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FCC Fights To Maintain Indecency Policy

GovTechGuy writes "The FCC filed Thursday to appeal a recent court decision that struck down its policy of fining broadcasters for profanity or nudity shown on live television. The FCC's brief argues the court ruling would make it almost impossible to punish broadcasters that show nudity or profanity during hours when children are likely to be watching or listening."

602 comments

  1. Fucking backwards by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Nobody wants to see a cock on their TV. But let me fucking blow up a baby. Americans fucking love that.

    --
    Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    1. Re:Fucking backwards by cappp · · Score: 5, Informative

      One of my biggest culture-shocks was waking up to UK morning TV and being confronted by a guy with his trousers around his ankles, his balls the subject of the morning discussion. It's covered in this BBC story but the long and short of it is that it was a testicular awareness drive in the model of previously successful breast cancer awareness programs.It was the kind of early morning suprise that lets you skip your morning coffee and, more importantly, was one of the first times I've felt like television actually treated me like a thinking adult. Actually learned a few things that morning too. There's something to be said for the value of broadcasters approaching nudity, the body, and all that with a degree of maturity - its certainly one of the first steps towards a cultural shift.

    2. Re:Fucking backwards by ciderbrew · · Score: 1, Funny

      I've no problem with his cock on your TV?!?

    3. Re:Fucking backwards by Lumpy · · Score: 3, Funny

      Nobody wants to see a cock on their TV.

      I beg to differ, Fox News has high ratings and that channel has a Lot of Complete Cocks on it.

      Then we also have every public Show that has Tom Cruise and Mel Gibson...

      It seems that Americans like seeing Cocks on TV.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    4. Re:Fucking backwards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sexual repression is integral to building a winning army and dissipating opposition to corrupt authority.

    5. Re:Fucking backwards by Abcd1234 · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but, like... cock... and balls. Teehee. Hurr hurr. Now let's go to a monster truck rally!

    6. Re:Fucking backwards by mcgrew · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I agree, it's insane. They show The Terminator on TV and they show Arnold ripping someone's heart out by its bare hands but excise the "fuck you, asshole" and the entire sex scene.

      Stupidly insane.

    7. Re:Fucking backwards by Creepy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Yeah - I actually find America is backwater in some ways. Nobody gives a rats ass about nudity in Europe, and while people do binge drink, it is nowhere near the problem it is in America (or Russia, but Russia has cultural issues as well - it is considered rude to leave before the vodka bottle is finished, for instance).

    8. Re:Fucking backwards by ijakings · · Score: 1

      Nobody wants to see a cock on their TV

      I would disagree, there is no other possible way to explain Jeremy Clarksons meteoric rise.

    9. Re:Fucking backwards by geekoid · · Score: 1
      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    10. Re:Fucking backwards by geekoid · · Score: 3, Insightful

      In my experience, it's a vocal minority that oppose nudity. When you look at events like the Janet Jackson wardrobe malfunction and it's the most replayed event ever on TiVo.

      You can go on and on with examples. The amount of porn watched and read. No, most people don't care.

      regarding this issue. I don't want to turn on Sponge Bob at 2pm and see Sandy with a strap on fucking Patrick up the Ass while Squidward cums on his face.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    11. Re:Fucking backwards by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      Nobody wants to see a cock on their TV

      Ewan Mcgregor's got quite a nice one, but the folks at PBS are just too timid to show important films like Young Adam

    12. Re:Fucking backwards by budgenator · · Score: 4, Funny

      If Gibson is a cock, then Cruise would be more like a penile sheath; Gibson can be crazy on his own, but Cruise seems to need a supporting crew of loonies.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    13. Re:Fucking backwards by Drakin020 · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, care to show me the latest TV show that displays the blowing up of a real life baby?

      That's right, you can't, because it's not shown on TV.

      --
      The greatest revenge in life is massive success.
    14. Re:Fucking backwards by SleazyRidr · · Score: 1

      But the majority let the vocal minority control the airwaves. That is the difference.

    15. Re:Fucking backwards by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      While I have nothing against nudity or testicular cancer awareness, I would still prefer to avoid some other dude's balls in the morning if possible, thanks.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    16. Re:Fucking backwards by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      I don't want to turn on Sponge Bob at 2pm [content removed for various reasons]

      1. I think that taken verbatim up there is perfectly accurate.
      2. There's a difference between nudity and porn. I'd hope people can see that.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    17. Re:Fucking backwards by interval1066 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Its stupid, and purely a cultural thing. The American legal system is based on English Common Law, but our law diverged some 300-odd years ago to include Puritanical moires of virtue and vice; a sort of Prudish Penal Code, and it stuck around to be deeply ingrained in our culture. Having Charles I kick the Puritans asses out of England was probably a really good idea, as that prudish sort of cultural bent was somehow dissipated in old world common law and values because of their expulsion.
      It might be explained quite simply as our culture is just too young with regard to some moral aspects of society. We're talking about a culture that is really around 400 years old at best and very much more mature 2000+ year old culture in Europe. Certainly some things are going to be better developed over there, such a more adult attitude to nudity. A lot of people here though do believe that the only reason its a big deal here is because prudish people make it a big deal.

      --
      Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'
    18. Re:Fucking backwards by tophermeyer · · Score: 1

      Our political system has a lot of protections in place to prevent the so-called "tyranny" of the majority. Its not that we allow the minority to control it, but we definitely take steps to accommodate the minority viewpoint.

      The truth is that the US is not a true Democracy, we are not at all as egalitarian as we like to believe. We are a Federated Republic. Citizens have a voice in local laws and in electing representatives. We do place plenty of restrictions on the freedoms of the majority to protect the rights and sensibilities of the minority. Especially with indecency issues, there is nothing unusual about setting our limits conservatively to accommodate as many people as possible. Very few people are offended that there isn't Sponge Bob porn available during the afternoon.

    19. Re:Fucking backwards by tophermeyer · · Score: 1

      I'd hope people can see that.

      Unfortunately, I think you give the average American too much credit.

    20. Re:Fucking backwards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whoosh!

    21. Re:Fucking backwards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From your link, they got permission to do that first:

      Just before This Morning's GP Dr Chris Steele demonstrated the check, Richard Madeley announced that it had been cleared with the Independent Television Commission.
      ITC guidelines state that genitalia should not be shown on screen unless it is for "responsible medical reasons".

      You state, "... more importantly, was one of the first times I've felt like television actually treated me like a thinking adult." They made you feel that way, but were not treated like an adult. Sorry.

    22. Re:Fucking backwards by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      Nobody wants to see a cock on their TV. But let me fucking blow up a baby. Americans fucking love that.

      Uh... I think you overdid the hyperbole there. All I can think about now is "Who the hell said it was okay to blow up a baby?" and "Is there something wrong with me because I -don't- want to see cock?"

    23. Re:Fucking backwards by DJRumpy · · Score: 1

      And that is exactly the point. You are an adult. Just change the channel if you find it offensive. The other point being you have the choice to change the channel or just turn it off.

      I can only hope for the day when the church's clutches on mainstream America's balls loosens enough to let people make their own choices.

    24. Re:Fucking backwards by Defenestrar · · Score: 1

      Yes the American and English cultures diverged a few hundred years back. Which means we're different not inferior. If we seem more violent then perhaps there's a reason behind the desensitization toward distant and/or fictional occurrences such as the far more personal association we have when we still to this day need to worry about our children being eaten by the wildlife on their way to school.

      Perhaps instead of condemning the US culture it may be worth asking "why?" do the US and Europe have different views on sexuality and nudity. And before you call the US position of viewing sexuality as a more private aspect than Europeans view it "wrong," you may wish to ask "does it cause unjust harm?" (Such as withholding suffrage, property inheritance, educational, or human rights). Cultural judgments are a tricky thing and obviously a majority (because we are a republic) of the culture here has a different opinion than you do.

      Synonyms for immature could also be: young, fresh, or enthusiastic. Synonyms for "more mature" in this case could also be: jaded, desensitized, bored, or tired. You're arguments (as are mine) are a matter of perspective and opinion whereas your claims about the US culture seem to be more of a value claim based on right or wrong (which one hopes would be argued from fact, statistics, or at least logic).

      So please do explain to me why public nudity (in a sexual way) is absolutely wrong as opposed to different than the culture you opine to be superior. Please don't bring up breast feeding as that's a straw man argument. It's perfectly legal and accepted in US public locations (and in my personal experience the small minority who do have a problem will generally be run off by everyone else in the room if they voice an objection during a nursing).

    25. Re:Fucking backwards by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      To the "think of the children" crowd's credit, I'm pretty sure it's more likely that kids will cuss and have sex than rip someone's heart out by their bare hands. If you buy the argument that "kids will emulate what they see on TV," then it makes sense that you wouldn't bar the superhuman feat of strength, since the most that would happen there is kids hurting their hands on other peoples' chests.

      Against their credit, "kids do what they see on TV" is a stupid fucking idea held by idiots.

    26. Re:Fucking backwards by DJRumpy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I found this quote by the FCC particularly humorous:

      "The three-judge panel's decision in July raised serious concerns about the Commission's ability to protect children and families from indecent broadcast programming," FCC general counsel Austin Schlick said. "The Commission remains committed to empowering parents and protecting children, and looks forward to the court of appeals' further consideration of our arguments."

      The piece about empowering parents. Surely they do realize that they empower parents by taking away their power to choose?

    27. Re:Fucking backwards by kdemetter · · Score: 1

      I don't want to turn on Sponge Bob at 2pm and see Sandy with a strap on fucking Patrick up the Ass while Squidward cums on his face.

      If that would ever be the case , then don't let your childeren watch Sponge Bob .

      You should decide what your child watches , not the broadcast network.
      But there's the real problem : people just park their children in front of the tv , because it's easy .

      Personally , i'm more concerned about the violence in some cartoons for children.

      But the same applies there : don't let them watch it , if you don't think they can handle it.

    28. Re:Fucking backwards by kdemetter · · Score: 1

      "Tyranny of the majority" is actually just democracy :

      The reason is simply : a majority is made out of many people , who are all a minority in some way .
      Because the majority is so big , it will represent all these minorities , and result in a globally balanced view on things.

      For example : it's not because you are a minority because of your race , that you can't be part of a majority of people who like football ( just an example ).

      So any legislation that involves football , you are part of the majority , and so you will have impact ( to the detriment of the people that don't like football ).

    29. Re:Fucking backwards by countertrolling · · Score: 1

      "They train young men to drop fire on people. But their commanders won't allow them to write fuck on their airplanes because it's obscene!"

      --
      For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
    30. Re:Fucking backwards by jayme0227 · · Score: 1

      At best, you get groups in the majority who can relate to the minority. But history is full of examples of the majority oppressing the minority, even in the US where our constitution is supposed to stop that from happening. For a modern example, take a look over at California. The majority clearly voted for homosexuals to be oppressed. This is exactly the situation in which the constitution and the US Federal government was designed to prevent. Without the protections against the "tyranny of the majority," gay marriage would be illegal until after homosexuals and their sympathizers gained the majority.

      --
      But then I realized the cable was blue, so I only gave it one star. I hate blue.
    31. Re:Fucking backwards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      +1 patriot point for thinking of the children.

    32. Re:Fucking backwards by interval1066 · · Score: 1

      Where in the world did you get "superior" out of all that? You're seeing things.

      --
      Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'
    33. Re:Fucking backwards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is that we in north america have sexualized nudity. In theory a nude body is a nude body, but we insist on our media only depicting an unrealistic ideal of the human body, wrapped up in heavy layers of sexuality and objectification. And this is why it's become objectionable by certain groups, and something to avoid children seeing.

      Otherwise, if we treated the nude form as just being "normal" it would be of little concern, much as it is in families were mom & dad walk around naked.

      We CREATE this idea that nudity == something for arousal.

    34. Re:Fucking backwards by Defenestrar · · Score: 1

      Its stupid...a sort of Prudish Penal Code...

      Having Charles I kick the Puritans asses out of England was probably a really good idea...

      ...our culture is just too young with regard to some moral aspects of society.

      Certainly some things are...better developed over there [Europe], such a more adult attitude to nudity...

      Those are the things I was seeing when I assumed you were saying the European views on nudity and sexuality are "superior" to the US views.

      Perhaps I am at fault for not reading your articulated phrases clearly enough. Please help me understand how the above are neutral statements and have no connotation implying the "superiority" of one view over the other.

    35. Re:Fucking backwards by tophermeyer · · Score: 1

      For a modern example, take a look over at California. The majority clearly voted for homosexuals to be oppressed.

      That's a perfect example.

      A part of the problem is that our process of elections generally doesn't even produce a majority, we get pluralities. Take a deeper look at proposition 8. Using statistics from Wikipedia, prop 8 was supported by about 52% of voters. But only about 80% of eligible voters even voted! Only about 42% of the people even supported the thing!

      An even more striking (and flame attracting) example is the 2008 Presidential Election. Obama won with about 53% of the vote, but only 57% of the country even voted in the election. Obama won with only 30% of the country supporting him.

      You don't even need to hold a true majority to trample all over peoples rights (directed towards prop 8 and not the 2008 election).

    36. Re:Fucking backwards by TheCarp · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I actually wonder if nudity being such a big deal isn't the primary cause of it being such a re-watched event.

      This sort of stuff always reminds me the few weeks I spent lounging around French Beaches. Everyone would ask "did you go to the nude beaches". What "nude" beaches? You go to the city beach and women walk around topless, and men wear nearly transparent speedos.

      After a few days though, I realized something. I looked over down the beach and I saw a family, 3 generations of women, toddler, mother, and grandmother, all topless on the beach.... and I realzied, they grew up with this, they have done this all their lives... it was ME who was the strange one for even taking notice!

      Then of course I came home, and everyone asked about the "nude beaches" and all I could think was, they just need to go there for themselves and see.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    37. Re:Fucking backwards by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      "The long and short of it" is probably not the best phrase when talking about a dude's sack.

