Jesus Castillo, Supreme Court, And Free Speech
I've been following the Jesus Castillo case for a while. The case itself is an obscenity charge for selling an adult comic to an adult undercover police officer in Dallas. Recently, the US Supreme Court denied his appeal, with the notion that obscenity is a state-level affair, despite the First Amendment being a Federal law. There's also an interview with the head of the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, and some good ruminations from Neil Gaiman on the subject. Bad precedents for free speech - the CBDLF donations and giving to the EFF are Good Things.
The government needs to back off on lifestyle issues, especially when it comes to adults. If a person is making a positive contribution to society (not in jail, has a job, pays taxes, etc.) what right does anybody else have to tell them what they can and cannot say, do, smoke, eat, drink when it does affect other people. I am hoping there is more to this case than just buying an adult magazine, but according to the article the offense took place in Texas, which makes it less surprising that such a rediculous case is even being considered. I also find it interesting that his appeal was denied because obcenity charges were a state issue. Doesn't the federal court system have a certain responsiblity to step in when a state is being accused of infringing on a constitutional right?
Visualize the world of wine
Jesus Castillo, Supreme Court, And Free Speech :D
...and thankfully not SCO
I have over 70 freaks, do you?
The links in the summary all lead to peripheral sites, not to anything detailing the case itself.
Since it's in Texas, will he receive the death penalty?
The case itself is an obscenity charge for selling an adult comic to an adult undercover police officer in Dallas.
At the risk of getting myself modded down for being a little clueless... Why is selling adult materials to adults in Dallas a problem? Is adult content illegal there? Or did he violate some ordinance? If it's a local thing, this should not be a big deal at all and is way out of proportion...
(if he thought said police officer was a minor, well, then I think I can understand the issue.)
Flame away...
Be excellent to each other. And... PARTY ON, DUDES!
the precedent has always been that the locale of the alleged offense has the right to determine what is "patently obscene" free speech is guaranteed, but if everyone around decides that what you say is obscene you can be shut down. I for one, believe in personal responsibility. Your right to extend your fist ends when it hits my nose
The first amendment is not a "federal law." It is a component of the federal constitution which restricts federal power, and through the 14th amendment, it is considered "incorporated" to restrict state power as well. This has been well-settled since shortly after the Civil War.
Larry
The First Amendmeent is not a "Federal Law".
PS - why is this under 'yro'?
If the case interests you, you may want to read the court document of the judgment.
the US Supreme Court denied his appeal, with the notion that obscenity is a state-level affair, despite the First Amendment being a Federal law
Free speech is a federal issue, however the USSC decided in 1973 that the determination of obscentiy is a test in part based on community standards.
The court does not seem to be ignoring this issue as much as they are referring back to their previous ruling.
Do not taunt Happy Fun Ball(TM)
good call dude.
The first amendment is not a law; it is a direct amendment of the constitution. Arguably, the most important role of the constitution (for Jefferson, anyway) is the delineation of rights and responsibilities between federal and state governments. Thus, it seems plausible to me that it could still be a state responsibility, although it is specified in a federal constitution.
(Disclaimer: I am not a SCOTUS justice.)
How does free speach come into play here?
In People -vs- Larry Flynt it was an issue because Larry was the one making the obscene stuff. This guy was charged with selling the obscene stuff...not really a speach issue, and I agree with the courts that this is probably something that is decided at a state level.
That being said, I think I'll stay far away from Texas. It's like looking back in time 100 years.
"The market alone cannot provide sufficient constraints on corporation's penchant to cause harm." -- Joel Bakan
The recent ruling by the supreme court on homosexual ruling basically nullified the state law agaisnt it. This is the Supreme Court getting involved in a state law case. This one is no different than that one and even has greater implications since it's a free speech/1st ammendment case and the other wasn't.
Now don't get me wrong, I know they assist with many cases, but they're in it more or less for the publicity. As for EFF, slowly they are becoming the same way.
There is likely a bit more to the case than it seems so keep this in mind, and I doubt any smart prosecutor would lay his cards right out since it could alter his offense.
MoFscker
the CBDLF donations and giving to the EFF are Good Things.
Okay. I can see how the CBDLF is relevant to this. But what possible connection does the EFF have to a case about comic books?
(Spudley Strikes Again!)
Is this just a local law, or one that's in a lot of states. Is such material OK, except in the form of comics?
I'm wondering as to the particulars of this law, as selling an X-rated comic book (which I'm assuming didn't touch the fringes of underage-looking characters or whatever) to an adult is not a crime in most areas, and certainly not here in Canada. How can the US uphold such a law, or is it just Texas?
What really gets me is that the store doesn't get busted for carrying the material, but the clerk does. The cop that pulled this bust should be ashamed of himself, railroading an unsuspecting clerk like that.
Many of the nerds on Slashdot are very interested in censorship and pr0n :oP
Doesn't it seem a bit strange that the Supreme Court
basically upholds the right of a state to determine what it considers "obscene" right after they overturn a Texas sodomy law due to the "right to privacy"?
Rhymes that keep their secrets will unfold behind the clouds.There upon the rainbow is the answer to a neverending story
I'd like to apologize to all forced to read my horrible misspellings in the above post.
Must get more coffee...
"The market alone cannot provide sufficient constraints on corporation's penchant to cause harm." -- Joel Bakan
I read an interveiw once on TechTV.com I think with the slashdot guys where they basically said there criteria for posting stories is stuff they think is cool. So why are you bitching about it. If you don't like what they post start your own site or read something else. You have an enless list of choices.
My days of not taking you seriously are certainly coming to a middle...
...but it is an offense and an affront to everything our founding fathers stood for, and it is categorically unamerican. Which shouldn't surprise anyone, with the grandson of a traitor residing in the White House on the coattails of a stolen election and folks like Aschcroft running their withchunts virtually unfettered.
Your right to extend your fist ends when it hits my nose
Yeah, and not a moment before. Your right to tell me what I can and cannot say ends at your ear. Plug it if it offends thee, but don't think for a moment you're going to tell me what I can say, write, printer, or sell. If thine eye offend thee, pluck it out, but do not tell another what they can and cannot do merely on the basis that it offends you.
Texas is an emberrassment to the US, the US is an emberrassment to the world, and it would not surprise me in the least to learn that humanity is an emberrassment to other sapient species throughout the comsos.
The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy
When the ACLU begins to defend all of the Bill of Rights, then I will donate to them.
The first amendment does not apply to obscenity. I'm going to get flamed for this, but it is true. You can look it up.
Slashdotter are stupid and biased.
"Recently, the US Supreme Court denied his appeal, with the notion that obscenity is a state-level affair, despite the First Amendment being a Federal law."
The First Amendment is not a "Federal law", nor is it a law at all. It defines rights guaranteed to citizens which cannot be abrogated by the federal government, nor the states, nor local governments.
Except in Texas. Don't mess with Texas.
That being said, I think I'll stay far away from Texas. It's like looking back in time 100 years.
100 is a number the figures prominently here in Texas. The temperatures always seem to be above it, while the locals' IQs average well below it.
