who is chatting on SOLO ChatThe Free RadicalPopular contentWho's onlineThere are currently 5 users and 18 guests online.
Online usersPollElection 2008: Who Will Win? Obama by a landslide 11% McCain by a landslide 19% Obama comfortably 12% McCain comfortably 28% Either narrowly 30% Total votes: 57
|
ARI Press Release: End Censorship on the AirwavesSubmitted by Ayn Rand Institute on Tue, 2008-07-22 20:06.
Ayn Rand Institute Press Release End Censorship on the Airwaves July 22, 2008 "In fact," said Don Watkins, a writer for the Ayn Rand Institute, "the government should put an end to the non-objective 'indecency' laws that permit the FCC to dictate what Americans can say and hear on the airwaves. "The Supreme Court has defined 'indecency' as speech that 'depicts or describes sexual or excretory activities and organs in terms patently offensive as measured by contemporary community standards.' But which Americans count--and don't count--as part of the community? Why are they king? And how are broadcasters to divine their supposedly shared standards? "As the history of the government's anti-indecency regime has shown, these questions are unanswerable. The only way for broadcasters to play it safe is to engage in self-censorship, cutting any material regulators might declare indecent. "And once the government becomes the enforcer of 'community standards,' no speech is safe. How long until the courts start rubber-stamping the Bible Belt's efforts to suppress the theory of evolution on the grounds that it is offensive, corrupts young minds, and undermines community values? "It's time for the government to stop telling Americans what we can say and hear on the airwaves, and to protect our Constitutionally guaranteed right to free speech." ### ### ### Contact: David Holcberg For more information on Objectivism's unique point of view, go to ARI's Web site. Founded in 1985, the Ayn Rand Institute promotes the philosophy of Ayn Rand, author of "Atlas Shrugged" and "The Fountainhead."
Copyright © 2008 Ayn Rand® Institute. All rights reserved.
( categories: )
|
User loginFeatured BookNavigation |
Here it is, in case you missed it!
One nipple star: $20
Janet Jackson at Superbowl: $100,000
One indecency fine: $550,000
Nipple shot on US prime-time TV: Priceless