    38. Re:Fucking backwards by Kryptonian+Jor-El · · Score: 1

      The majority didn't vote to ban homosexual marriage; Of those who voted, the majority voted to ban homosexual marriage. Just because something passes or doesnt pass, doesn't mean that it was the will of the majority

      --
      All your 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0 are belong to us
    39. Re:Fucking backwards by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      He said "more mature views." You then translated that to "superior" and went with that. Stick to his words, rather than lying to put "superior" into his mouth and perhaps you'll get corrected less. Lying for effect then claiming it's all his fault for being ambiguous when you deliberately don't use the words and tone he used is stupid. He may be too polite to call you an idiotic liar, but I'm not.

      And everything runs in cycles. Cultures have times of greater modesty, followed by times of reduced modesty. For all I know, his statements were that the movement from one to the other was accelerated in England (thus "more mature") while giving no value judgment of 'superior' as you assert. But no, you assume he's wrong, you are right, and you make up lies about what he said to prove your point. When you can enter a conversation disagreeing with someone but, at the same time accepting everything they say as correct, then you'll figure out how to actually have an intelligent conversation. As for me, I know how, but don't waste my time with those proven to be lying idiots like you.

    40. Re:Fucking backwards by toadlife · · Score: 1

      This is why I support compulsory voting. If we can be made to serve on juries in the U.S. I don't see any reason why we can't be made to vote.

      --
      I don't always use unix-like operating systems; but when I do, I prefer FreeBSD.
    41. Re:Fucking backwards by shentino · · Score: 1

      I think making it forbidden only makes it more attractive.

      Streisand effect, plus people usually love breaking rules.

    42. Re:Fucking backwards by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Even once the bottle is finished, it is still considered rude to leave unless it is to go fetch another bottle. Anyone still able to crawl is subject to being forcibly volunteered.

    43. Re:Fucking backwards by PhunkySchtuff · · Score: 1

      New punctuation: "~" at the end of a line to indicate 'Snarky'. http://harns.blogspot.com/

      You forgot to put a tilde at the end of that last sentence...

    44. Re:Fucking backwards by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      Americans fucking love this shit.

      http://www.sott.net/image/image/15508/medium/nick_ut_napalm.jpg

      Let's blow up the babies. It's a classic.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    45. Re:Fucking backwards by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1
      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    46. Re:Fucking backwards by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      Glen Beck? Is that you?

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    47. Re:Fucking backwards by Drakin020 · · Score: 1

      Wait so this was on Fox news? CNN? NBC?

      Oh you mean it's on the internet, with tons of other gross images that most Americans really don't care about.

      --
      The greatest revenge in life is massive success.
    48. Re:Fucking backwards by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      It was on TV. That's the Vietnam war, you newbie. No Interwebs back then.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    49. Re:Fucking backwards by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      2. There's a difference between nudity and porn

      While what you say it probably true in general, actually coming up with some non-biased definition that can sort between the two is almost impossible. It keeps falling back to the "I'll know it when I see it method", which varies by person and is a terrible way to make policy.

      Now, I'm not saying that this excuse should be used as a blanket "lets ban it all" mentality - quite the opposite. I DON'T care if they showed porn on the local airwaves. Most kids have as easy of access to that stuff on the internet anyways. Let the parents enforce the rules as they want. I'd wager that most local stations wouldn't show anything TOO explicit anyways just to avoid driving customers away - the market decides what they'll show.

      Just look at most cable networks - aside from the few channels that specifically cater to that market, the vast majority of them self-censor and won't even broadcast profanity during peak hours, and they have absolutely no regulatory requirement to do so (given that the FCC has no control over such channels).

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    50. Re:Fucking backwards by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      I think you go about defining porn the hard way.

      Here's a simple test:

      Is it intended to be sexually exciting or pleasurable?

      It has nothing to do with the bystander. If someone gets off watching mothers feed children, then too bad. They have to deal with that issue. Assuming the mother isn't doing it for some exhibitionist reasoning, then it isn't porn.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    51. Re:Fucking backwards by Drakin020 · · Score: 1

      So the last thing you can show me regarding this was from the Vietnam War.....

      The thing is, we don't show enough of "Babies being blown up" and it sounds wrong, but think about it.

      If Americans saw what war really did to people, there would be more people against the war. You see, American's don't like that kind of stuff.

      --
      The greatest revenge in life is massive success.
    52. Re:Fucking backwards by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      There's still the possibility of gray areas though. Assume you have some comical situation on a sitcom where a naked granny is involved. Cast member A sees this naked individual and runs out of the room. The audience laughs. Ok, probably not porn. It was for comedic effect. Now lets assume that they do the same scene, but instead of naked granny, they use naked Jessica Alba. It could still be used for comedic affect, but a ton more people would tune in because the mere attractiveness of the model would mean that many more people would tune in for ulterior motives.

      Indeed in the second case the "official" declaration might be that the use was for comedic reasons, but the "unofficial" reason might be that they simply wanted to show a hot naked girl to draw in viewers. Effectively, it's porn, but solely based on the choice of model. Stating that the attractiveness of the model would be a factor though gets into a gray area - particularly in the middle of the road girls. While you'll never get 100% consensus on any decision, the MAJORITY of the population would agree that naked granny isn't attractive, whilst naked Jessica Alba is. The problem comes in when it's someone more like Allison Janney. Older woman. A fair number of people would find her attractive. A fair number of people wouldn't. Where would that fall?

      All in all, it's still something that would fall into the "judgement call" category. Instead I'd say it's easier to just get the government out of the business of telling us what we can and can't show.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    53. Re:Fucking backwards by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      The problem with that argument is that this "unofficial" reason is the -true- intent, thus clearly defining it. It would be far rarer for it to be truly innocent. In which case, it simply isn't porn... just like a wardrobe malfunction isn't porn, unless it was planned... which then puts it easily into my definition!

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    54. Re:Fucking backwards by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      What are you, a fucking infant? Your social skills suck ass.

      Fuck off, you look like a teabagger trying to argue that there's no violence on TV. Everybody's laughing. At you.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    55. Re:Fucking backwards by Drakin020 · · Score: 1

      It's easy to tell when someone has lost an argument. :-D

      If your proven wrong, just start name calling!

      --
      The greatest revenge in life is massive success.
    56. Re:Fucking backwards by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      The problem with that argument is that this "unofficial" reason is the -true- intent, thus clearly defining it.

      Not at all, as intention is almost impossible to prove. If I go to the laundry mat every Thursday and my only reason is because there's a girl there that I like to talk to, how do you prove it? I'm still technically taking my clothes and washing them, but unless I officially come out and admit it, you can only put forth a suspicion on my real motives - you can't prove anything one way or another.

      The same is true in the hypothetical TV case. Sure you might suspect that the unofficial reason is to draw in viewers, but you wouldn't necessarily be able to prove it, and somehow I doubt making it legal to show nudity on television so long as the subject is ugly would garner much support.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    57. Re:Fucking backwards by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      It's easy to tell when arguments don't work. When your opponent is such an idiot that they dispute claims for which evidence is given, without even disputing the validity of evidence, then it's time to fuck them in the ass.

      So, I gave you a cream pie.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    58. Re:Fucking backwards by MozzleyOne · · Score: 1

      I don't want to turn on Sponge Bob at 2pm and see Sandy with a strap on fucking Patrick up the Ass while Squidward cums on his face.

      So don't watch channels that do that! How do so many people not understand that just because something exists doesn't imply that you'll be forced to see it!

      Seriously, there are a LOT of adults with young kids in the world. There is a very large demand for kid-friendly material, and that demand will be met! Stop fucking worrying about the evil porn monster jumping out and randomly slapping your kids in the face - any channel that did that would never get another viewer or ad dollar ever again!

      --
      Ayjay on Fedang
  2. Le sigh by Pojut · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I still can't believe that you can show autopsies, murder, drug deals, and all the horrible things shown on the news...but if you show a titty, you face a big fine. ::head shake::

    It's freakin' stupid.

    1. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      So does that mean you're in favour of porn during kid's prime time, or that you want violence banned as well?

    2. Re:Le sigh by Pharmboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Keep in mind that many people thought it dirty to breast feed in public, and that a woman should do it in private, shamefully. And some still think that way and STILL lobby to make it illegal. We Americans are entirely too focused on nudity being "bad", which I chalk up to too many people who can't separate their religion and their politics.

      This is the same reason pot is illegal, prostitution is illegal, gambling is illegal (unless the states is sponsoring it, then it is ok) in most parts of the US. Self righteous politicians and those who support them that want to tell others how to live and think.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    3. Re:Le sigh by adewolf · · Score: 1

      Yeah exactly. Not only that but the so-called news outlets in this country love to glorify shootings and hate-crimes. "Oh won't someone think of the children"...yeah go spend some quality time with your children and stop all the overtime at work.

      --
      "The Brady Bunch is back...working homicide"
    4. Re:Le sigh by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Anybody who files an indecency complaint with the FCC should be required to swear, under penalty of perjury, that all of their children(if any) were delivered by C-section, exclusively bottle fed, and bathed and changed only in the dark.

      If two seconds of Janet Jackson nipple leads to depravity, our vile custom of allowing mere innocent babies to freely gratify their sickening bodily desires on bare breasts must be the reason that we can't build prisons fast enough to contain the criminal element.

    5. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Our culture does not look favourably on ANY act of something being expelled from the human body. Deal with it.

    6. Re:Le sigh by Pojut · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm saying that if you're willing to show people being killed, you should be willing to show people being fucked. Personally, I don't care what they do because we don't watch TV (we don't even have TV service...Netflix is all we need), but my own opinion is that sex is much less harmful to show than violence. Besides, look at most commercials and/or music videos...or reality shows...or just about everywhere else. Sex is EVERWHERE...it's just nudity that stays hidden. That's stupid.

    7. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about instead of reaching for two extremes, we just come to some sort of middle ground?

      Violent porn at all hours, but only on a channel that nobody's likely to tune in to: CW.

    8. Re:Le sigh by dmgxmichael · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Our society would be a much, much better place if "kill" had the same vulgar and obscene connotations as "fuck".

    9. Re:Le sigh by elrous0 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Yeah, but without the FCC, I might have to actually pay attention to what my kids are watching myself. Can't the FCC just screen the babysitter for me, while I take a nap?

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    10. Re:Le sigh by Dancindan84 · · Score: 1

      Anybody who files an indecency complaint with the FCC should be required to swear

      But then won't they get fined themselves?

      --
      "Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much." - Oscar Wilde
    11. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm generally for freedom of speech. I think you should be able to make and market any variety of porn you like, for example, as long as it's made exclusively with 0 or more consenting adults. But I do think the Janet Jackson thing was really bad, and not something that should have happened.

      In short, I want the religious right to leave me alone, and be respectful of my desire to watch what I want to watch. But I think there's a flipside to that coin. I think it's also reasonable for us to accomodate people who don't want their kids (or themselves) exposed to such things. They have a resonable (if prudish) expectation that Janet's nipple not be shown during what is considered a gathering event for all of America. You respect my rights to what I want, and I'll respect your rights to what you want.

    12. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anybody who files an indecency complaint with the FCC should be required to swear

      Damn right! Teach those sanctimonious mindchokers some motherfucking culture, maybe in twenty years they can look their sons and daughters in the eyes and say "I raised you to be free, and not take no shit from nobody."

    13. Re:Le sigh by FranTaylor · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Does that include your words?

    14. Re:Le sigh by hazah · · Score: 1

      Fail.

      Nudity is not porn.

    15. Re:Le sigh by Stele · · Score: 1

      If two seconds of Janet Jackson nipple

      Her nipple wasn't even exposed. I believe she was wearing a pasty.

      My wife and I were watching the event live, in HD, and when the "malfunction" occurred we just looked at each other, said "huh!" and went back to what we were doing.

    16. Re:Le sigh by Pojut · · Score: 1, Funny

      OH SHIT!!!

      wait....

    17. Re:Le sigh by paiute · · Score: 1

      Sex is EVERWHERE...it's just nudity that stays hidden. That's stupid.

      Reminds me of Doctorow's Ragtime, where Father is on an expedition to the North Pole and sees the Eskimos having sex through slits in their fur suits.

      --
      If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
    18. Re:Le sigh by Exitar · · Score: 1

      So does that mean you're equiparating full frontal nudity to porn?

    19. Re:Le sigh by chris.alex.thomas · · Score: 1, Interesting

      actually, I think it comes from the mentality of a organ of the body which shares a sexual purpose, breasts are not actually a sexual organs, but are sexually charged so get lumped together, they are used in the process of feeding children from an ACT of sexual means, but they are not actually anything to do with the act of sex apart from that weak connection so it's about the americans having little tolerance for sexuality. if the FCC had to patrol the european markets, they'd have a heart attack

    20. Re:Le sigh by Pojut · · Score: 1

      Her nipple wasn't even exposed. I believe she was wearing a pasty.

      her nipple was most certainly exposed. She wasn't wearing a pasty, it was a nipple shield...and a really high-quality one, too!

    21. Re:Le sigh by Jason+Levine · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's not a matter of the milk being expelled from the woman's body. The breastfeeding issue is that some people think that breasts are solely sexual objects and a woman taking one out is being indecent. Nevermind if she's just taking a small portion of it out to feed her child, not to gain some sort of sexual satisfaction, and nevermind that the view of the part of her breast that is out is obscured by the feeding child. No, these people insist that women should remain covered up at all times and should feed their child in the bathroom. (Like any of them would consent to taking their food to a public restroom to eat it.)

      People also sometimes claim "mental harm" for being "forced" to watch, but unless you've been chained up with your eyeballs propped open, you have the option of looking elsewhere. I've had women breastfeed in front of me and I tend to look the other way because it's a private moment between mother and child (even if it takes place in a public setting) and it is rude to stare. If I was talking to the woman, I would focus my eyes on her eyes and not on her feeding child.