This is probably one of the back-asswardest states in the Union and since you appear to have half a brain, I'd recommend staying the hell away from it and let it degenerate into the backwards, inbred garbage dump it is rapidly becoming.
Karma: Excellent Birds (mostly as a result of listening to Laurie Anderson)
> ok, so it's a pet issue of Hemos' but does this really merit a story on slashdot?
Jesus arrested for selling pr0n, and you don't think it's news!
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
Does anybody have more information about the crime for which he is being charged? I'm not finding anything from that first link, and I'm wondering whats wrong with adults selling adult comics to other adults, be they undercover cops or not.
Trust Your Technolust
I think there are two reasons that comics seem to always be under attack. (Wasn't there a whole big thing in the 50's about censoring comics?) The first of course is that children read a lot of them. Parents are probably suprised when The Invisibles in no way resembles Superman.
The second reason is that comics tend to touch on subjects that more maintstream mediums won't. You will never see a TV version of The Invisibles on CBS. I think that's the reason there's a market for adult comic books, it's really one of few places you can go to see unconventional stories.
Should Grant Morisson be thrown in jail for writing stories about attacking the US government? IMO, no. Should he be surprised when someone wants to throw him in jail? Not really. Alas, in this day and age, if you are in the public eye at all, you need a good attorney. Probably why Mr. Morisson chose invisibility as his theme.
Wow, a lucrative publishing contract! I don't have to be evil anymore. --Meteor
I'm going to apologize in advance for being picky.
So SCOTUS has now made a million itty-bitty divisions within the First Amendment. You can go to jail for burning a draft card, but it's ok to wear a jacket saying "Fuck the Draft."
The Supreme Court is busy. Very very busy. Don't think that they're the only ones who could have helped this guy, though. For his case to have gotten this far, it must have wound its way through a handful of courts and a dozen different judges.
The First Amendment is complicated. Don't get me wrong, I'm as much a foe of obscenity law as Larry Flynt; this post isn't about the underlying case, more about the way that it's been presented here. Want to make things better? Petition your state legislator to change the laws of your state. State legislators have a thankless job and would probably look forward to some feedback from one of their constituents.
And no, I'm not a legislator or a guy who knows one. I'm just a student.
Sheesh....
These irresponsible fiends are offering hardcore porn to children!! There is no acceptable excuse for this sort of lacivious behavior. Texas is a state that rests well in the light of the Lord Jesus Christ and the beneavolent George W. Bush, that such atrocities could even be conceived in our community is beyond reproach!
It don't matter to the Jesus!
A dios me man, I don't know how the fuck you rolled your way into the semi's, but Liam and me...we gonna fuck you up!
And you pendeho, if you try any of that shit, you flash a piece out on the lanes...I gonna take it away from you...shove it up your ass and pull the fucking trigger till it goes *click*
"Jesus..."
You said it man...nobody fucks with the Jesus...
I followed the links, but got no information re what the local obscenity laws are in Dallas. Did the comic sold violate them? If so, then what's the issue...?
Lookit, laws re obscenity and speed limits and such are made on the state and local levels Because That Makes Sense! The people in downtown Tulsa don't want L.A.-style porn shops opening in their area, and the people in L.A. don't want to live in a Tulsa-esque climate. Fine! Great! Makes perfect sense! If the Fed comes in to determine what is "universally" obscene or not, folks in both Oklahoma and California aren't going to be happy by the compromise.
Hey, this is America, Land of Opportunity, and if I want to get rich with a chain of Car Washes, I can go for it. But if I try to open one next to your suburban golf course or grammar school, I'm going to be denied. Why? Cuz of the local zoning laws. So I go elsewhere to pursue my "opportunity." Makes sense to me, and the people with the kids in the local school. Some guy selling some explicit tentacle-sex manga is cuffed in Dallas. That makes sense too.
How refreshing that the Supreme Court is repsecting state statute on this one. I really do not want the Federal Goverment involving themselves with local lifestyle laws. There's a Big Big World West of the Beltway and East of Hollywood.
> The US is an embarassment to the world?
:)
> No..you are an embarassment to Americans
Those two statements do not contradict each other, actually I think they are both true
the ACLU has become irrelavant! They use to fight for our rights but now all they do is try to protect pedophiles and murderers. I would'nt donate to them!
Obscenity is not considered free speech as protected under the first amendment. Therefore it is left to the state and local level to decide if and how to regulate obscenity, as obscenity is judged by the local community standards.
I know this because
A) My sister works in a porn shop (yes, we are all proud she.. then again at least she is finally working)
B) Playboy repeadetly writes about people who get taken to jail for having porno in their car...
Recently they have been cracking down on both pornography and drug associated products (EG Pipes).. Evidently terrorist do nothing but get stoned and watch porn.
I mean... they're really making an example out of JESUS in the name of decency and being good Christians. Morality for the sake of our good religious children. So let's jail JESUS!
(Have I made my point?)
...if its too late to let Mexico have Texas back. I hate having to say I'm from the same country as these people.
"Crimes against Morality" are not the worst things to be dealing with. What about the "war" on drugs? Dallas is easily accessible as a waypoint for drug/contraband trafficking point due to its relative proximity to other majors cities (New Orleans, Houston) and as a transportation hub. Personally I think that if the people who have pron to look at are being distracted from criminal acts, the pron distributors shouldn't be busted at all.
Besides, who determines what "morals" are the norm? I have friends from conservative churches, mosques, and synagogues whose overall values jive somewhat but who strongly disagree over details. Some people think that dancing is too immoral for people to engage in, remember the whole episode with Indianapolis and its mayor over that issue. Some parts of this country still ban the trade of alcohol (southeast KY) and others make possession of it a misdemeanor (parts of southeast alabama) all in the name of "public good". Here in Georgia video poker was banned because it was disrupting the "public good" despite little evidence thatit did anything but make non-taxable income for the state's more remote gas stations and resembled gambling too much for the conservative Christians in state government.
This all seems to be a political distraction from the bigger issues. Why haven't the CEO of Enron or Worldcom been indicted on criminal charges yet? Could the economy be recovering more quickly under different economic policy? Why did we fight a massive war in the middle east only in an oil-rich country but gas prices keep rising?. I find that the more often people take care to focus attention on the details and the little things the more often they fail to pay attention to the big picture. Anyone have any thoughts?
As long as there is a Second Amendment, there will always be a First Amendment.
. . . with the notion that obscenity is a state-level affair, despite the First Amendment being a Federal law.
Well, the Amendment is a Constitutional Law, not 'Federal,' but that's not my point. I thought the 14th Amendment gave equal protection, which (as I understand it, and IANALY) means that if it would be unconstitutional as a Federal Law, then it would be for a state law as well. This was the view taken to stop Texas from enforcing its Sodemy law recently.
What those who want activist courts fear is rule by the people.
thats what we need , more people in jail ! 4.8% of the texas population in jail is not enough, its a growth industry (2million in the usa and counting)
And if God wanted us to be clothed all the time the human race would be extinct.
