morally abhorrent and socially taboo. The outrage from residents and their
elected officials is sufficient substantiation of this assertion.
The artistic value of the film is non-existent. The Court, in Miller, qualified
the obscenity standard with the third prong to provide exceptions where materials
have other value. Examples of artistic value would be a nude painting. Scientific
value would be a medical journal. Of course proponents of the screening are
arguing that the pornographic movie has artistic value. They have to in order
to justify the screening. But, they fail to mention that Digital Playground
produced an R-rated version of the movie. If there is an interest, other than
appealing to the prurient interest, why are students and officials not showing
the R-rated version instead of the unrated version?
It may feel wrong to abridge First Amendment rights because of the long-standing
belief that the First Amendment is one of the most important and unique rights
bestowed upon Americans. But, the history of the First Amendment stems from
the infinite value of political speech. The Founders recognized the value
of vigorous political debate, and recognized the danger of oppression by powerful
political leaders without the First Amendment. From there, speech proceeds
down the spectrum until it reaches the point that it serves no legitimate
interest while contemporaneously damaging the society as a whole. Fighting
words, incitement to violence, and defamation of character are other examples
of speech that have been held to present a danger that outweighs the value
of uninhibited expression.
http://www.examiner.com/x-6428-Baltimore-Legal-News-Examiner~y2009m4d8-UMD-claims-First-Amedment-protects-pornographic-screening
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In closing, one of the concerns that many of us have is that as the Obama
administration unleashes its liberal, statist agenda - pro-abortion, pro-homosexuality,
pro-pornography (David Ogden pornography attorney as Obama's 2nd in command
at U.S. Justice Department - that pornographers will become increasingly emboldened
as we see in the article under discussion here.
I find myself as burdened over our country as never before in my 62 years.
I'm not oblivious to what is unfolding. Presently, we are mostly hearing about
the massive, godless changes. Within days, weeks, months and years, we will
feel, see, taste, experience the fallout from these ramrodded changes foisted
upon us by the most liberal, multicultural president in the history of our
country!
But, I'm a Christian. I have learned (and am learning) and fear that I have
much more to learn about the reality that our hope is not in men, but in the
Living God.
Sharing some devotional thoughts:
"The Christian life is a heated battle against the world, the flesh,
and the Devil, and it is not for the faint of heart. In this war we will suffer
seeming defeat and enjoy God-given sucess. At times we will be exhilarated,
and at other times loss will discourage us. Yet we must never give up. Jesus's
victory over Satan at the cross (Col. 2:13-15) has decided the war. Victory
is guaranteed for God's people, and it is now slowly working itself out in
our lives and in the created order.
Philippians 3:12-16 calls us to forget what is behind us and press on toward
the goal. Paul knew his reward was sure in Christ. But he also knew that he
would receive it only by pressing forward, working out his salvation with
fear and trembling just as Christ was working in him (Phil. 2:12-13). Sanctification
(our growth in holiness) is a cooperative effort between us and God. He makes
our victory certain in Christ, but we only know that it is ours if we press
on away from sin and toward Jesus (2 Peter 1:10-11)."
[Taken from Table Talk, Ligonier Ministries, April 8, 2009, www.ligonier.org]
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