      Women should be able to feed their child wherever they want so long as stopping to nurse doesn't cause a public safety hazard, of course. (e.g. Not stopping in the middle of the highway to nurse her baby.)

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    22. Re:Le sigh by Jason+Levine · · Score: 2, Insightful

      My wife and I need to report ourselves for indecency. Not only did my wife breastfeed our two sons, but the older son has seen the younger son breastfeed. Who knows what damage his (then) five year old mind sustained by seeing his mother feeding his (then) infant brother!

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    23. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Keep in mind that many people thought it dirty to breast feed in public

      They still do, and they have a large voice locally, trying to ban it where ever they can.

    24. Re:Le sigh by fuzznutz · · Score: 4, Insightful
      The top three stories on this morning's local news show was:
      • Man busted for child porn
      • Massage parlors raided for prostitution
      • Man arrested for "molesting" girls in park by tongue kissing them

      I find it odd that most of the people in power came from the generation of "free love" and are so obsessed with preventing sex. In the mean time, I have more hardcore porn channels available on my cable PPV than there were porn theaters in the late seventies. WTF?

    25. Re:Le sigh by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Why can't you take a shit in public? Some necessary bodily functions are best performed behind closed doors, according to our culture. Other cultures piss in public. Heck in China they don't use diapers, baby just shits whenever he feels the need, and most baby garments are of the wonderful "split-crotch" kind. Is it OK if our culture has some ideas about what is and isn't appropriate, and we all agree to respect the feelings of others even if we disagree with them? No, it must be the fault of ordinary Americans, who are always wrong about EVERYTHING. Drugs, prostitution, and gambling are all social ills with well-documented effects. Progressives campaigned tirelessly against them back in the 20s and 30s.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    26. Re:Le sigh by spamking · · Score: 1

      I was teaching a class about 14 years ago and there were moms, dads and kids around . . . so this lady sitting on the front row decides to pull out a boob and start feeding her kid. She wasn't all that pleasant to look at so it wasn't too distracting, but I felt it wasn't the best time/place to do it. Move to the back and do it where you're not the center of attention.

      Face it, there are some people nobody wants to see nekkid.

    27. Re:Le sigh by rjstanford · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But boxing, on the other hand, is eagerly shown on 172" big screen HD TVs in sports bars around the country. Not to mention on ESPN.

      --
      You're special forces then? That's great! I just love your olympics!
    28. Re:Le sigh by bhtooefr · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Pot is illegal because blacks and Mexicans smoked it, and hemp was threatening the cotton and (wood) paper industries.

    29. Re:Le sigh by AmonTheMetalhead · · Score: 1

      I'm generally for freedom of speech. I think you should be able to make and market any variety of porn you like, for example, as long as it's made exclusively with 0 or more consenting adults. But I do think the Janet Jackson thing was really bad, and not something that should have happened.

      Why was it a bad thing that shouldn't have happened? Here's a question for you, if nudity wasn't so 'horrible' over there, do you think it would've happened in the first place?

    30. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

      Two issues:

      1. Women should show modesty with their bodies. The simple truth and fact is that most men are visually driven sexually, while most women are not. By a woman remaining modest, she reduces the sexual tensions that should otherwise not exist in a public setting.

      2. Eventually, everyone gets indoctrinated with "adult" themes, but why force the issue with children? Children should be left to "be children" and not forced into being adults until they're ready.

    31. Re:Le sigh by Killjoy_NL · · Score: 1

      Ah so that's what it was, I was wondering for a few seconds what that ugly thing on her boob was.

      --
      This is the sig that says NI (again)
    32. Re:Le sigh by Jedi+Alec · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Nonsense. I despise religion as much as you do, but thinking that removing it will eleminate terrorism is a pipedream.

      Terrorism is simply a form of warfare, and in situations where one is outnumbered by one's enemies on the scale of 1 to 10000 effectively the *only* form of warfare available.

      So unless we run completely out of other excuses to bash one another's brains in...terrorism is here to stay.

      --

      People replying to my sig annoy me. That's why I change it all the time.
    33. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      want to permanently fix terrorism? remove religion (entirely, from everyone).

      You should look up a couple of terrorist groups. The RAF for instance wasn't motivated by religion, neither is the ETA. Even if you removed religion from the middle east Israelis and Palestinians would still kill each other, because it's more about land than religion.

    34. Re:Le sigh by Nadaka · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Religion is politics, a means of controlling the distribution of wealth and authority within a population. Religion carries a bigger stick because it can promise you a joyous afterlife or damn you to eternal hell in addition to the more mundane rewards/punishments that normal governance can offer.

    35. Re:Le sigh by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      This is the same reason pot is illegal, prostitution is illegal, gambling is illegal (unless the states is sponsoring it, then it is ok) in most parts of the US.

      There are some good historical reasons for prostitution and gambling to be illegal: social diseases for prostitution, and gambling being - at best - a con game with some entertainment value, and at worst, an addictive con game or front-cover for crime gangs (where else to launder large amounts of bills?).

    36. Re:Le sigh by phyrexianshaw.ca · · Score: 1

      sure, because all we need is more kids growing up repressed about how Horrible sex is, and how they should never have sex, and how dirty anything sexual is.

      people need to face the fact that sex is part of life. it's not going to make a kid any less human to know what sex looks like. hell, if you approach the topic with them in an open fashion, they might even LIKE the idea in the future.

      I know though, that's just horrible!

    37. Re:Le sigh by drinkypoo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No, it must be the fault of ordinary Americans, who are always wrong about EVERYTHING.

      Some ordinary Americans, perhaps even the majority, don't care about what they can't see. This was a nation founded more or less on the principle of being able to beat your own dog and children, but we've come a long way since. But doing things to people and making information available are not remotely the same thing.

      Drugs, prostitution, and gambling are all social ills with well-documented effects. Progressives campaigned tirelessly against them back in the 20s and 30s.

      Yes, campaigned against them, when making them illegal makes them more harmful. Excellent logic, there.

      Drugs, prostitution, and gambling are both symptoms and causes. Barring evolving out of them they will always likely all exist. The trick is to integrate them into society in a way that is least harmful, not to engage in futile attempts to eliminate them. Each of these things is also a matter of degree and even opinion. In (or near) the words of one female comic, if you're married, you're just a whore for a washer and dryer. Flip a coin to make a decision as to who will do or get something and you're a gambler. Sugar is a drug by every definition of the word. Caffeine and nicotine are powerful drugs which are readily available in nearly every society on the planet. Governments run lotteries.

      Drugs, prostitution, and gambling are here to stay. We only have to decide how we will handle this fact.

      Please don't make me draw the parallels to "decency", or I will do it in crayon for your sake.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    38. Re:Le sigh by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Why can't you take a shit in public? Some necessary bodily functions are best performed behind closed doors

      So, just to be clear here, you're comparing breast feeding... to shitting in public.

      Nice.

    39. Re:Le sigh by Lumpy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You are trying to convince a fanatical puritan that normal human behavior is good, and violence is bad. This goes against all they believe in.

      Puritans love violence. History shows they used it at the drop of the hat against anyone that disagreed with them.

      Sex and nudity is a good thing.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    40. Re:Le sigh by easterberry · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Don't be ridiculous. Pol Pot and Stalin were atheist and they were right cunts too. People do bad things because we're stupid animals, not because some people believe in deities.

    41. Re:Le sigh by Abstrackt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Our society would be a much, much better place if "kill" had the same vulgar and obscene connotations as "fuck".

      I think our society would be a much better place if "fuck" didn't have such vulgar and obscene connotations. I'd rather see a cock or two on my TV than another graphic murder show. If acknowledging the existence of all the bad things that happen in the world is a good thing, why isn't it a good thing to acknowledge the existence of the good things too?

      --
      They say a little knowledge is a dangerous thing, but it's not one half so bad as a lot of ignorance. - Terry Pratchett
    42. Re:Le sigh by easterberry · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Why can't you take a shit in public?

      It's unhygenic and smells bad. Both are objectively legitimate reasons that have nothing to do with morality or values. Citation on the well documented effects of pot and marijuana? Because last I checked Amsterdam was doing alright.

    43. Re:Le sigh by networkBoy · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I was at the hospital ER a while back and it was the middle of the night. The waiting room had a mother with her two kids (one a baby, the other ~ 2) and me with my daughter. Our SOs were the ones there for treatment.
      Her baby was hungry and she asked me if it was OK if she fed her child.
      I told her I didn't see how it was my choice, but since she asked I was fine with it.

      One of the nurses (WTF? shouldn't they be the most understanding?) came out from behind their counter and told her not to feed her child there and suggested the rest room. I kindly replied to the nurse that this woman and I were the only two in the waiting room, that I didn't mind at all, and how would she like her next meal to be served while she was on the can? I think she considered kicking me out then thought better of it and let the poor embarrassed woman be.

      I mean, had they offered an exam room that might have been fine, I'd see it as the nurse offering up some privacy, rather than shunning this person. Later the mom thanked me, and I told her about all the fun my wife and I had along those same lines. It really bugs me. Thing is, this woman even had some nifty shawl thing that covers everything up (wish we had that when my kids were that young).
      -nB

      --
      whois gawk date unzip strip find touch finger mount join nice man top fsck grep eject more yes exit umount sleep dump
    44. Re:Le sigh by Rogerborg · · Score: 1

      And let's not forget: the cocaine nigger sure is hard to kill (aka the I CAN HAZ MOAR GUNZ? speech)

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    45. Re:Le sigh by HungryHobo · · Score: 1

      What the fuck?
      Seeing someone breastfeeding forces nobody to stop being an adult.

      "The simple truth and fact is that most men are visually driven sexually, while most women are not."

      Your problem. not hers.
      And if you get turned on by watching a baby eat then you've got bigger problems.

    46. Re:Le sigh by Rogerborg · · Score: 1

      I was wondering for a few seconds what that ugly thing on her boob was.

      I think he's going by "Justin" now.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    47. Re:Le sigh by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      I have it on good authority that many gays were breast fed as children. If that's not conclusive proof, I don't know what is.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    48. Re:Le sigh by networkBoy · · Score: 1

      Specifically don't want to start a flame war...
      Why despise religion? I am religious, but I also acknowledge that we all have free will to decide what, if any, religion we follow.

      I find it interesting that the human psyche seems hardwired to believe in a higher power. Go back through history and you will find some form of theism in almost every culture. Whether it is belief in ancient ancestors, all powerful God/Allah/Yahweh, the Greek/Roman/Norse/Egyptian gods, Gaea etc. That we appear to be hardwired for it makes me wonder.
      -nB

      --
      whois gawk date unzip strip find touch finger mount join nice man top fsck grep eject more yes exit umount sleep dump
    49. Re:Le sigh by dmgxmichael · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well, to be honest, in a perfect world the connotations would be reversed - violence would be vulgar and sex would not be. If I can have only one I'd choose to have violence be seen as vulgar in the hopes there'd be less of it.

    50. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      It shouldn't have happened because it upset a large portion of the viewing audience, because the product they got wasn't what was expected.

      Don't get me wrong. being upset by programming happens a lot. This isn't always a bad thing. Art should be provacative. News editorials should be provacative. Expose articles should be provacative. Coverage of things you disagree with should be upsetting. Coverage of natrural disasters should be upsetting. Coverage of war, particularly of war, should be upsetting. All of these things should be on the televsion.

      But the US Super Bowl is billed as a family friendly (for the most common meaning of that term in the US) event. That meaning means that it's OK to show one grown man knock into another with sufficient force to give him a concussion. That's family friendly. Showing nipples is much, much worse. I know that's fucked up. It is. But today, in America, that's the way it is. But if those of us who want to have the freedom to consume and produce things that some people find offensive, then we need to have a way for those people to avoid such things. And not showing nipples during the super-bowl is part of that.

      Otherwise, we will always be at war with one another, always be trying to settle things by trying to legislate or litigate the point of view of the other party out of existance. The Airwaves are a public resource. Their use needs to be done in a way to, as best possible, fulfill the needs and desires of everyone.

    51. Re:Le sigh by Abstrackt · · Score: 1

      If I hadn't responded to you I'd mod you up. ;)

      --
      They say a little knowledge is a dangerous thing, but it's not one half so bad as a lot of ignorance. - Terry Pratchett
    52. Re:Le sigh by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      Yes. You can show a breast stripped of flesh but not a breast.

      The thing that gets me is the word "shit". Everyone says this word including fairly young children.
      It's just goofy to ban it. It's a bodily function.

      I can see the argument against hard core porn but nudity is also goofy.
      However, I can see cable providers contractually specifying certain channels will be nudity free and then serving sets of those up to people who want to avoid nudity.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    53. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By a woman remaining modest, she reduces the sexual tensions that should otherwise not exist in a public setting.

      And public stonings for the immodest whores who remove their burqas in public!

    54. Re:Le sigh by BenevolentP · · Score: 1

      Furries. They're everywhere.

    55. Re:Le sigh by mobby_6kl · · Score: 2

      >social diseases for prostitution,

      That's not a good reason. Neither is the one that you give for gambling - this isn't too different from other forms of entertainment, except that here you can win money. And there are plenty of other ways to launder money, almost anything retail would do.

    56. Re:Le sigh by Peeteriz · · Score: 1

      She really can't choose the time when the infant will ask for food, so your recommendation is that she+her kid should simply not be allowed to sit there, in a "move to the back of the bus" kind of way? Really?

    57. Re:Le sigh by Applekid · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Easy. The hippie/me generations had kids, and they've memories vivid enough to remember the hedonistic excesses they were able to partake in under their parents' noses.

      Can't have any of THAT, after all, due to a lovely combination of "precious-little-snowflake" and "think-of-the-children."

      --
      More Twoson than Cupertino
    58. Re:Le sigh by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Pot is illegal because blacks and Mexicans smoked it, and hemp was threatening the cotton and (wood) paper industries.