We initially WERE naked. Obviously the Lord didn't create Adam and Eve, and then hand them some GAP clothes. Humans created clothing throughout history, mainly as a way of showing wealth (more money = better clothes). Anywho, this is mainly a political discussion, not a religious one. Don't recall Jesus ever payign a visit to the Lone Star State
Defender of Microsoft and Communism!!!
http://newsarama.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&thre adid=4953
... We're here to get this off the shelf."
In an argument that sets the common view of comics back a good thirty years, the Texas state prosecutor secured a guilty verdict with a closing argument in which she said, "I don't care what type of evidence or what type of testimony is out there, use your rationality, use your common sense. Comic books, traditionally what we think of, are for kids. This is in a store directly across from an elementary school and it is put in a medium, in a forum, to directly appeal to kids. That is why we are here, ladies and gentlemen.
The State won, and as a result, Castillo was sentenced to 180 days in jail, a year probation, and a $4,000 fine. Again - in the eyes of Texas, selling a comic book created for adults, from the adult section of the shop, to an adult was deemed a crime because, in the prosecutor's eyes, all comics are for kids.
(I hate having to make this qualification, but I am really not a troll and this isn't flamebait. It is my soul found opinion.)
Why is porn a "News for nerds?" If this happend online, maybe I could see the point. However, this happened in the meat. This story has no technology component and is just a standard porn issue.
I am a geek that happens to not care about porn. I wouldn't mind obscenity laws being even stricter. There is no need to for hardcore pornography in a modern society.
> Lookit, laws re obscenity and speed limits and such are made on the state and local levels Because That Makes Sense! The people in downtown Tulsa don't want L.A.-style porn shops opening in their area, and the people in L.A. don't want to live in a Tulsa-esque climate. Fine! Great! Makes perfect sense!
Of course, if the fine folk in Tulsa don't want that stuff they won't buy it, and the shops will fold due to lack of business.
There's a reason this stuff was being sold in Dallas, and it ain't that nobody in Dallas wants it.
> If the Fed comes in to determine what is "universally" obscene or not, folks in both Oklahoma and California aren't going to be happy by the compromise.
Of course, the Feds shouldn't be worrying themselves over what is obscene at all, universally or not. The US Constitution doesn't have any "except for obscene materials" clauses in it.
> Hey, this is America, Land of Opportunity, and if I want to get rich with a chain of Car Washes, I can go for it. But if I try to open one next to your suburban golf course or grammar school, I'm going to be denied. Why? Cuz of the local zoning laws. So I go elsewhere to pursue my "opportunity."
So if it was a zoning issue, why didn't they just close the shop instead of throwing an employee in jail?
> How refreshing that the Supreme Court is repsecting state statute on this one. I really do not want the Federal Goverment involving themselves with local lifestyle laws.
I do. We've got a sub-population in this country that's rampaging out of control, trying to get anyone who differs from them thrown in prison. You can't run a free country on that basis.
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
Hemos should at least get his facts right before he goes off on a tangent about the threat to the republic posed by getting in trouble reading dirty comic books.
The First Amendment is part of the U.S. Constitution. It isn't a state law or a federal law; it's part of the framework which gives Congress the power to legislate and the Supreme Court te power to judge.
God knows what this has to do with computing, but it is certainly indicative of the kind of audience Slashdot draws: Adults Who Read Comic Books. Now, there's something that can threaten the republic.
-- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
There's rape, murder, infanticide, mass killing, cult activity, genocide, supernatural beings, and talking animals. Surely these things should not be allowed!
Bart is playing a videogame. After committing a few unlawful acts his character is arrested and must stand trial.
Bart: (hitting button) Change of venue! Change of venue!
Videogame: **TEXAS** (electric chair graphic)
Bart: Oh man!
Well, hey, I didn't spend all those years playing Dungeons and Dragons and not learn a little something about courage.
If god would have wanted us to walk around naked, we would have been born that way.
Recently, the US Supreme Court denied his appeal, with the notion that obscenity is a state-level affair, despite the First Amendment being a Federal law.
But the Supreme Court didn't actually say that, or anything of the kind. Read the linked article. Castillo thinks the Supreme Court refused to hear his case because Castillo thinks the Court thinks it's a question for the states. But the Court itself didn't say one word about why it refused to hear Castillo's case, so we have no way to know whether his belief about their reasons is an accurate belief or not. The Court gets asked to hear thousands of cases every year and actually hears fewer than a hundred of them. The Court generally doesn't offer any explanation of why it takes, or fails to take, any particular case -- and its order denying Castillo's petition says nothing about why they decided not to hear it.
[insert randomly selected declaration of absolutist meta-moderation philosophy here]
The judgement seems to me to be entirely obsecene. I mean, "AND no drawing for his own personal use... his home was subject to unannounced searches by local police to make sure he was complying."
Sounds more like something people experienced during the Chinese Revolution than SHOUL BE the case in modern America (or any civilized society.)
Corporation, n. An ingenious device for obtaining individual profit without individual responsibility. - Ambrose Bierce
We've got a sub-population in this country that's rampaging out of control, trying to get anyone who differs from them thrown in prison.
The Gays? Yeah, I've noticed that too. But what can we do? They control the media. Only makes sense they'd target the courts next.
Dear Moderators,
Why is this currently modded 0, Offtopic?
Whether you agree with the posters statement that the ACLU is an equivalent to the EFF or CBDLF, it certainly is germane to a discussion in which donations are suggested to the two organizations mentioned. Just because you disagree with a poster doesn't make the post offtopic. Instead, reply with a rebuttal, please.
It's some paper with ink on it. I think we need a reality check here.
Essentially it sounds as if his crime isn't one that he committed but more like one that he could have committed. Why should it be illegal to sell pr0n to adults in any format in the vecinity of children? I should be able to run an arcade that sells comic book pr0n as long as I keep it away from the kiddies. I have seen many a sperm & split (thats kum & go to most of you) across the street from schools. While they sell things more along the lines of Playboy and Penthouse I wouldn't see any reason for the to not sell it in comic book form. Hell if the'll sell comic pr0n on an Air Force Base they should be able to sell it anywhere.
Trust Your Technolust
DING DING! He compares smoking to rape and murder. One is a lifestyle choice, the others are felonious crimes. Apples and oranges, my friend. C'mon, try harder next time, fool.
The Supreme Court's charge is "to ensure the uniformity of judgments". It is not to correct individual cases that may have merely been decided wrongly -- the Court spends its time on cases that will have the most effect, to the most people. The Supreme Court is said to weigh these issues before even accepting a case:
does the case bring up substantial questions of law?
has the case been decided in conflicting ways by lower courts?
is the case a good test case to issue a decision on a matter of law?
are many people affected by it?
Does this guy's case satisfy any of these requirements? Remember, not all speech is protected speech. Obscenities, or material of purely prurient nature, is not protected, and probably there's no reason for them to intervene in a case like this.
I can now have sex with another man in... interesting orifices, but I can't sell pictures of it to other adults?
After I have received the wisdom of good teaching, I will untiringly teach all people. - The Teachings of Buddha
Jesus, don't sells porn to cops. This is my job.
Satan
Jesus obviously wants us to. Jesus Castillo, that is.