      You're close; that's why it was made illegal. It continues to be illegal because drug users are an easy group to demonize (in spite of the fact that nearly all of us are one) and therefore they can be milked for profit. If you want to profit from privatized prizons, you need to have someone to put into them. The mechanism of its continued illegality is partly marketing, and partly the disenfranchisement of felons; once you've received a felony drug conviction, you can no longer vote to legalize drugs.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    59. Re:Le sigh by spamking · · Score: 1

      I didn't ask her to move, and never said she wasn't allowed to sit anywhere.

      No she can't choose when the kid wants food, but it really isn't that hard to get a kid on a schedule. This wasn't a 6 month old. He was about 16 months old.

      What's your point?

    60. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some people believe no-public breast feeding to be a matter of class ... and not of sex. So be it, with so many noisy, vacuous proles roaming the streets.

    61. Re:Le sigh by DaFallus · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I don't care if women breast feed in public, but I don't think it should be legal unless they also make it legal for me to urinate in public without ending up on a sex offender registry.

      --
      No one cares what your captcha was

      Houston TX, USA
    62. Re:Le sigh by IndustrialComplex · · Score: 1

      I didn't ask her to move, and never said she wasn't allowed to sit anywhere.

      No she can't choose when the kid wants food, but it really isn't that hard to get a kid on a schedule. This wasn't a 6 month old. He was about 16 months old.

      What's your point?

      What's your point? If she pulled out a bottle it would have been ok? What's the difference?

      It was only an issue because YOU decided to view it as such.

      --
      Out of modpoints but really liked a post? 1BDkF6TtmmeZ3yqXbz9yhdYVqRYnwFoXDj
    63. Re:Le sigh by geekoid · · Score: 1

      They don't really show any of that. The show it near and they imply it. You don't see people actually doing an autopsy, you don't see the actual murders, you don't see people nude, but you do see them near being nude, or clearly just had sex.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    64. Re:Le sigh by IndustrialComplex · · Score: 2, Insightful

      One of the nurses (WTF? shouldn't they be the most understanding?)

      The only thing that separates a nurse from anyone else is the material they chose to memorize during school. They are the same people, with the same virtues and faults as any of us.

      --
      Out of modpoints but really liked a post? 1BDkF6TtmmeZ3yqXbz9yhdYVqRYnwFoXDj
    65. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is a nipple worse than a squad of hot cheerleaders in short skirts, tight shirts, and exposed skin of the upper thigh all the while dancing and spinning around and gyration of hips?

      Is beer family friendly too? How about erectile dysfunction medication? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_Bowl_XXXVIII_halftime_show_controversy#Commercials

      I mean, you don't give kids beer and surely you don't talk about making penises throbbing and erect, right?

    66. Re:Le sigh by computational+super · · Score: 1

      I'm disappointingly unsurprised that I'm only 10% of the way through the comments, and I've already seen this exchange:

      Pojut: if you show a titty, you face a big fine

      Anonymous Coward: you're in favour [sic] of porn during kid's prime time

      If somebody makes a good point, indignantly insist that he said something else. American debate at its finest.

      --
      Proud neuron in the Slashdot hivemind since 2002.
    67. Re:Le sigh by IndustrialComplex · · Score: 2, Funny

      The thing that gets me is the word "shit". Everyone says this word including fairly young children.
      It's just goofy to ban it. It's a bodily function.

      Think about the roots of our 'curse' words. They share a common denominator (for the most part), Germanic origins.

      There has been a huge push by the 'enlightened' to view the latin (and tangentially, French) origins as 'pure' and the german origins as 'impure'. It's the same reason that a taboo was created with regard to ending sentences with prepositions, it was something not done in latin, but due to the germanic structure of English, some sentences do sound and appear better when ended with a preposition. We aren't speaking Latin (or French), so a lot of the rules are just appeals to tradition. A tradition started as a mild cultural cleansing.

      But back on point, look at the 'curse' words and their entymological origins. It is very eye opening to see how a push for cleansing a culture became a social taboo.

      --
      Out of modpoints but really liked a post? 1BDkF6TtmmeZ3yqXbz9yhdYVqRYnwFoXDj
    68. Re:Le sigh by Golddess · · Score: 1
      --
      "I'm not sure I like the fugnutish tone you used in your post!" -RogL (608926)-
    69. Re:Le sigh by renoX · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I agree with most of the thing you said, but some are weird:
      >Flip a coin to make a decision as to who will do or get something and you're a gambler.
      So? Being a gambler is not *in itself* bad, only being addicted to gambling is an issue..

      >Sugar is a drug by every definition of the word.
      No! When you don't eat sugar you don't suffer from withdrawal syndroms (or very mild one), same for caffeine, but you can't say this for cigarettes.
      This is a very important difference..

      >Governments run lotteries.
      So? This doesn't make lotteries good!
      Goverments do many immoral things: lying to go to war, etc.

    70. Re:Le sigh by geekoid · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Neither of which killed people in the name of atheism.

      It's a false comparison.

      People murder in the name of their god, still do. Billy Graham sponsered and creted 10,000 church along the 10th parallel.

      Church where the parishioners will circle Muslim towns and kill every man, woman and child in the town.
      Muslims are doing the same thing to Christian towns. This is happening right the fuck now.

      In BOTH CASES it's because of their belief in God. The do it in the name of their God.

      The belief in a power that takes them above the law of man. by it's very nature, means people will feel anything they do in their gods name is good and morally correct thing to do.

      Belief in a higher power is bad, horrible and destructive. Whether the higher power is a God, or an unquestioning faith in the government.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    71. Re:Le sigh by geekoid · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, it's about risk mitigation. Just say No is a horrid philosophy that hurts people and society.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    72. Re:Le sigh by IndustrialComplex · · Score: 1

      Ugh... etymological, not entymological. I'm sure there are a few other typos in there.

      --
      Out of modpoints but really liked a post? 1BDkF6TtmmeZ3yqXbz9yhdYVqRYnwFoXDj
    73. Re:Le sigh by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      No! When you don't eat sugar you don't suffer from withdrawal syndroms (or very mild one), same for caffeine, but you can't say this for cigarettes.

      You are totally, completely wrong. You DO suffer from withdrawal if you eat sugar, it IS addictive, I could go on but why bother? Do a little more research on sugar. You're also just as wrong about caffeine. Even one or two-cup a day coffee drinkers (and I mean regular drinkers, not occasional) tend to get headaches if they skip coffee for a single day. Indeed, I personally experience far worse symptoms from quitting coffee (more irritability) than I do when quitting smoking. I should know, I've quit smoking several times :) (for years this time, though.)

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    74. Re:Le sigh by GofG · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The concept of agency is important for evolutionary theory. Agents are anything with a will, needs, and wants, such as an animal. Now, a human that assumes that every stick is a snake is going to survive for a lot longer than a human that assumes every snake is a stick. In general, we vastly overestimate the amount of agency in the situation surrounding us, because we ARE hardcoded to do so.

      This overestimation of agency is what led to the belief in higher powers; the wind *is* an agent because it is safer to believe that it is than not, the sun *is* an agent because it is safer to believe that it is than not, etc. That is why we seem to be hardcoded to believe in a higher power; really we are just hardcoded to believe that everything around us is a dangerous entity or caused by a dangerous entity with its own motivations.

      --
      GFA/M/S d-- s: a--- C++++ UBL++$ P+ L+++ !E- W++ N+ !o K- w--- !O !M !V PS++ PE Y+ PGP+ t+++ 5- X+ R tv@ b++ DI++++ D+ G
    75. Re:Le sigh by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      This is the same reason pot is illegal

      I never did understand some religious folks' hatred of getting high. The bible says absolutely nothing about pot, and very little bad and much good about drinking. It's hard on pimps, but not on hookers. And aficr it doesn't say anything about gambling.

      I think rather, it's the people with addictive personalities and their SOs that want those things illegal. I still can't understand the pot thing, though, as the only people I ever met who had any problem with it started smoking it young and were also doing a lot of other drugs as well.

    76. Re:Le sigh by geekoid · · Score: 1

      "...Amsterdam was doing alright."

      They have issue there as well.

      It's also a bad comparison. The culture and people are different.

      marijuana does have negative effects. Addiction does happen, abuse does happen. Neither of which warrant it being illegal.
      It should be legal, regulated, and taxed.
      There should also be prescription strength, because some of the really hard stuff is dangerous.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    77. Re:Le sigh by cjb658 · · Score: 1

      But then we'd just start a war about whether to call ourselves the United Atheist League or the United Atheist Alliance.

    78. Re:Le sigh by geekoid · · Score: 1

      But that makes no sense... the paper industry part.

      If you are a millionaire industrialist, you buy the land and then make money from hemp. They want' money, making it illegal directly opposes their goal.

      I can see certain groups banning it for a racist perception.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    79. Re:Le sigh by geekoid · · Score: 1

      It carried a big stick because of social pressures. Don't break from the group.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    80. Re:Le sigh by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1, Troll

      Both are bodily functions that involve the excretion of fluids. Do you really want to watch that? In some cultures you can't even pick your teeth with a toothpick without covering your mouth because it involves saliva. It's considered unsightly and a mark of low culture. But hey, we're always right and they're always wrong.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    81. Re:Le sigh by computational+super · · Score: 1

      Which is particularly ironic since the only reason they're considered sexually charged in the first place is the obsession with keeping them hidden.

      --
      Proud neuron in the Slashdot hivemind since 2002.
    82. Re:Le sigh by geekoid · · Score: 1

      prostitution spreads social disease because it's illegal. I suggest you look into places where it's legal, like some counties in Nevada. IT's regulated, and the workers are tested, and they use protection.
      Bottom line: Men are going to go looking for sex, and they are willing to pay for it. You can not stop that, so make it safe, regulated, and taxed.

      Gambling is OK, but some of it needs to be stopped, and it need series regulation regard access to money for the players. Like no check cashing or ATMs.

      The lottery needs to go away. It is a horrible game, and it send the wrong message to people.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    83. Re:Le sigh by computational+super · · Score: 1
      we all agree to respect the feelings of others even if we disagree with them

      Oh, my God... the irony of you insisting that he should be more tolerant is going to create a rip in the space-time continuum...

      --
      Proud neuron in the Slashdot hivemind since 2002.
    84. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am not the op, and he is way off base. Terrorism won't end without religion, and the war necessary to cleanse religion from the world would be as destructive and immoral as any religions war to cleans the unbelievers from this world.

      I am a radical atheist. I have a lot of reasons to hate religion and the way many religious people act. But that doesn't mean I can not find merit in individual religious people.

      Why despise religion:
      *It is false, a lie used to manipulate and control you.
      *It is self contradictory and creates cognitive dissonance, reducing and in some cases completely removing your rational capacity.
      *Most religions overtly worship evil, the christian, Hebrew and Islamic god are unquestionably and unfathomably evil as described by your own literature.
      *Its primary means of spreading is the brainwashing of children/mentally damaged and the forced conversion or extermination of unbelievers.
      *It provides in inequitable exchange of authority and wealth because the promise of heaven and threat of hell after death are used to remove wealth and power from the masses and concentrate it in the hands of the church while providing nothing of actual value in return.

      My morality is not dictated to me by an evil sky fairy who promotes hatred, fear, slavery, genocide and a host of other horrors. My morality is a superior morality because it is mine through logic and will. I am a good man, an honest man, a kind man, a just man. I am as good as the best of your kind, not because I was tricked into it, or I fear divine retribution, or because I believe I will be rewarded in heaven, but because I chose to be that way of my own will.

    85. Re:Le sigh by computational+super · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well, I think that you're ugly, and I don't want to see your face. Put a bandana or a burqua over it or stay inside all the time or something. Have some respect for the rights of other people not to have to look at your face.

      --
      Proud neuron in the Slashdot hivemind since 2002.
    86. Re:Le sigh by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      True, but that is not a quality exclusive to religion. Many secular organizations have similar pressures.

    87. Re:Le sigh by Abcd1234 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Both are bodily functions that involve the excretion of fluids.

      Yeah, so's spitting, but any idiot knows that comparing spitting to shitting in public is, well, idiotic.

      Or, to put it another way: If there's anything shitty around here, it's your penchant for false equivalences.

    88. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wouldn't a video of a rape be acceptable as your definition of acceptable porn. I would hope you meant that ALL of those involved were consenting adults.

    89. Re:Le sigh by fey000 · · Score: 1

      Actually, "fuck" is intended to be vulgar. If it were not, another vulgar word would have to be invented. Consider instead "sex" and all others which refer to sex without vulgar, violent or dominating undertones.

    90. Re:Le sigh by easterberry · · Score: 1

      And America has issues with prison overcrowding and dealers using the relation they form with their clientele over pot to segue them into hard drugs in a way that wouldn't happen if the stuff was legal. So saying they have issues is a bit of a "pick your poison" type of argument.

    91. Re:Le sigh by dryeo · · Score: 1

      Don't forget the large government bureaucracy that was created during prohibition to prosecute alcohol use now needed a reason to exist.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    92. Re:Le sigh by anagama · · Score: 1

      I once quit eating sugar or anything with sugar in it for 13 days (didn't take honey or maple syrup or some other sweet substitute -- that would be cheating in my experiement). I don't know how long it would take to get over sugar, but my cravings never diminished, rather they only got worse. Toward the end, thoughts of sweet things basically intruded on every minute, and it was an incredible struggle to refrain. I even had to start cheating, chewing sugar-free gum, but it wouldn't even touch the constant, obsessive thoughts about sugar. I finally broke down, ate a Reeses Peanut Butter cup, and it was probably the most joyful moment of my life.

      Compare that to coffee (I was 4-5 cup a day drinker) -- first day a little dizzy and headache. Second day: headache but more mild than day 1. Third day: headache from time to time. Fourth day: all done, no cravings, no headache, nothing. Totally easy. Sugar is much different.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    93. Re:Le sigh by easterberry · · Score: 1

      And had he said "want to reduce the rate of terrorism some what? remove religion because it is generally more harmful than helpful" then your argument would be correct.

      But he said "want to permanently fix terrorism? remove religion (entirely, from everyone)." and "religion has to be the #1 worst trait of mankind, above all else. it truly is the root of all evil"
       
      So my point that lots of terrible stuff was done by people who weren't religious is an entirely valid counter argument. I'm not saying atheism is bad, I'm a atheist myself. I'm saying that we atheists need to stop pretending we're some magical supergroup who are immune from moral wrong and perfectly flawless and logical and that all religious people are crazy flawed and stupid and that were they to just give up the god they'd stop doing anyting bad ever because all evil comes from religion. It just aint so.

    94. Re:Le sigh by Nadaka · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You are right, it doesn't make much sense. Here is a part that does...

      Imagine you are a major chemical company owned by an old money family with payed political lackeys at every level of government. Lets make up a name for them and call them Dupont.

      Now imagine that you invent an amazing new product with tough weather resistant fibers that are suitable for use in any kind of rope. This is patented and you have the exclusive right to create this material. Lets make up a name for this and call it nylon.

      There is a problem though, there is a cheap widespread naturally occurring fiber that is just as good as your artificial fiber. This means that breaking into the market will be virtually impossible. lets make up a name for this and call it hemp.

      Fortunately there is already racially motivated and puritan dislike of the natural materials source. All you have to do is produce some propaganda to sway the opinions of moderates and maybe buy a few more votes and you can remove the competition completely.

      This not only lets you move into the market, but to completely replace the market for durable weather resistant rope (because hemp was the only affordable alternative with those qualities).

      Dupont is not solely responsible, but they sure as hell were instrumental in the final push that got it banned.

    95. Re:Le sigh by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      Yes, but even if the kid is on a schedule, the schedule may interfere with whatever they are doing, such as being in your class. Also, if the kid is having a growth spurt, sometimes they will want to feed spontaneously, off their regular schedule. Or maybe the kid was feeling cranky at the previous feeding and didn't each as much and therefore needed to feed again ahead of schedule. There's a million reasons why the kid may need to eat during your class. And as long as she feels comfortable feeding the kid in public, why should you judge her.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    96. Re:Le sigh by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      Historical reasons. The fact that those historical reasons no longer exist doesn't mean that they aren't ingrained in our culture for many more generations.

    97. Re:Le sigh by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      They hate it because anything that makes life more enjoyable reduces the impact of the promise of heavan.

      And because the ecstatics (snake dancers, etc, they used to be a lot more common than now) want the only way to get high is through praise and worship.

    98. Re:Le sigh by astar · · Score: 1

      haha, where I live (in the US), there is no legal obstacle to walking down main street nude. Now I can imagine getting off on doing that since exhibitionism is often popular, but, for me, I would have to consider my unattractive belly :-) But you know, I would think the public street is a more intrusive location for bad aesthetics than the public airways. And so I am not quite old enough to really know, but I think within the last century in the US, it was popular to put cloth covers on the legs of the dining room table to avoid the obvious? sexual connotations. Perhaps there was a fear of driving men insane? It might be fun if we could avoid some of the local to time and place rules now and again.

    99. Re:Le sigh by PPH · · Score: 1

      And its all sponsored by proponents of "smaller government".

      Yeah, right.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    100. Re:Le sigh by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      That's not an American trait. That's an asshole and/or dumbass trait.

      It's only a coincidence that they seem to be tied together. Correlation is not causation :P

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    101. Re:Le sigh by GungaDan · · Score: 1

      Physical addiction to marijuana is a myth. It is an habituating drug - you develop a habit of using it. But there is ZERO physical addiction.

      --
      Eloi are stupid, throw morlocks at them!
    102. Re:Le sigh by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      you got insightful and my post which basically said the same thing about religion was -1.

      clearly we can't agree that religion is the root of all evil but at least some of us do see this.

      remove religion and you solve more than half the world's problems as a side-effect.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    103. Re:Le sigh by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      My problem isn't that people follow religions (at all, or not mine) - but rather that they nearly always try to force their associated morality onto others.

      Some religions are much better about that by nature. Others have exceptions to this all in their populous. Still others do not intend to do this (in their texts/teachings I mean) but their followers choose to ignore it.

      That doesn't change the fact that the vast majority seem to feel correct and righteous in forcing these things onto others.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    104. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm saying that if you're willing to show people being killed, you should be willing to show people being fucked.

      Speaking strictly in terms of "monkey see, monkey do" it is easier to copy one without legal repercussions than the other. It is known that not everyone kill, can get a gun or perform an autopsy without authorizations that laws provide... and going through with it can create a new crime --not so with sex.

      Sex is as uncontrolled by the feds as the drug market, and being opening it up to everyone out enforcing the "age license" we put to watch it, it a bit insensitive to the older generation that fights to keep sexual depiction as a pay-for experience that you could normally only get through magazines and cable subscriptions

    105. Re:Le sigh by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      The funny thing about your example - Christian vs Muslim - is that both's teachings don't tell you to go about doing that. People decided to go about it.

      I'm not 100% on the Christianity side of it, since I never bothered to go looking about. Islam, however, considers Christians "People of the Book" and are /supposed/ to be excepted from the whole "kill the heathen" idea.

      That, at least, is my understanding. I don't follow either religion really, so I'm far from an expert.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    106. Re:Le sigh by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      and its kept illegal because politics and 'saying we got it wrong' are 100% opposing concepts.

      its impossible for a politician to say that we got a whole set of behaviors and laws 'wrong' because of special interests. no one ever admits that they got it wrong.

      its the elephant in the room. everyone knows its there but no one can really address it.

      alcohol is far worse for you and for society, but its tolerated. why? because it always HAS been. you HAVE to give the population some form of intoxicant. but because we (as society) have previous defined one intox as good and another as bad, its impossible to reverse that.

      it was never about right and wrong or good or bad. it was all political and economic (mostly protecting dupont!) and since the lines are drawn, now, no one will dare try to reverse it.

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    107. Re:Le sigh by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      ... separating this so that people being asses can mod this down instead.

      Specifically, I'm a Deist.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    108. Re:Le sigh by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      When you don't eat sugar you don't suffer from withdrawal syndroms[SIC] (or very mild one), same for caffeine

      Sorry, but you are wrong on at least caffeine.

      Caffeine comes along with a minor physical dependency. There's some disagreement here on Slashdot as to whether that counts as addiction, but I've noticed addictive-like behavior in myself regarding it.

      And I didn't just read the dependency in a book. My headaches, jitteryness, and foul temper are evidence.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    109. Re:Le sigh by budgenator · · Score: 1

      It's even wackier than that, New York state has an equal rights amendment to their constitution, it's perfectly legal for both men and women to walk around on the street bare-chested and showing a street scene of what's happening outside their doors, on the news can get the network fined.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    110. Re:Le sigh by kalirion · · Score: 1

      Man arrested for "molesting" girls in park by tongue kissing them

      Before or after the story of the thug arrested for "mugging" passerby by hitting them with a beer bottle in the back of the head and taking their wallets?

    111. Re:Le sigh by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      Two issues:

      1. Women should show modesty with their bodies. The simple truth and fact is that most men are visually driven sexually, while most women are not. By a woman remaining modest, she reduces the sexual tensions that should otherwise not exist in a public setting.

      2. Eventually, everyone gets indoctrinated with "adult" themes, but why force the issue with children? Children should be left to "be children" and not forced into being adults until they're ready.

      1a. This is your opionion. I don't happen to agree. Deal with it.
      1b. You'd find yourself wrong, regarding the whole visual stimulation bit. You should try talking to a woman (without being a condescending asshole) and you might learn something.
      2. WTF does this have to do with breast feeding?

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    112. Re:Le sigh by wowbagger · · Score: 1

      "etymological, not entymological"

      Don't worry about it, it's just a bug.

    113. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ad logicam? Yes, religion is not the only reason, but arguments as good as your "we're all bad" argument can be made for religion being a driving force behind many massacres (9/11). Good arguments can be made that it is just a scapegoat. But your simple reduction that there were bad atheist == religion has no ill effects is illogical.

    114. Re:Le sigh by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      Oh, so the epidemics of all kinds of nasty diseases like Syphilis never really existed? But it was easier to just make it "bad" back then (no understanding of things etc) rather than regulate it, and the stigma has stayed for various reasons (mostly relating to imposed morality).

      Gambling... is a bit trickier. I won't get into that.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    115. Re:Le sigh by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      The illegality of prostitution is an archaic thing. We can regulate it now, because we can test for and treat the diseases that might show up.

      Back then... you wouldn't know until it was too late, and then nothing could be done about it.

      However, people seem to like imposing their morality systems onto others, hence it remaining illegal almost everywhere it was made so previously.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    116. Re:Le sigh by ubergeek65536 · · Score: 1

      Adding sugar to food is evil.
      In North America diabetes eats up nearly 15% of the health care budget not to mention the indirect losses such as lost work.

      http://www.google.com/#hl=en&q=health+care+cost+diabetes

    117. Re:Le sigh by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      ... and yet they don't respect that right. Hence, what makes them deserve to have theirs respected?

      I'm not above sinking to that level and going eye for an eye.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    118. Re:Le sigh by shaitand · · Score: 1

      "It should be legal, regulated, and taxed."

      But no more so than any other comparably harmless herbal supplement on the shelf. Almost everything on the shelf is more dangerous and pretty much every regulated over the counter medicine is FAR more dangerous.

      "There should also be prescription strength, because some of the really hard stuff is dangerous."

      Obviously you have no actual knowledge of marijuana. There is no functional difference between different strengths. Stronger marijuana has the exact same effects as the weaker variety, the only difference is the dose.

    119. Re:Le sigh by kilodelta · · Score: 1

      It's the Puritan/Calvinist undercurrent that runs through the United States. Don't forget the original settlers here (The Pilgrims) were people that they really didn't want in England at the time.

      So they endured hardships and came here. It figures that we founded by religious misfits.

    120. Re:Le sigh by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      Can you name one act of terror in the past 20 years that had nothing to do with religion? I know I can't.

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    121. Re:Le sigh by shaitand · · Score: 1

      "haha, where I live (in the US), there is no legal obstacle to walking down main street nude"

      Unless of course you mind getting arrested. Public nudity is illegal (pretty much?) everywhere in the US.

    122. Re:Le sigh by BaronHethorSamedi · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm going to gently point out that some people have been known to do good things in the name of whatever god they worship. Set up hospitals/shelters/disaster relief efforts. Even missionary efforts in less developed areas. Sure, they'll hand out the Bible/Koran/Book of Mormon, etc., but that may also entail teaching people to read, setting up schools where none existed before, or teaching basic hygiene and health habits to communities that might not otherwise receive those benefits.

      If you want to argue about religion, blast away, but it's not entirely honest to cite only the bad things that flow from it, without acknowledging the good.

    123. Re:Le sigh by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      How can you equate the two?

      You proposed a war of extermination against all religions. And indicated that this war would eliminate all terrorism and prevent a religious war that could end the world.

      I made a statement relating the effect and means of politics and religion.

    124. Re:Le sigh by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      It's perfectly okay to show titties, as long as they're sagging 3rd world titties.

    125. Re:Le sigh by bjk002 · · Score: 1

      "teachings don't tell you to go about doing that. People decided to go about it."

      I think you are proving his point for him...

      People, with their own independent thought processes, are capable and most often willing to allow for interpretation to suit their needs, whatever those needs may be, up to and including killing their neighbor because he/she doesn't "believe".

      Religion is not the enemy per se, it is a human being's BELIEF in a religion that is the real problem.

      --
      Opinion:=TMyOpinion.Create(Me);
    126. Re:Le sigh by shaitand · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Everyone is forgetting the oil industry backing as well. You see people always think of oil in cars. What they forget is all the oil that goes into the production of plastics.

      Plastics can be made from plant oils, unfortunately they aren't very strong. Ford demonstrated the solution in the body of an old automobile prototype. If you reinforce the plant plastics with the strong fibers from the hemp plant you have a dirt cheap and very strong versatile plastic... patent free.

      That's the problem with the hemp plant it is extremely versatile and yes there is money to be made with it, but there are no patents. Why make lots of money on a product when any farmer can compete with a patch of dirt when you can outlaw the cheap and freely available competition and flood the market with patented solutions? Its the same reason the drug industry hates marijuana and continues to release minor modifications of their drugs with new names and fresh new patents.

    127. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Ehem... Stalin had millions of Christians killed because they refused to convert to Atheism.
      Citation: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persecution_of_Christians_in_the_Soviet_Union#Anti-religious_campaign_1921-1928

    128. Re:Le sigh by mldi · · Score: 1

      First, nudity is not porn.

      Second, here's how I look at it. EVERYBODY fucks. VERY FEW people kill, maim, torture, or disembowel somebody. So why do we think showing a boob is a bad thing? Everybody's seen one. Therefore, it shouldn't be a shock. Seeing someone's gutted corpse, however, should cause one hell of a shitstorm by comparison.

      To add to the irony, if the part in question is maimed or sliced up or disfigured horribly, then it's OK to show. It's like the only organ that's not allowed on TV is your skin, which even more ironically is your most exposed organ in the first place.

      Absolutely fucking retarded.

      --
      If you aren't suspicious of your government's actions, you aren't doing your job as a responsible citizen.
    129. Re:Le sigh by spamking · · Score: 1

      What's your point? If she pulled out a bottle it would have been ok?

      I never once said it wasn't ok. I simply commented that if you're going to pull out the boob that doing it on the front row might not be the best place to do it. Use some common sense.

      What's the difference?

      The difference between a boob and a bottle? Do I really need to respond to this?

      It was only an issue because YOU decided to view it as such.

      Did I was say it caused a problem for me at the time? Did I once say I asked to stop? Nope. I was simply posting my experience as it related to the topic.