The Constitution (and the Amendments) is above any Federal Law, in fact any Federal Law that violates the Constitution can be stuck down (we all should know that, DMCA and such go against the Constitution). The Constitution gives powers to the Federal Government, in fact right now the Federal Government is over stepping it bounds in terms of powers with the DMCA and the PATRIOT Act.
I know this was only flamebait, but I've noticed a trend in this community to encourage this type of nonsense. I've read slashdot for years, but I've never felt compelled to post before. I love the intelligence and character that I often see in the passion displayed by many of you on diverse subjects. But I do not understand the general animosity towards all things associated with God. Do you think that Christianity is irrational? Religious institutions tend to gravitate towards corruption. So do political institutions. This is the way of Man, not God. Human foolishness does not excuse the person that scorns the name of Christ. Christ was a good man, which is something that no one else (myself included) has ever been able to say. Jesus never could have considered nakedness a sin, for that which was made in the image of his Father is glorious to behold. It is the carnal thoughts that nakedness tends to promote in our sinful minds that is responsible for spiritual degeneration and the moral decay of society. I know that many of you believe we live in a world of shades of gray. Fortunately, there is an absolute standard. There is good. And there is evil. The one intolerable sin is calling good by the name of evil. Shame on all here who delight in mocking Christ, his gospel, and the name of the Father.
Love God with all your heart, mind, spirit, and strength, and love your neighbor as yourself.
http://www.renderotica.com
8 year olds, dude.
"'Yrch!' said Legolas, falling into his own tongue."
if you're gonna troll, you might as well make it interesting man...
"Faith: Belief without evidence in what is told by one who speaks without knowledge, of things without parallel." - A.B.
Start washing cars in your restaurant and you get a fine. Start selling porn and you go to jail. No, I don't think it's the same thing as zoning.
I am going to go look at alt.binaries.pictures.erotica.cartoons. Have a nice day.
Anyone who wants to should be able to open a pr0n shop in Tulsa, there should not be a law restricting it. If the people of Tulsa don't want a pr0n shop then they don't have to shop there, and it will go out of business.
Obscenity and other forms of dangerous speech (split infinitives, sentence fragments, etc.) are unprotected -- and rightfully so.
Ask someone who knows. I've been speaking and hearing speech for close to my entire life, and nothing dismays me more than a bit of speech that endangers all of humanity.
It's getting scarier every day. We now have a president who's official statements are bible quotes... Given how uber-conservative the current administration/congress is trying to make the country, the backlash in a couple of years is going to be interesting... presuming that we are still allowed to have opinions of our own by then...
"Faith: Belief without evidence in what is told by one who speaks without knowledge, of things without parallel." - A.B.
Hey, his name is Jesus, he can't be wrong!
Sig & Below
Yuck Fou
But you see, we can mock Christ all we want. How do you know he was a good man? Because of what you have been told by people you admit are capable of being corrupt? Don't you see the problem with that? Personally I think it is the insane desire to control all aspects of people's lives and thus taking away the control of their own lives that causes social decay (moral decay makes no sense since morals are completely subjective). And who is responsible for this? The people doing the controlling (i.e. the polititions and religious fanatics). Which apparently includes you.
And you wonder why other religions don't like you...
When I have children, I will teach them to look both ways before crossing the street, to not talk to strangers and to stay the hell out of Texas.
By this argument, does it make sense to put an airport next to a library? The coal plant next to the grade school? Cemetary next to the swimming hole?
Zoning laws are for appearance, logic and other subjctive concepts. Thus, they are local only.
FYI: Texas has no zoning laws. Houston has strip bars next to elementary schools.
Of course, if the fine folk in Tulsa don't want that stuff they won't buy it, and the shops will fold due to lack of business.
They may want it. I think they might be a bit abnormal if they did not. They just don't want it sold locally. Some people don't want to live next to a power plant, but they still use electricity. They can move away from the power plant, campaign to establish the apropos zoning laws (and pay higher taxes as consequence), or not. Free Country.
Of course, the Feds shouldn't be worrying themselves over what is obscene at all, universally or not. The US Constitution doesn't have any "except for obscene materials" clauses in it.
See the discussion about the Constitution and Free Speech and Obscenity above. What the Founding Fathers *did* intend was for states' sovereignity to be better respected.
So if it was a zoning issue, why didn't they just close the shop instead of throwing an employee in jail?
I'm using Local Zoning as a metaphor, but as no one has posted any real links of any substance regarding the case, I don't know what the practice is in Dallas.
I do. We've got a sub-population in this country that's rampaging out of control, trying to get anyone who differs from them thrown in prison. You can't run a free country on that basis.
You're right, although I suspect my rampaging sub-population differs somewhat from yours. Thankfully, it's a big country, with plenty of diversity cherished and protected at the neighborhood level. Hopefully, no Supreme Court judge legislating from the bench will seek to homogenize any of us anytime soon.
I find this kind of argument strange. Why does the freedom of speech necessarily cover local sales of adult manga? The US Constitution doesn't guarantee the "freedom to distribute racy Japanese comics for a profit at any locale." Yet that's what the guy is in trouble for, not for his speech.
It seems to me that freedom of speech doesn't arbitrarily mean freedom of expression -- after all, any crime could be construed as an expression.
I don't think this porn vendor's right to express ideas has been unduly circumscribed. Most likely he could have legally communicated whatever idea that he may have had.
I don't see anybody linking to the 5th District Court of Appeals's opinion yet, so rather than relying on the biased CBLDF perspective on what the ruling means, why not read the Court's opinion and get it straight from the source? The Majority Opinion is from two of the three judges, and the Dissenting Opinion is from the other. davidh
The other one was bout the state violating someone' house.
> > The Texas Penal Code isn't generally thought of as a laugh-out-loud read, but Section 43.23 is an exception: "A person commits an offense if he
> Ah, the Five Dildo Limit. Remember that when packing for a trip to Texas.
Ehrm, maybe "packing" wasn't the best choice of words in that context.
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
Basically, during the month September 1999, an undercover police officer purchased a collection of adult comics from a store called "Keith's Comics" in Dallas. He then looked through them to try and determine comics that would be considered obscene by community standards. (This is a normal part of vice operations anywhere.)
The comics chosen where Demon Beast Invasion: The Fallen and Legend of the Overfiend (links to Google searches). At trial the second one was dropped and only "Demon Beast Invasion" was considered as being an obscene book sold to the officer. (Funny quote from the Dallas Observer article: "There was no test here to show the clerk knew what was in there. You can't judge a book by its cover." (Said by Castillo's attorney, working for the CBLDF.) Look at the Demon Beast Invasion cover. I think you probably can judge that book by its cover. Just look at the Google links above. Enough editorializing...)
The defense basically argued that the books were not legally obscene because they did not "taken as a whole, lacks any serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value." Scott McCloud (OT: one of my father's childhood friends was his older brother) testified about the artistic values, and Susan Napier, an associate professor in UT-Austin's Department of Asian Studies, testified about the cultural value in relation to Japanese culture.
Castillo was found guilty, and both appeals in the Texas legal system failed to overturn the verdict. The Supreme Court was the last resort, and they have declined the case. He has already paid his $4000 fine and began his 180-day probation.