    130. Re:Le sigh by spamking · · Score: 1

      Yes, but even if the kid is on a schedule, the schedule may interfere with whatever they are doing, such as being in your class. Also, if the kid is having a growth spurt, sometimes they will want to feed spontaneously, off their regular schedule. Or maybe the kid was feeling cranky at the previous feeding and didn't each as much and therefore needed to feed again ahead of schedule. There's a million reasons why the kid may need to eat during your class. And as long as she feels comfortable feeding the kid in public, why should you judge her.

      I wasn't judging anyone. But since you brought it up, if you do something in PUBLIC don't get all butt hurt if someone disagrees with it.

      My wife and I have two kids . . . I know full well how things can get off schedule. I was simply implying that people CAN plan for things.

    131. Re:Le sigh by mldi · · Score: 1

      Exactly. When ya gotta go ya gotta go.

      But really, I think everything should just be about mutual respect. The woman breastfeeding doesn't just get a free pass for unpopular public behavior just because a kid is involved. She should be aware of where she's at and what's going on. That being said, I don't have a problem with public breastfeeding if that's just what she's gotta do at that given time. However, if it doesn't take much effort to move out of the center of attention, I think that should be done. It's still a private act between mother and child, and I don't think it should be put on display so readily and just expect everyone else to avert their eyes and go out of their way to make sure she's undisturbed. I've seen some women make it a point to sit on the bench in the mall in the area with the most traffic, whip out a boob without bothering to cover anything up, and feed the kid. The kid wasn't crying or anything so it didn't appear hungry, plus there was another empty bench not 20ft away that was less attention-getting. Now, in that instance, I think she should have just moved to the less attention-getting bench out of respect for everyone else around her. Not in the act of being ashamed or anything, just simply out of respect. However, if she couldn't or there wasn't room anywhere else or <insert some other excuse here>, fine.

      Just, really, try to be respectful. Some people may find it offensive. I'm not asking for you to tip-toe around, but at least don't intentionally create waves.

      --
      If you aren't suspicious of your government's actions, you aren't doing your job as a responsible citizen.
    132. Re:Le sigh by gfreeman · · Score: 2, Informative

      Can you name one act of terror in the past 20 years that had nothing to do with religion? I know I can't.

      Explain Justin Beiber.

      --
      Ceci n'est pas un sig.
    133. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In BOTH CASES it's because of their belief in God. The do it in the name of their God.

      Wrong and right, respectively. God provides an excuse for people to do the shitty things they already want to do. If he wasn't available, they'd just find another excuse.

    134. Re:Le sigh by gfreeman · · Score: 1

      If you want to argue about religion, blast away, but it's not entirely honest to cite only the bad things that flow from it, without acknowledging the good.

      Unless you can prove that the religious are more likely to set up hospitals/shelters/disaster relief efforts, then it's entirely honest to cite only the bad things that flow from religion.

      There are a large number of secular organisations that are front and centre when it comes to setting up hospitals/shelters/disaster relief efforts.

      --
      Ceci n'est pas un sig.
    135. Re:Le sigh by mldi · · Score: 1

      But people also murder in the name of greed, selfishness, power, vengeance, because they're batshit crazy, some other non-religious cult, being brainwashed, etc. There are a billion reasons why people kill. And just because they belong to a particular group, you can't subscribe that group to being behind it all. Eliminating the group won't eliminate the extremists. And that's what these modern wars are about, extremists.

      Also, religious persecution has been around for a very long time as well. People have been killed for simply being religious. Let's not pretend that never happens.

      Don't be ridiculous.

      --
      If you aren't suspicious of your government's actions, you aren't doing your job as a responsible citizen.
    136. Re:Le sigh by k8to · · Score: 1

      It's pretty easily shown that Pol Pot and company had their own breed of dogma which occupied exactly the same kind of mental slot that religion has had for many other "justified" horror shows.

      This both agrees and disagrees with your premise. No, religion doesn't have an exclusive lock on this sort of crap. Yes, it does participate frequently.

      --
      -josh
    137. Re:Le sigh by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      There is a difference here, sugar has been a nutritious and even vital part of the human diet for millions of years, caffeine not so much.

      You are genetically predisposed to desire sugar by millions of years of evolution. You are only chemically predisposed to desire caffeine by a temporary chemical imbalance in your body.

    138. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One of the nurses (WTF? shouldn't they be the most understanding?) came out from behind their counter and told her not to feed her child there and suggested the rest room.

      Did this happen at a time when breast feeding in public was protected by law (i.e., within the past several years)? If so, I'm surprised this nurse didn't get fired and blackballed from any other nursing position. Not only should they be the most understanding, but they also should be the most supportive of breast feeding considering its health benefits. Plus, any nurse who would suggest that you feed your infant in as unsanitary a place as a restroom has no business in the health care field. Even if this happened before the law was passed, that nurse should be ashamed.

    139. Re:Le sigh by Donkey_Hotey · · Score: 1
      Er, there's this new thing I keep hearing about. Maybe you've heard of it: "correlation!=causation." I'm told it's the latest fashion in London.

      http://www.diabetes.org/diabetes-basics/diabetes-myths/

      --
      (There is supposed to be a Sarcmark® here, but my $1.99 check hasn't cleared, yet...)
    140. Re:Le sigh by sznupi · · Score: 1

      Fear of new competition, period of transformation & loosing control over some market can be all easily greater than the perspective of maybe somewhat lower (& with externalities), but certain, profits (if maintaining present course)

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    141. Re:Le sigh by gfreeman · · Score: 1

      Why can't you take a shit in public?

      Seriously? You haven't thought that through? Hygiene. People are urged, through the legal framework, to shit where there's plumbing that can deal with it. I've crapped in a few public lavatories where the stalls have walls that are low enough for you to see and talk to the person in the next one. I have little problem with the concept, everyone shits. Public toilets are there to be used.

      Drugs, prostitution, and gambling are all social ills with well-documented effects.

      Whoa there, Scooter. I do drugs (yummy alcohol for a start), I prostitute my body to my gf plus my brain to my employer, and I play the national lottery. I expect I'm not that much different from most people in my country, so please be a bit more specific when tarring us all with your "social ills" brush.

      --
      Ceci n'est pas un sig.
    142. Re:Le sigh by easterberry · · Score: 1

      But that's not my argument. HIS argument is that religion is the number one cause of evil and that religion is the only cause of terrorism.

      I'm not arguing that Religion is never bad. It often is. I'm arguing that religion is not the only source of anything bad in which case my atheist argument is not only logical but basically a complete checkmate to the grandiose statements about religion he made.

    143. Re:Le sigh by sznupi · · Score: 1

      The solution was actually sort of demonstrated on a much larger scale by Trabant. While its body wasn't produced, I think, from plant oils, it did use plant waste (might as well have been hemp, even if it wasn't ever used); supposedly is edible...

      --
      One that hath name thou can not otter
    144. Re:Le sigh by gfreeman · · Score: 1

      True, but that is not a quality exclusive to religion. Many secular organizations have similar pressures.

      Name three.

      --
      Ceci n'est pas un sig.
    145. Re:Le sigh by easterberry · · Score: 1

      since my premise was that the statement:

      want to permanently fix terrorism? remove religion (entirely, from everyone).

      is wrong. It completely agrees with my premise since all I have to show is that removing religion would not magically fix all terrorism forever.

    146. Re:Le sigh by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

      The only thing that separates a nurse from anyone else is the material they chose to memorize during school.

      And the situations they encounter as part of their job.

    147. Re:Le sigh by Slime-dogg · · Score: 1

      Pot is illegal because blacks and Mexicans smoked it, and hemp was threatening the cotton and (wood) paper industries.

      And oil! Hemp seed oil was the most used fuel at the turn of the 20th century. It threatened the petroleum, wood, and cotton industries, and had to go. The hysteria generated to help public acceptance of a ban was the racial stuff.

      --
      You need to restart your computer. Hold down the Power button for several seconds or press the Restart button.
    148. Re:Le sigh by md65536 · · Score: 1

      Same connotations? This thread is now movie and tv quotes where "fuck" and "kill" are interchanged.

      God there's too much! I'll even pick just one movie...
      -----

      Good night, Westley. Good work. Sleep well. I'll most likely fuck you in the morning.

      I have some rope up here, but I do not think you would accept my help, since I am only waiting around to fuck you.
      - That does put a damper on our relationship.

      Fuck me quickly.
      - I would sooner destroy a stained glass window than an artist like yourself.

      You mean, you'll put down your rock and I'll put down my sword, and we'll try to fuck each other like civilized people?
      - I could fuck you now.

      So all we have to do is get in, break up the wedding, steal the princess, make our escape... after I fuck Count Rugen.

      Hello. My name is Inigo Montoya. You fucked my father. Prepare to die.

    149. Re:Le sigh by sjames · · Score: 1

      Gods come in many forms. Some kill in the name of their anthropomorphic image of an all powerful creator from which all goodness flows.

      Some kill in the name of the Revolution from which all goodness flows.

      Some kill in the name of the Free Market, from which all goodness flows.

      The one constant is that the greatest sin is suggesting that their god is false or that they are false prophets of that god. For that, they kill faster.

    150. Re:Le sigh by j-turkey · · Score: 1

      Actually, "fuck" is intended to be vulgar. If it were not, another vulgar word would have to be invented. Consider instead "sex" and all others which refer to sex without vulgar, violent or dominating undertones.

      I don't think that I agree with this. While this may have been a valid observation many years ago, I believe that the idea of the word "fuck" being vulgar (in an absolute sense) is not longer completely valid. It completely depends on the intent of the user. There's a massive difference between saying "aw, fuck it" and "fuck that pussy - hard". One is a colloquialism, and the other is intentionally vulgar.

      There's no need for me to go into how "fuck" has worked its way into every part of speech in American English. My point is that the use of an expletive does not, in and of itself, suggest a vulgar intent. It can be intended and/or used that way, but this is not absolute.

      --

      -Turkey

    151. Re:Le sigh by spamking · · Score: 1

      Really? I'm so hurt.

      "Insightful" . . . right.

    152. Re:Le sigh by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      Any union.
      Any police force.
      Any family.

    153. Re:Le sigh by supersloshy · · Score: 1

      Belief in a higher power is bad, horrible and destructive. Whether the higher power is a God, or an unquestioning faith in the government.

      Religion doesn't encourage stupidity. Religion enables stupidity just as everything else in the world does. If you'd like to pretend that atheists can't be crazy then go ahead. I'm a Christian who actually knows what God wants from us, mind you, and killing is not even close to being on the list. There will always be idiots, and you just have to deal with them. Religion doesn't change how idiotic someone is, rather it can make them less idiotic. The ones that will always stay idiots and don't care about not being an idiot will always do idiotic things, such as killing people "in the name of God".

      --
      "Our country is not nearly so overrun with the bigoted as it is overrun with the broadminded." -Archbishop Fulton Sheen
    154. Re:Le sigh by fuzznutz · · Score: 1

      That's the kind of thinking that has people registering as a sex offender for life just for pissing in public. I had a friend who committed suicide because he was arrested for pissing in some bushes and was facing "sex" charges. Assault is assault and there is no need to infer sexual connotations. It cheapens real sexual assault crimes. I always thought kissing, with or without permission, and molesting were two different animals.

    155. Re:Le sigh by IndustrialComplex · · Score: 1

      I never once said it wasn't ok. I simply commented that if you're going to pull out the boob that doing it on the front row might not be the best place to do it. Use some common sense.

      I am using common sense. If it isn't something wrong, why should she be concerned about moving elsewhere?

      If she did something wrong, then I'd like to know what was wrong. If not, then you don't really have a strong position to object, which by suggesting that she shouldn't have done what she did, you ARE objecting to her behavior. I'm curious why.

      --
      Out of modpoints but really liked a post? 1BDkF6TtmmeZ3yqXbz9yhdYVqRYnwFoXDj
    156. Re:Le sigh by astar · · Score: 2, Informative

      As I said, no legal obstacle. Really. I live in Oregon. Mostly public nudity here is used as an attention driver for some sort of political demonstration. No cop problems. Not even any public outrage problems. There are some odd circumstances where people feel obliged to criminalize public nudity in particular locations in particular cities, but really, we just do not seem to be inclined to get around to making a big thing out of this.

      It happens that if you are severely depressed, for some reason, an identifying symptom is standing in your window and exposing yourself to little kids. I have read of it happening in this state and people do not like it, but it is not like it is illegal.

      Hmm, I used to live in a small town in Washington. Some nude drunk was wandering up and down the middle of main street in the middle of the night. The local cops wanted to arrest him but could not. Nudity was not illegal and there was no motor vehicle involved.

      I have not noticed any big collapses of the local social fabric.

      A cite is sometime useful: try this

      http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2009294723_webnudeman03m.html

      Kind of an overview

    157. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is why we need a "-1, Wrong" mod.

    158. Re:Le sigh by IndustrialComplex · · Score: 1

      And the situations they encounter as part of their job.

      You might be surprised that what people encounter during a job might even make someone develop beliefs that run counter to your own.

      I'd suggest that someone not nurse a child in an ER waiting room because those places are breeding grounds for communicable diseases. At least in a bathroom (I agree a separate area would be better than a BR) the child won't be eating in the presence of people with influenza and other infectious agents. Reducing airflow that is shared with these people might not be a bad idea.

      I didn't wait with my infant daughter in the waiting room at the ER for this exact purpose. I didn't let her diaper bag touch anything, and generally was very cautious.

      But back on point, nurses can EASILY draw different conclusions even when exposed to the same situations just because they are different people. And being exposed to ER situations won't cause them to react in a manner that everyone would agree with in all circumstances.

      --
      Out of modpoints but really liked a post? 1BDkF6TtmmeZ3yqXbz9yhdYVqRYnwFoXDj
    159. Re:Le sigh by unr3a1 · · Score: 1

      The belief in a power that takes them above the law of man. by it's very nature, means people will feel anything they do in their gods name is good and morally correct thing to do.

      Belief in a higher power is bad, horrible and destructive. Whether the higher power is a God, or an unquestioning faith in the government.