You are in a maze of twisty little relative jumps, all alike.
Seriously... this is more or less a harassment law rather than one meant to regulate business.
The statement "despite the First Amendment being a Federal law" is not strictly correct. The First Amendment is a restriction on what Federal laws can do. That is why it says "Congress shall make no law..."
End of Line.
IOW, there isn't really any free speech... This may be "normal" in the USA, but it isn't "liberty and justice for all". shut the hell up! I am sick and tired of people continuously saying "there is no free speech in America". My country has will and continually defends my right to criticize every institution of government. I'm not going to be shot or put in jail for saying things like the Patriot act won't make me safe or George Bush is a bigger threat to this nation than Al-qaeda and the so called Axis of Evil. So what if precedent says the case doesn't need to be heard in the highest court? The law was decided to benefit the majority in the most specific way and if need be the law will change to benefit the majority in the most specific way. If you don't like it don't post crap. Write your reps and put substance in the letter.
I don't think so. Care to try again?
I'm posting this as a general reply so I don't have to reply to each person who has said "The First Amendment isn't federl law!!!" The Constitution is a "Federal law," as are it's Amendments. It just happens to be the supreme law of the land, meaning that it is superior to all other law (statutes, regulations, common law, etc.).
While I certainly feel for Mr. Castillo, the Supreme Court has long ruled that obscenity is not protected by the First Amendment. See Miller v. California, 413 U.S. 15 (1973). This does not apply to speech that only rises to the level of "indecent." Whether something is obscene or not is determined based on local community standards. While I personally think that obscenity should be protected by the First Amendment (it says "Congress shall make no law..."), that's the law as it stands now ( and yes, case law is law too).
Also, I AM a lawyer.
D'oh -- the stuff that buys me beer! Ray -- the guy who sells me beer!
along with 100 others, with no comment
That's right guys, keep branding criminal activity as Free Speech. Pretty soon we'll lose it entirely.
He broke the law, he got caught, now he's paying the price. Should I argue against my speeding ticket because I was excersicing my first ammendment right to speak out against the speed limit? Should I willfully break copyright law just to "speak out" against the RIAA? First ammendment rights are not an excuse for criminal behaviour, and I refuse to feel anything but contempt for those who think that way.
Laws don't change in the breaking, except in rare, extreme cases which this isn't. Laws change by voting for representatives on election day or writing to your governor/senator/etc.
Well there goes my "excellent" karma. It was fun while it lasted.
Everytime you click on GOATSE , a fairy gets his salad tossed!
the first of the two is a private action between two people, the other is public sale of material deemed inappropriate... there are differences
"Of course, if the fine folk in Tulsa don't want that stuff they won't buy it, and the shops will fold due to lack of business."
There's a market for crack and murder in Tulsa too....should that be legal? Just because there's something people are willing to pay for, doesn't mean it should be legally available.
"The US Constitution doesn't have any "except for obscene materials" clauses in it."
That's because George Washington and Co. never dreamed that "hot young teen pussies for you!" would be openly sold in markets. It's a bit of a stretch to say the founders expicitly wanted obscene matierial to have legal protection. They never included it because the mores of the day forbid such things publicly, and it obviously never crossed their minds to ban it via the law. While they had skeletons in their closets too, I think it's safe to say none of them would endorse the public sale of porn.
"We've got a sub-population in this country that's rampaging out of control, trying to get anyone who differs from them thrown in prison. "
That's a gross exageration and hysterical nonsense. You're pissed because the country isn't going your way right now, and you comfort yourself by telling yourself it's a big conspiracy by a small minority. If the "sub-population" you're speaking of consists of center-right and right leaning people, you're sadly mistaken; in that case, YOU'RE the minority.
You can disagree with me on this, but this is a fairly conservative country. There are pockets of liberalism/leftism, but they're highly concentrated on the coasts. Texas is smack in the middle of that conservative voting zone. Why is anyone surprised at this? If you don't like the way things in Texas are, then move to a place more of your liking. You don't have to right to change the laws of the state agaisnt the wishes of the majority because you want things differently, with few exceptions. That's the atmosphere they want there. Look at the voting record in Texas over the past couple of decades. Is anyone SERIOUSLY going to contend that it's not a conservative state?
The Supreme Court ruled that local community standards for obscenity would rule the day. This has been the way things have been done for decades. Again, if you don't like it, try to change the minds of the populace. If they still want different obscenity standards than you, hey, San Francisco and Los Angelas are calling your name. Go there. Buy Porn. Make fun of the middle America yokels. Be happy. They'll probably be just as happy that YOU left.
Life is hard, and the world is cruel
in the eyes of Texas, selling a comic book created for adults, from the adult section of the shop, to an adult was deemed a crime because, in the prosecutor's eyes, all comics are for kids
This has got to be one of the most STUPID cases yet. (Not to mention a big waste of taxpayer's money.) Not all comics are for kids and are not read by kids. (i.e. graphic novels). Considering that the adult books was cordoned off from kids and Castillo sold it to an adult.. I don't see where the law was broken.
Too many lawyers on this planet seeking to screw (no pun intended..) anyone just so they can probably get their name recognized.
!@#$% whole-grain cereal. When I want fiber, I eat some wicker furniture. - G. Carlin
Here in Alabama, vibrators were (and maybe still are) illegal. The attorney general ruled that "women do not have a constitutional right to pleasure inducing devices".
It ain't just Texas.
Life is hard, and the world is cruel
So I put it to you that porn is not for either of these purposes {to mostly to allow the populace to criticize the government and other figures with power as a means of exacting political change (and) to allow one to teach one's beliefs and way of life to other people.}; it is merely for pleasure. It stands, therefore, not as a right, but rather as a privelege awarded by the majority.
So, if it feels good, it's a "privelege"? Shouldn't this be considered under the "scope of privacy" between two consentual adults.
Conversely, if it make you 'feel bad', it's protected? How does one measure 'bad' -- by the majority or by the individual?
The decision falls to the majority. Will more people be unhappy with it than happy? Then it won't be allowed.
We're at break-neck speed down that slope as ideas and concepts are being reclassified "priveleges" rather than rights, which imply that we are nothing more than border-line disobedient kids who need discipline for 'bad thoughts' rather than as adults in a free society.
Furthermore, there is a fallacy in this even for the 'free speech' parameters. Even in mild discourse, there will be disagreements which will make people happy and unhappy. The 1st Amendment specifically protects the speech (especially the political speech) that makes the majority unhappy.
Mod Karma -1: I sed bad wurds. If I cep my mouf shut, I wud be at riyses.
Did this comic feature Darl McBride getting rogered by a large blue elephant?
Just wondered.
The worst part in my mind isn't that the case was brought, although that is definitely bad, but that the court/DA prosecuted for a book that specifically states on the cover:
Warning: Absolutely Not for Children
http://store6.yimg.com/I/tisinc99_1751_26791046
The logic used was that the comic book is children's literature. Hmmm...
Yet, the adult comic industry has been labelling such books for at least ten years.
-------------------------
As easy as herding cats!