      Then these people do not truly follow their religions. The people that kill in the name of their god are extremists in their religion and do not and should not be the staple that we base our opinions of the general people of those religions. Neither Christianity nor Islam condone killing people in the name of God or Allah. The original person is correct.

      People do bad things because it's a part of their nature, not because they believe in a higher power.

    160. Re:Le sigh by spamking · · Score: 1

      If somebody makes a good point, indignantly insist that he said something else. American debate at its finest.

      Or attack them for it . . . apparently that's a good debate tactic as well.

    161. Re:Le sigh by kalirion · · Score: 1

      I always thought kissing, with or without permission, and molesting were two different animals.

      All rape might be molestation, but not all molestation is rape. Coming up to little girls and "tongue kissing" them is a rather good example of molestation I'd say.

    162. Re:Le sigh by DrgnDancer · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I can't, but only because religion is so often used as an excuse for doing things that we wanna do anyway. I'm no kind of seriously religious, so I'm not offended by the idea that religion is the cause of terrorism, but no more do I believe it. I spent a year in Iraq. One of the things that the Army learned early is that a happy young man with a food on his table, a safe place to send his kids or younger siblings, and prospects for the future is almost never a terrorist. (Note the "almost". It does happen, but very, very rarely) Terrorist organizations recruit from the poorest of the poor, and they make concrete promises that a young man can understand and appreciate:

      DRAMATIZATION:

      "Go kill yourself blowing up the Americans. We will take care of your family, give them money, food, and protection. Also blah blah blah blah Allah, blah blah."

      "Oh, yes? Blah, blah Allah? Yes! So um, you'll take care of may family? They'll be safe and have food?"

      "Of course, we honor the families of Martyrs! Blah Allah!"

      "Well as long as my sacrifice will make them happy... Oh, yeah, blah Allah, blah blah."

      Look at any conflict which appears to have religion at its root, and mostly likely you will find that there are economic, political, racial, and/or cultural roots so deeply intertwined with the religion that you can't really separate them. A lot of the reason religion appears to be the source of so much tension is the natural tendency of religious people to assume that their God must support what they are doing. Look at Northern Ireland. Catholics vs Protestants, yes? When do the think the last time most IRA bombers were in a Church? Catholic vs Protestant is just easier to demark than "Native Gaelic Residents Who have a Bit of Norse and Some Germanic in Them" vs "Recently (in the last 400 or years) Immigrated Gaelic (With a Good Bit More Germanic and a Very Germanic Culture) Residents Who Also Have a Bit of Norse in Them" which is really what the fighting is about.

      --
      I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.
    163. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obviously you have no actual knowledge of marijuana. There is no functional difference between different strengths. Stronger marijuana has the exact same effects as the weaker variety, the only difference is the dose.

      Obviously you have not had any very good pot, or hash.

      There is definitely a functional difference - or at least a difference in how you function - between, say, smoking some shit weed, and eatying 4 grammes of ice hash.

      Go try it in Amsterdam if you don't believe me.

      Marijuana is a hallucinogen, and if you eat 4 grammes of good hash you will be having them.

      Regards.

    164. Re:Le sigh by unr3a1 · · Score: 1

      Also forgot to remind you that there are twisted people of all beliefs (the belief in nothing is still a belief). Just because Pol Pot and Stalin didn't "kill in the name of atheism" doesn't mean that others haven't and certainly doesn't mean that Pol Pot and Stalin are "better" than people who kill in the name of their deity. It's still senseless killing and they are equally bad.

    165. Re:Le sigh by Smauler · · Score: 1

      Anonymous Coward: you're in favour [sic] of porn during kid's prime time

      Just to let you know, favour is the correct English spelling.

    166. Re:Le sigh by networkBoy · · Score: 1

      Thank you.
      Hadn't thought about that.
      Now I will.

      --
      whois gawk date unzip strip find touch finger mount join nice man top fsck grep eject more yes exit umount sleep dump
    167. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've had women breastfeed in front of me and I tend to look the other way because it's a private moment between mother and child (even if it takes place in a public setting) and it is rude to stare.

      So should breastfeeding be a public or private act? Kinda sounds like you just argued it should be both...

    168. Re:Le sigh by geekoid · · Score: 1

      no. They are extremist in civilized countries, every where else is SOP.

      I am talking about a huge majority. How can you say 10,000 churches who vocalize there desire to kill other people an extreme minority?

      "People do bad things because it's a part of their nature, not because they believe in a higher power."

      No. People will do bad things when they becomes convinced it the right thing to do. Unquestioning belief is how you get people to do that. Complete belief that their god is the only moral right belief and everone else is sent from the devil to get them.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    169. Re:Le sigh by gfreeman · · Score: 1

      Any union.

      No - I've joined and left two unions, and never felt any pressure to "not break from the group"

      Any police force.

      No - police retire from the force/service all the time.

      Any family.

      No - you don't know my family.

      Try again. 0 for 3 so far.

      --
      Ceci n'est pas un sig.
    170. Re:Le sigh by easterberry · · Score: 1

      Yes, thank god we outlawed prostitution and STDs ceased to exist entirely. And there's certainly no longer any deadly epidemics of them going around... Oh wait.

    171. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd agree with you except for one inaccurate definition:

      "privatized prisons" do not exist. You cannot call it a free enterprise if the employer is the state. That kind of business is better called a utility, an artificial franchise, a corporation or most accurately, an example of economic fascism. When a state steals money from us and gives it to a group of people in exchange for its services, they may not be directly run by the state in the manner of socialism where production is directly planned by a central authority, but they are still indirectly on the payroll of the state. The corporation in question bribes the state bureaucrats for state protection and tax money(and in this case favorable drug laws to imprison non violent people).

      That is not the definition of privatization, and the distinction isn't pedantic. It is the difference between society wanting to pay for this obscene imprisonment and entrenched minorities paying the government to make us pay for it. If this system were truly privatized, these places would only exist in few parts of this country where the local society favors such insane practices. Even then, only those groups that were willing to pay for the costs upfront(rather than be put into debt or lose wealth through inflation or taxes in all the obfuscated ways we are forced to pay for things now) would have them and when the true cost is exposed, that number becomes very small.

    172. Re:Le sigh by Omestes · · Score: 1

      I'm not disagreeing with the base premise; that American prudishness is stupid. You wrong about breasts though, they do have some sexual function, they (or at least the nipples) are considered to be erogenous zones. I would have included a link to Wikipedia, but Chrome has for some reason decided that I should not be allowed to use the paste function anymore.

      Granted this doesn't subtract from your point, since some consider the ear lobes to be such zones as well.

      I got severely reprimanded when I was going to community college for publicly saying the word "nipple". I said it about a statue that was on campus, which was a female torso with breasts, but completely lacking nipples. Someone overheard this, and told security that I was being lewd. Security supported the random prude, and threatened disciplinary action.

      --
      A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
    173. Re:Le sigh by geekoid · · Score: 1

      "(the belief in nothing is still a belief)"

      just like not collecting stamp is a hobby.

      Stop spouting nonsense.

      Pol Pot and Stalin both killed for a higher belief. They believed that their form of government is above the people.

      .

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    174. Re:Le sigh by easterberry · · Score: 1

      that guy who flew a plane into an IRS building earlier this year because he hated taxes

    175. Re:Le sigh by Jedi+Alec · · Score: 1

      Specifically don't want to start a flame war...
      Why despise religion? I am religious, but I also acknowledge that we all have free will to decide what, if any, religion we follow.

      My problem with religion is not that I don't want adult people believing whatever it is they want to believe in. My issue is with the fact that on a massive scale we feed children superstitions and, contrary to the local version of Santa and the Easter bunny, we go on letting them believe that for the remainder of their life. And even those that really don't believe will still allow the same to be done to the next generation.

      I find it interesting that the human psyche seems hardwired to believe in a higher power. Go back through history and you will find some form of theism in almost every culture. Whether it is belief in ancient ancestors, all powerful God/Allah/Yahweh, the Greek/Roman/Norse/Egyptian gods, Gaea etc. That we appear to be hardwired for it makes me wonder.

      I'll be the first to admit that religion is throughout all of human culture. There are things out there that are scary, unfair, that we cannot understand or influence etc. And within every group of people there will be one who's just a little smarter than the rest who will be more than happy to fill in the gaps and tell us what we can do about it, usually in such a way that said individual inexplicable comes out a little better.

      I despise religion for the very same reasons that many Slashdotians despise/fear government. No matter how pure it may be at first, within no time it becomes a tool for people to control other people. It becomes a means of shirking responsibility, for claiming "God's Will" in those situations where we have no explanations (yet), etc.

      Free will? Maybe...but when religion has been force-fed to you from the age of 4 and your entire peer group consists of people for whom the same applies...you're in a big heap of trouble if you want out.

      --

      People replying to my sig annoy me. That's why I change it all the time.
    176. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Nevermind if she's just taking a small portion of it out to feed her child,"

      Wow, sorry, no, you've been brainwashed. That's bullshit. CNN covered this, and MOST of the women advocating this in a political fashion are saying it's okay to go full bare, not covered, full display. There's an entire group saying full frontal one side is fine. Airplanes, restaurants, whatever.

      I hate the word decency. And I get the point that they are probably pushing for these open laws so as to not get the minor indecent uncovered breast mothers cited up. But I've also seen too much basic flagrant "look at me, I've breastfeeding, give me attention" (usually at shopping malls) too. I don't think the baby's head should be covered, or that the breast has to be totally covered or anything like that; I just think it should be discreetly done. Many women who practice open breast feeding DO NOT do this.

      And that's what really annoys people. I still remember when I was like 7yo, and a relative breast fed at the dinner table at a small family gathering. Very conservative family, conservative area politically at the time. No one was insulted, said a bad word, or was suprised. Natural thing to do. Myself, I was surprised but not insulted, taken back, or threatened. It was decent and done with class, shirt went up halfway, baby got tucked underneath and latched, shirt pulled up rest of way on one side and wrapped around breast. I never saw anything since I didn't stare, and there probably wasn't anything to see until release and that was for a fraction of a second before the shirt went down.

      Compare that to the woman at the restaurant who pulled her shirt up the whole way on one side, left an open breast flopping while talking to her husband as she fussed around and leaned over to get a towel, never latched the baby the entire time, then fed the baby totally open while carrying on. I wasn't the only person who found this a little annoying, as it seemed most conversation and eating stopped. Of course, when the waitress asked her to partly covered, she threw a fit. Maybe a mechanism not to pay for the meal or a tip.

      So maybe consider that most people who stand against breast feeding in public aren't against public breast feeding, but we've gotten to this point because it's easier to say no to everyone than to those many who can't do it "right." There's also the point to be said when you hear many of the totally open breast feeding advocates saying "breasts aren't sexual objects" crap--like hell lady, you don't know what the hell you are talking about.

    177. Re:Le sigh by xav_jones · · Score: 1

      Props to you. Well done! Speaking out for common sense when a situation arises is what this world needs much more of.

    178. Re:Le sigh by easterberry · · Score: 1

      Actually it's believed to be an evolutionary throwback from male primates liking big asses because the meant wide hips and therefore good breeding. When we started walking upright our perception changed and there were two new large fatty lumps slightly below eye level.

    179. Re:Le sigh by unr3a1 · · Score: 1

      The amount of people that do it means nothing. They are still twisting and misinterpreting their beliefs to justify it. I will reiterate, neither the Christian nor Islam religions condone killing people in the name of God or Allah. 99% of the people in both religions could be out killing people in the name of God or Allah. All that means is that 99% of the people in both religions have gone completely against the moral standards their religions require.

    180. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not everyone was a hippie back then. The news just reported on them more so that it seemed like everyone was a hippie. Many more people were still quite conservative.

    181. Re:Le sigh by farble1670 · · Score: 1

      i'm confused. are you comparing babies shitting all over in public to breastfeeding?

      the difference, if you can't figure it out, is that having shit all over the place is a health hazard. where breast feeding can't harm anyone. or maybe you like crying screaming hungry babies better than seeing part of a breast? not to mention, there are a lot more public bathrooms than there are public breast feeding rooms. and no, it's not possible to breast feed in a bathroom considering the state of most public restrooms.

    182. Re:Le sigh by Omestes · · Score: 1

      Oh, so the epidemics of all kinds of nasty diseases like Syphilis never really existed?

      STDs alone are hardly a good reason to outlaw prostitution completely. If they were, we would have laws against casual sex. Actually, we might have to ban all sex, since herpes exists in a very large portion of the population.

      Not to say prostitution isn't a bit morally ambiguous. On one hand, consenting adults should be allowed to do whatever the hell they want (as long as it isn't harmful to a 3rd party), for money or for free. On the other hand, prostitution is generally exploitive of woman (not in the "zomg, the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit edition is exploitive to women!!1one!"), and often doesn't really involve a strong element of free choice for the prostitute. It is a job of desperation, not a decent career choice taken willfully. Not many young girls say "I want to grow up to be a whore" (AFAIK, time do change). Generally people end up there because of addiction or being forced into it against their will.

      If prostitution was to be legal it would have to be heavily regulated to keep such lopsided relationships from existing. Either that or there should be a prostitute's union.

      --
      A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
    183. Re:Le sigh by unr3a1 · · Score: 1

      Your stamp statement does not parallel what I said about a belief in nothing.

      belief - as defined on dictionary.com

      belief

      –noun
      1. something believed; an opinion or conviction: a belief that the earth is flat.
      2. confidence in the truth or existence of something not immediately susceptible to rigorous proof: a statement unworthy of belief.
      3. confidence; faith; trust: a child's belief in his parents.
      4. a religious tenet or tenets; religious creed or faith: the Christian belief.

      atheism:

      atheism

      –noun
      1. the doctrine or belief that there is no god.
      2. disbelief in the existence of a supreme being or beings.

      Atheism is a belief.

    184. Re:Le sigh by Omestes · · Score: 1

      Most gay folks were also squeezed out of a vagina at some point in time!