"We initially WERE naked. Obviously the Lord didn't create Adam and Eve, and then hand them some GAP clothes. Humans created clothing throughout history, mainly as a way of showing wealth"
Strictly in a Biblical Context, man started wearing clothing (if you can call a fig leaf clothing) after he (and she) partook of the fruit of the tree of knowledge, and knew good and evil, and became aware of the naked bodies, and became ashamed. Hey, you and the previous poster brought God into this....
And scientifically, we got tired of freezing to death, so we figured we could use those animal skins more than they could...besides, the animals were mighty tasty. Style or wealth probably didn't have a lot to do with things at first.
Life is hard, and the world is cruel
Humans created clothing throughout history, mainly as a way of showing wealth (more money = better clothes).
Really? I thought it was the not freeze to death factor. Silly me.
Any description of the material anywhere so I can judge for myself just how obscene it was? I'd ask if there was a web site for it, but I guess someone in Butthole, state of Wheretheheck (Pop 23.5) would have got it shutdown if there was.
One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
Free speech, and the accomptying freedoms of religion are not soley about politics, and pornography is not apolitical. Sex, how we have it (consider the Mormons), if we have it (some early American communities banned it outright), what we think about it, and who we have it forms a foundation of our "way of life" as you put it.
Consider the issue of women's liberation. in the 1800's, even in the 1950's the expectation was that women were meant to stay in the home and have children because that was their lot in life. Sex, issues such as homosexuality, etc were not discussed. As a result the nature of public life, and of politics was different.
If you want a more palpable idea consider the issue of homosexuality. Until recently it was illegal in Texas (and still is in many other areas). Banning homosexuality and the discussion of it allows for homosexuals to be denied access to the public sphere (unless they hide who they are). That in turn changes politics. Even in the early 1980's Man conservatives were able to stymie research into AIDS and public health initiatives dealing with it by arguing that "it was a homosexual disease" and therefore didn't affect "the rest" of us. It was only through the gorwing realization that heterosexuals were contracting it in increasing numbers combined with a growing homosexual lobby that brought it to the forefront.
To take a non-sex issue, consider the muslim religion. For many muslims wearing beards and turbans is part of their religion or at least their culture. Should we ban those, as well as the public call to prayer because they remind many people (uncomfortably) of 9/11? After all the freedom of religion still stands, we are merely banning something that gives them "pleasure".
I say no, the right to dress as such and walk freely without hiding who you are is a necessary part of this country. It is also very very political. To deny people the right to dress as they want for fear of offending others is to deny them the right (again as with homosexuals) to access the public (and thus political) sphere on their own terms. To do so would skew the public debate in this country by making it possible for one group to oust another or at least limit their public presence (and thus influence) on the most subjective of grounds, that of comfort.
With regards to your comments about children. We have laws to protect them. The constitutional definition of obscenity is very narrow and should remain that way. In the case of Jesus, he sold the materials to an adult. If they wound up in the hands of a child then the adult who bought them would have been the one giving them. Moreover the supreme court has held (correctly in my view) that the function of laws to protect children cannot be to force adults to act like them. If we have the right to ban things that may reach children then adults can never yhave a public conversation about adult issues such as sex, AIDS, WAR, and so on.
There are a great deal of things that make me uncomfortable including LEgend of the Overfiend (the comic book that Jesus was arrested for selling) but I am willing to give up my ability to ban them in echange for the agreement that they not ban me.
As easy as the nee-jerk answer feels I believe that it is the wrong one.
areolus is what you meant?
Anyways, I'd say that would still fit indecent as far as general public goes. If you feel the need to be displaying your breasts to other folks, do it at home or a private place. Not in general public.
Norris/Palin 2012
Fact: We deserve leaders who can kick your ass and field dress your carcass.
Right, the ACLU would seem to be a more relevant organization...
It's the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund.
Is no longer worth the paper it is printed on. Everytime the US government finds a "compelling need", it uses that to trump the Constitution.
Anyone who thinks the US Constitution IS worth the paper it is written on is either an idiot or so naive they need to climb out of the baby crib they've been put into.
"There are laws that enslave men, and laws that set them free. " - Sean Connery as King Arthur
Quoting:
Yeah, that's them.
Thanks a bundle.
I agree that it should be kept in private, but I wanted to give a conservitive example.
The article implies that the U.S. Supreme Court made some sort of ruling about Castillo's case--perhaps that obscenity is a matter for the states to work out. This is totally incorrect. All that the Supreme Court did is deny certiorari in this case (their ruling reads, in its entirety, that "Petition for writ of certiorari to the Court of Appeals of Texas, Fifth District, denied.") [Couldn't find this ruling in a free on-line database, or I'd post a link.]
The U.S. Supreme court receives THOUSANDS of petitions for certiorari each year. From that, they pick a handful where (a) there is an opportunity to "claify" important areas of the law, and (b) the facts of the case provide a good setting in which to do the clarifying. The fact that they denied Castillo's petition does not imply that they took any position on the merits of his case. By necessity, the Supreme Court denies cert. in many meritorious cases each year; unlike the federal courts of appeal, the Supreme Court's job is not primarily error correction.
This post is not intended to constitute legal advice. If you need such advice, see your lawyer, not Slashdot!
"The dinosaurs died because they didn't have a space program." - Niven
All fine and good, until you realize that the President has the right to his own opinions too. Toss out the ol' free speech when it comes to Bible quotes, eh? Just so long as you get your porn.
Norris/Palin 2012
Fact: We deserve leaders who can kick your ass and field dress your carcass.
funny how freedom of speech, one of the oldest federal rights, becomes a state issue. Then you look at California and their marijuana laws and the government case there. Federal law trumping state law. What a mess the US government is.
-- Having a Creationist Museum is like having an Atheist place of worship
"There's a Big Big World West of the Beltway and East of Hollywood."
There's an even bigger world than the USA out there.
No really!
Have a look at a map sometime.
And don't just look for countries to invade.
Fran
:):):)
1st 1st Poster of the new Millennium!
Yes, local determination of obscenity is on the whole, a good thing. But I have no doubt that you could walk into any porn store in Dallas and pick up nastier porn--with photos of real people, not drawings--than anything in the comic. Castillo is simply the victim of prejudice: Comics are for kids, so anybody drawing pornographic pictures for comic books is giving porn to kids, and that's obscene.
Probably, Castillo was just unlucky in the jury selection, or the prosecutor was better than Castillo's lawyer, and was able to exclude from the jury anybody smart enough to understand that comics aren't necessarily for kids.
How refreshing that the Supreme Court is repsecting state statute on this one.
Actually, what they're respecting is their own precedents, which hold that the determination of what is and is not obscene is a matter of community standards.
THEREFORE:
1) the 7-11 up the street from my high school cannot sell playboy to adults.
2) pornographic movies or movies with sexual content cannot be screened, EVER, since movies are also a medium for kids.
3) throw TV in there too, no sexual content on TV, since TV is for kids!
4) because a significant portion of internet users are kids, pornography CANNOT be allowed on the internet.
Amazing what happens once you let the government dictate what is morally acceptable, isn't it?
**** You never REALLY learn to swear until you own a computer. ****
> All fine and good, until you realize that the President has the right to his own opinions too. Toss out the ol' free speech when it comes to Bible quotes, eh? Just so long as you get your porn.
Notice that he didn't claim the president broke the law; he claimed that the president's behavior is scary.
And IMO having a bible-thumper at the helm of a superpower is every bit as scary as having the competing extremists in Iran get their hands on their own nukes.
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
I've never understood how the Supreme Court derived the "community standard" from the Constitution.
Imagine if your other rights varied based on community standards- you may or may not have the right to remain silent, privacy, right to vote, etc. It seems utterly illogical and nothing less than a cop out. What if the community found Democratic election signs obscene, but not Republican? It may sound ridiculous, but most obscenity provisions are so vague that it may be entirely possible.
I find a lot of the crime comics downright evil, but when confronted by images and themes that offend me I am forced to think and that is something I value far more than whatever temporary revulsion I might have. My opinion of what they are or aren't should not affect the right of someone else to buy and enjoy them.
There's an even bigger world than the USA out there
Yeah, and I've probably seen more of it than you ever will unless you join the Peace Corps. What point are you trying to make?
Is this the same jesus that was arrested in 99 (or 2002 I'm an idiot) for indecent assualt and battery on a 14year old?
http://www.socialaw.com/appslip/appAug02d.html
If so... I dunno... I'm all for free speech, but if its the same guy it makes me feel icky.
Might does not make morally right. Nor does numbers. Just a couple hundred years ago, it could be argued that the majority of the population thought that African Americans didn't deserve rights. That makes it a popular position, not a right one.
,which in all cases supercede any other laws, and nullify those laws which are in conflict. It's pretty clear that adult comic books, and other x-rated material, is protected under the First Amendment.
Selling pornography doesn't violate anyone's rights. In fact, you can't make a reasonable case for it harming anyone, since no-one has to buy it or look at it. That's a different matter from walking down a public street naked, something that it's unavoidable to look at.
Of course, there's also this silly litle thing called the US Constitution and Amerndment's
Your populist thinking is disturbing, because it goes against the very principles that we think of when we talk about human rights, one of which is freedom of speech. According to you, if a community felt like it, they would be right in forcing a husband and wife to have sex in a specified way, or in forbidding sex on Sundays, or at a specific time of the day.
It is clear that you have little or no respect for human rights, if you think that we are justified in violating them every time we can convince a majority of the people that that's "ok".
It's also nice to know that the cops are making good use of our tax dollars by prosecuting victimless crimes, such as pornography, prostitution, and drug-use, instead of going after real criminals, like rapists, murderers, and child-molesters.
social sciences can never use experience to verify their statemen
Thank you for getting my point!
"Faith: Belief without evidence in what is told by one who speaks without knowledge, of things without parallel." - A.B.
obviously morons.
Having such a vague standard as to let it vary from one state to another, or one town to another, and depend on nothing more than the "moral consensus of the community" (or whatever the vague bullshit was that the USSC said) is non-sense, and makes a mockery out of our justice system.
We might as well say that rape is wrong in one state, but if you step accross the border to another, it's ok.
Legal standards cannot be vague bullshit like "I'll know it when I see it", or "accorfding to the moral sensibility of the community". Also, no-one has to go into a store of pornography, or look at any of the magazines inside...they may very well see the words "X-Rated Magazines" on the store, but they also hear about obscenity in those vague terms from all the zealots who oppose it.
social sciences can never use experience to verify their statemen
You make some excellent points. Unfortunatelty, we are still debating in something of a vacuum here, as none of the links provided any detail on Dallas statutes. Are the obscenity laws in Dallas more stringent than, say, Ft. Worth? Houston? Salt Lake City? Are there areas -- "red light districts" -- specific to such trade, or not?
....who is also a slashdot editor.
What this whole thread comes down to is a discussion re the scope of a local south Texas law, and our opinions re whether it's enforcement has been overly zealous or severe. Where "Free Speech" and "Our Rights Online" came into this, I have no idea.
Oh, yeah, the original poster.
Huh?
(Hey, Hemos, no dig intended, bro. Besides, ya got a Hemos Hat-Trick: You managed to mention Comics, the EFF, and Neil Gaiman in a single post! Does it get any better than that?)
So a Texan court case sets a precedent for the rest of your United States?
I suppose this means that every other state in the union will take to executing mentally disabled minors, then?
Think about it - the best-known texan in the world is one George Walker Bush. If he's the cream of the crop, then it's a pretty sorry lookout for the rest of them.
Never been myself, but they are doing a pretty good job of convincing everyone else that their state is a backward medieval shithole...
with their wallets. If there is little demand for what the store is offering, it will have to close down. If there is enough demand to keep it open, then obviously it's providing a valuable service to enough people, and shutting it down because "those other people who don't shop there don't like it" is tantamount to communism. If you don't like the store being there, then *don't go to the store*.
I'm an atheist. I don't much like religion. So let's say I live in a town that's mostly atheist, with a few religious people who open a small church. Just because we all get together and say that we don't like the church doesn't mean we get to close it down. No-one's forcing us or anyone else to go to the church, and you cannot make a reasonable argument that it is violating our rights. Thus, there is no justification to shut it down. Likewise for the pornography case in the main article.
social sciences can never use experience to verify their statemen
What the Founding Fathers *did* intend was for states' sovereignity to be better respected.
This is true, but it is also true that the Founding Fathers explicitly intended that the expression and dissemination of unpleasant and unpopular ideas should be protected from interference from government (federal and local).
Darth --
Nil Mortifi, Sine Lucre
That's a pretty foolish argument. The addictive effects of smoking are due to nicotine, and require a relatively high dose. The harmful effects of smoke are (mostly) due to other components of smoke, many of which are more potent.
I don't think that's really true. I think that's a convenient excuse for poor restaurants...there are local restaurants I love that are totally smoke-free--by choice, not by gov't fiat--where the food is good and there's usually an hour wait for a table if you have more than two people in your group. Meanwhile, chain restaurants--with smoking sections--across the street have closed a year after opening.
And I live in a redneck/white trash part of the States, yo. Lotsa smokers.
Anyways, I'd say that would still fit indecent as far as general public goes. If you feel the need to be displaying your breasts to other folks, do it at home or a private place. Not in general public.
One of those things that has always bothered me, its ok for a male to walk around without his shirt, but not for a female, why? Seems just a bit like a double standard. Sure, females tend to have hangy bits underneath their shirt, though so do a lot of males these days. What is it, that is so inherently wrong with a woman with her shirt off?
Necessity is the mother of invention.
Laziness is the father.
Totally lame BUT. When has a printed on paper comic been "online" ...
this sends a mixed message.
Now, all a bible belt state has to do to reinstitute a ban on sodomy is to classify it as "Committing an obscene act."
Since obscenity is now just a state's rights issue.
LK
"Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
Congratulations you've just discovered the secret plan of the Christian Right.
There's not a lot of debate that the comic in question (which was a Manga based off of Urotsukidoji (Legend of the Overfiend), a "classic" tentacle-porn thing) is reasonably classified as pornography. It's obscene, right along with your Playboys and whatnot. It's perfectly reasonable, under generally accepted U.S. law and custom, that it would be illegal to sell this material to children.
That's not the point.
The point is that the clerk (not the store owner or the creator, the sales clerk) is getting a criminal record (on probation and a hefty fine) for selling porn that was in a restricted adults-only section to an adult. Thankfully, the CBLDF has raised enough money to pay his fine - comic store clerks are not exactly on the fast track to fortune.
The prosecution actually used the argument that Comic Books were by definition for kids, and anyone selling Adult Comics was therefore selling Porn For Kids. And they won with that case!
It's going to be a _lot_ harder for adults in Texas to buy drawn porn. Not kids - there was no allegation in this case of selling porn to kids - adults. I don't care if comic porn is your thing or not - this is not rational.
And it's not just an 'Only In Texas' thing. How many states have groups pressuring law enforcement to engage in censorship? 50. And not just the U.S., though we're more culturally hung up on sex than many Western nations. It's not at all uncommon for comics to be held up at customs in many countries for a variety of reasons, usually involving sex and violence.
Debating about the first amendment and what is obscene and such is probably pretty valuable, but the issues in this particular case are _much_ simpler, and it's a tragic miscarriage of justice.
-- Kate
Texas has no state-wide zoning laws. Most cities have local laws, though not Houston.
from reading the court's opinions, that showing the court that one can walk into any porn store in Dallas -- and a bunch of liquor stores -- and find worse -- isn't a defence. Even though in the real world it proves that the community sanctions it, since those places are still open, the judges on the appeal court are of the opinion that, to paraphrase, showing that others break the law too isn't a defence.
So are they going after farmers growing cucumbers too?
I'm sure you could find someone somewhere to marry two people of the same sex. I think you're really asking where could a same-sex couple go to have a State sanctioned marriage?
Personally I view marriage as a religious tradition and would rather the State not be involved at all. Why should I (a single male) be paying for married couples' tax breaks?
Take a look at the link before you decide that "Troll" was "Unfair". Don't follow it, just look at what it would do if you did.
Just one thing surprises me that the supreme court says it's a state matter.The World over the rights of the citizen entitle him/her to equality before the law.This is certainly not the case in US where the same crime in different states can often carry unequal punishments.What do people from US think about this?
Wanted : A Signature.
Houston has strip bars next to elementary schools.
I guess I went to the wrong elementary school, nutz!
-
- - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
Recently, the US Supreme Court denied his appeal, with the notion that obscenity is a state-level affair, despite the First Amendment being a Federal law.
It's been legally established for a long time that states get to make their own obscenity laws. This could easily lead off into a tangent about what the limits of the first amendment are (and I think there are several), but I'm going to touch on a couple of the things that I think are abused: (1) the 1st amendment was primarily intended to protect political speech, not to give everyone the right to say whatever they want, whenever they want, and in whatever format that want (2) it doesn't say "freedom of expression". Free speech != do anything you want. At any rate, even if the Feds wanted to step in, they would have to get laws in the book that specifically give that power to the federal government. The constitution explicitly states that any powers not specifically granted to the federal government fall to the states, except those that are restricted (such as minting currency, etc).
Bad precedents for free speech
No, bad precedents for perverts, and precedents that have been around for a long time.
the CBDLF donations and giving to the EFF are Good Things.
Ok, I'll go along with that.
Don't become a regular here, you will become retarded. -- Yoda the Retard
No, it's a stupid damned "argument".
Anal sex affects only those who indulge in it, and there are few jobs (sailors, gay hookers) that make it unavoidable. Like I said earlier, if nicotine addicts shot up with needles or pills, that would be fine with me, just don't share you poison with everyone in the vicinity.
Let's see, this post went from a score of 5 to 3 due to the result of 2 "overrated" moderations. Now, if I were a metamoderator right now, I'd say this was an obvious abuse. This post is right on target and very relevant to the discussion. "Overrated" is annonymous, sadly, and you cannot be held accountable for using it. *sigh* Stupid moderators.
One of those things that has always bothered me, its ok for a male to walk around without his shirt, but not for a female, why?
1. Women generally do not find man-boobs attractive and are less likely to be sexually harassing anyone at all.
2. Even if they did, those who posess the man-boobs probably wouldn't be offended and welcome the unusual attention.
Let's have a common sense break here, shall we?
If you had said to the Founding Fathers that you were going to take their "Freedom of Speech" language and use it to allow someone to sell tentacle-sex manga in a comic book store nextdoor to Liberty Hall in Philly, they would have taken you behind the Liberty Bell and beaten the shit out of you with the sticks from their butter churns.
Which is not to say they would forbid its sale in their new nation, or that they would not fight to the death for your right to sell it (especially Ben Franklin, who was, by all accounts, a hound dog). They would be looking for a little common sense on your part, and a little direction to be provided on the local level if that common sense was shown lacking. And a little enforcement if that direction was ignored.
Ever been to Amsterdam? Great city. My favorite in Northern Europe. Their Red Light District is amazing. But there must be some kind of statutes on the books there that keeps the vice trade confined to certain geographical borders. I'm reasonably certain that a strip club that opened next to a church uptown would be shut down pretty quickly -- even in "liberal" Amsterdam. Again, I have not seen the Dallas statutes, but if a law was broken, a law was broken. If it's a bad law, if the people of Dallas want it changed, let them petition their legislators to change it (*Legislators*, not judges). But please, in the name of Jefferson, Hamilton, Franklin and all that's Holy, let's keep the federal government out of it!
Thank you!
There is probably a little known ordinance against the Son of God selling smutty comics.
I don't think enough End Times events have occurred to confirm Mr. Castillo as the Son of God.
Seriously, the name "Jesus" (hay-SOOS) is roughly Spanish for "Joshua".
Will I retire or break 10K?
The founding fathers also understood that society and morals change over time. They set in place a system to facilitate that change and allow the government to evolve with it.
Challenging laws and free speech issues in the court system is part of the process of the evolution of government. I think the founding fathers would prefer people to be agressive in defending their position against agressive government interference; after all, that's basically how this country got started.
with respect to amsterdam, lots of places have zoning laws that would do the same thing as what you describe. I'm not sure if Dallas has zoning laws to taht effect, but it is really irrelevent to the issue at hand. He wasnt convicted of selling adult comics next to a church. he was convicted of selling obscene material (regardless of where he sold it).
To be honest (and i dont mean this as an attack, though it might sound like one), your argument about Amsterdam would sound better if it wasnt just random speculation on your part. It would still be irrelevent, but it'd sound more convincing.
Darth --
Nil Mortifi, Sine Lucre
They were filming porn in the capital in Iceland when I visited, no body cares.
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Disgust is irrational, sex is nature and nature is what we are.
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Jesus H. Castillo, when will you authoritarians learn?
From the Declaration of Independence:
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.
Note that the declaration of independence although highly respected is not actual law and as such can't be enforce by the judiciary.
http://yetanotherpoliticalrant.blogspot.com
Come to Ohio. A few years ago it was ruled it is not illegal for a woman to go toples if she so desires.
I never have seen anyone choosing to do so, but aparently you can if you want to.
Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.