      The horror, the horror.

      (I realize you are, probably, being facetious)

      --
      A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
    185. Re:Le sigh by tophermeyer · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I might not have been so understanding, I'm generally not so ok with the public breastfeeding, but I too get pissed off when breastfeeding mothers are shooed into the bathroom. Bathrooms are dirty, and are no place to be feeding a child. My response in your place would have been to excuse myself to offer her some privacy.

      An offer of a private place would have been the right course there, especially from a nurse. Obviously that woman did not bring her two small children to the ER just to find something to do for the night, she was probably stressed out enough as it was without having to worry about feeding her child. I fail to understand how so many places are not family friendly.

      I'm not religious, but as a kid my mom took me to church. I remember the church had a separated sound-insulated private area for parents to bring small children. The kids would scream, breastfeed, and get their diapers changed in privacy while the sermon was piped in through speakers. Why don't places like hospitals have spaces like these?

    186. Re:Le sigh by brainboyz · · Score: 1

      Most places, yes, but not all by a long shot.

    187. Re:Le sigh by Omestes · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In short, I want the religious right to leave me alone, and be respectful of my desire to watch what I want to watch. But I think there's a flipside to that coin. I think it's also reasonable for us to accomodate people who don't want their kids (or themselves) exposed to such things. They have a resonable (if prudish) expectation that Janet's nipple not be shown during what is considered a gathering event for all of America. You respect my rights to what I want, and I'll respect your rights to what you want.

      I disagree. We shouldn't go out of our way to offend them. But we shouldn't regulate on the standards of the most restrictive minority, either. Why stop at most prude and restrictive of Christian sects, when we should be trying our hardest to accommodated the morals of extreme Islam, we wouldn't want them to be offended either. Freedom should be the default, people should self-regulate by their tastes. If youy find something offensive, change the channel, walk the other way, avert your eyes, etc... It isn't my responsibility to make sure your restrictive sensibilities are respected. It sure as hell isn't the government's job.

      Respecting others, and regulation from on high are very different things, or at least they should be.

      --
      A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
    188. Re:Le sigh by Omestes · · Score: 1

      So thats why I can't say "fork" on national television!

      --
      A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
    189. Re:Le sigh by tophermeyer · · Score: 1

      I've read that breast milk contains a large amount of dihydrogen monoxide. And we all know how dangerous that can be!

    190. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are right in some sense, but consider the case of someone who has mental illness. For example, I have a form of schizophrenia and depression. If people smoke pot around me, I start to get very bad hallucinations and my ability to rationally judge my thought is marginalized. I cannot possibly convey how uncomfortable it feels to slowly lose control of your sanity during a period of about 30 minutes.

      Maybe my life sucks since I can't do drugs or abuse any prescription medications to get high. But I know it sucks less when I feel like a normal person.

      My stance is that people can smoke whatever they want, but I want to be left out of it.

    191. Re:Le sigh by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      I suffer no ill-effects from not drinking coffee. I drink it because I love the flavor. I don't drink cheap coffee (nor decaf, not because I need the caffeine, but because it's all terrible tasting stuff). If I can't have good coffee, then I prefer to have no coffee. That's hardly the definition of addiction.

      It doesn't keep me awake at night, give me the jitters or give me headaches when I stop. I understand these things happen for some people, but not all.

      Besides, I think there are enough studies now showing the benefits of coffee can outweigh any supposed addictive qualities.

      Being addicted to something is only bad if it has bad effects. I'm not sure coffee has that (for me, at least).

    192. Re:Le sigh by unr3a1 · · Score: 1

      The other misconception is that "10,000 churches" represents a "huge majority" of Christians world wide. Well over a billion people on earth follow the Christian religion. Even if every church out of that 10,000 had 300 people in their congregation, that's only 3 million people who support their views. For the sake of simplicity, say there is only a billion Christians in the world.

      3,000,000/1,000,000,000 = 0.003%. Hardly a "huge majority"

    193. Re:Le sigh by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      Both are bodily functions that excrete fluids--one of which is meant to sustain human life. Man, what kind of low-brow logical fallacy is that, comparing human excrement to the staple of all mammals on Earth?

      Anyone who thinks breast feeding in public is wrong in any form just needs to go away.

      Thankfully here in Texas the woman has the right to breast feed her child "anywhere she is legally allowed to be".

    194. Re:Le sigh by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      We don't get many laws right here in Texas but this one we did:

      Sec. 165.002. RIGHT TO BREAST-FEED.
      A mother is entitled to breast-feed her baby in any location in which the mother
      is authorized to be.

    195. Re:Le sigh by Smauler · · Score: 1

      There has been a huge push by the 'enlightened' to view the latin (and tangentially, French) origins as 'pure' and the german origins as 'impure'. It's the same reason that a taboo was created with regard to ending sentences with prepositions, it was something not done in latin, but due to the germanic structure of English, some sentences do sound and appear better when ended with a preposition. We aren't speaking Latin (or French), so a lot of the rules are just appeals to tradition. A tradition started as a mild cultural cleansing.

      What's interesting about this is that in England, the upper class see french/latin derived words as pretentious a lot of the time. Anyone who uses toilet or serviette over loo or napkin is looked down on. If you want to seem posh in England, stick to anglo-saxon words. The fucking Fulfords would approve.

      Now, why anyone should look upon the English aristocracy as an aspirational model is another question...

    196. Re:Le sigh by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      One mans terrorist is another mans patriot, and yet another mans wacked out nutjob.

    197. Re:Le sigh by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

      So...taking a shit does not sustain life? Try sewing your asshole shut and see how long you live. I give you a week, tops, before sepsis.

      Here in China breast-feeding in public is considered distasteful. So all of them need to go away? Racist fuckwad.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    198. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that guy who flew a plane into an IRS building earlier this year because he hated taxes

      You mean the guy who's suicide note included, "In particular, zeroed in on a section relating to the wonderful "exemptions" that make institutions like the vulgar, corrupt Catholic Church so incredibly wealthy." I agree it's not much, but it's *something* to do with religion.

    199. Re:Le sigh by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      That stuff is everywhere these days. It's a powerful solvent and will corrode metal, and yet they've *loaded* our drinking reservoirs with it!

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    200. Re:Le sigh by easterberry · · Score: 1

      Did you have a point or were you just praising the man who flew a plane into a building trying to kill the people inside?

    201. Re:Le sigh by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      Why can't you take a shit in public?

      Because it smells bad and is extremely unhygienic.

      Or, to put it in terms your tiny brain might be able to comprehend, it bears about as much resemblance to breast feeding as it does to sweating.

    202. Re:Le sigh by Nadaka · · Score: 1

      Yes. No.

      If you actually looked at the specifics of that case, it was little more than a murder suicide by a man who's life fell apart against some of the people he blamed for failure that were mostly his own.

      Just because someone attacks a government facility or national landmark does not make it an act of terror.

    203. Re:Le sigh by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      Move to the back and do it where you're not the center of attention.

      She's only the centre of attention when voyeurs like you make her so.

      I am fully sympathetic to the fact that some people may feel the need to stare at exposed boobies, though I sometimes wonder how they deal with all those [semi-]naked statues around the place. I have zero tolerance for those who fail to recognise it's their problem, not the boob owner's.

    204. Re:Le sigh by easterberry · · Score: 1

      How about the unabomber? He was trying to start a revolution against the effects of modern society's "industrial-technological system. Not at all religious in nature.

    205. Re:Le sigh by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      So urinals should be illegal because you can watch someone while they are peeing. And restaurants should have private booths for everyone so that you don't have to see eating.

      The only reason it's a private act is because you arbitrarily define it as such. Others see it as "private" as eating a candy bar, and treat it as such. The problem isn't what it is, the problem is the lack of empathy and tolerance. And, since people lack both, those reading this will likely take the previous sentence as indicating that they don't have empathy or tolerance, thus proving my point.

    206. Re:Le sigh by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      If they were, we would have laws against casual sex.

      We still do in some places. Adultery can be defined as any sex between two unmarried people (regardless of whether they are married to others). I think most of them were invalidated with the last round of rulings on the laws against gay sex, but before that, there were there in some places, and could still be on the books (but unenforceable).

    207. Re:Le sigh by mldi · · Score: 1
      I didn't say what should or should not be illegal. I just said what my personal feelings were for what I believe is acceptable social behavior. Certainly, public breast feeding should not be illegal, but I was just asking for a little bit of social awareness and respect.

      The only reason it's a private act is because you arbitrarily define it as such.

      Bullshit. You can falsely apply that same rule to ANYTHING if you want to justify it.

      A mother breast feeding a child is very intimate. It only occurs between mother and child. Therefore, it is a very private act. Not private as in "teehee, private parts, smirk smirk". Private as in occurring between only two very specific parties. Don't misinterpret what I'm saying.

      ...the problem is the lack of empathy and tolerance...

      Exactly. And that goes both ways. You can't tell people who are offended to stop being offended. It doesn't work that way. Just the same, you can't tell a mother to stop breast feeding. It just goes both ways, and all I ask is both parties respect the other. You can't make everybody happy, but you can go a long way to keeping the peace.

      A good example of how to do that: if I spot a mother breast feeding, I'll respect what she's doing and leave her alone. I won't bother her and tell her what to do, that's her business.
      At the same time, if I'm a woman and I need to breast feed, since it's not everybody else's business I would try to see if there's someplace nearby a bit more inconspicuous. That's respecting the act just as much as tolerating someone else doing it in public.

      I just don't see why tolerance has to be a one-way street.

      --
      If you aren't suspicious of your government's actions, you aren't doing your job as a responsible citizen.
    208. Re:Le sigh by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      I don't know how long it would take to get over sugar, but my cravings never diminished

      That would be because sugar (specifically glucose) is the only thing your brain can eat. We have a complex system to regulate our body's supply of glucose in order to keep our brains from dying. When that starts running low, you're going to crave sugar.

      You aren't addicted to sugar any more than you're addicted to breathing.

    209. Re:Le sigh by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      Both are bodily functions that involve the excretion of fluids.

      So's sweating. And you do that in public all the time. Even when you aren't sweating enough to notice it, you are excreting sweat.

    210. Re:Le sigh by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      If you are a millionaire industrialist, you buy the land and then make money from hemp

      Unless you already own a forest.

    211. Re:Le sigh by compro01 · · Score: 1

      44 states have laws explicitly permitting mothers to breastfeed anywhere they like, mostly worded like the Texas law you quoted (Texas was the third state with such a law, after Florida and North Carolina). The remainder (except for West Virginia, where it remains illegal to breastfeed in public) at least have laws exempting breastfeeding from indecency laws.

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    212. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Canada, it is a criminal offense to protest a woman breastfeeding, and especially if you say she has to move( even suggesting it is illegal ). My wife gave birth to my Perfect, angelic daughter, and it is wrong to have asked her to move. If for no other reason than it's a human rights violation to say a woman can't take her top off, but a man can. Incidentally, topless women are legal everywhere in Canada. Now, if we could get hemp legalized, and a few really stupid laws repealed as well... I'd be as proud as a citizen anyone could be. We just need to get rid of that godawful Stephen Harper.

    213. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know, I know, don't feed the trolls...

      Nevertheless, this is really orthogonal to the trolled issue, and I'm a stickler for these things...

      That said:

      Breast milk is a SECRETION, not an EXCRETION.

      Just like saliva and seminal fluid, glands secrete the milk, none of them are waste products.

      Urine and feces are not secreted by any gland, they are excreted as the byproduct of extracting nutrients from food and eliminating cellular waste.

    214. Re:Le sigh by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      We Americans are entirely too focused on nudity being "bad", which I chalk up to too many people who can't separate their religion and their politics.

      Look, we need these religious ideas in order to keep the population down. We're a nomadic desert tribe - if people are just fucking all the time they're going to have too many kids, and food and water are scarce. What we need are a relatively few number of bloodthirsty warriors to take land and expand our territory.

      Oh, wait, no, that was 6000 years ago and now we have birth control and live in a resources-rich part of the world. So, maybe we ought to update our thinking and do a bit more fucking and a little less killing.

      Oh, boy, now I'm goin' to hell! Until then, somebody should lock me in a cage for that kind of crazy talk. And if anybody tries this crap on TV, a financial stoning is in order.

      YHWH, I can't wait until Free-to-Air TV dies.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    215. Re:Le sigh by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      because politics and 'saying we got it wrong' are 100% opposing concepts.

      Generally, yes. Anything that threatens the viability of the State cannot be allowed. It's really only happened a handful of times, including:

      alcohol is far worse for you and for society, but its tolerated. why? because it always HAS been.

      No - Prohibition. This was also the most notable time that the Government admitted it was wrong.

      Still nobody in power questions why Alcohol Prohibition was required as a Constitutional Amendment but Marijuana Prohibition is not. The Supreme Court won't touch this the same way they won't reverse Slaughterhouse - so much of the Government apparatus is built upon these premises that righting the wrong is more dangerous to the continuance of the State than leaving it be wrong. They know and admit this.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    216. Re:Le sigh by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      You didn't have to be an atheist, specifically. You just had to belong to one of the government-approved churches. Look up "living church" and "sergianism" on wikipedia for details.

      It's similar to what they have in China today. Belonging to the official Catholic churc is not okay because Pope is outside the party hierarchy. But they have their own special party-approved church...

    217. Re:Le sigh by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      To say atheism is a belief is just a silly play on words. Like the action of inaction, the movement of staying still or the speech of silence.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    218. Re:Le sigh by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but he was mainly targeting government & not civilians in general, still you do have a point.

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    219. Re:Le sigh by unr3a1 · · Score: 1

      Atheism is the belief that there is no god. You see the definition of it right there. To deny it is a belief is silly.

    220. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thing is, this woman even had some nifty shawl thing that covers everything up (wish we had that when my kids were that young).

      Holy smokes, how old are you that when your kids were young, thin blankets weren't invented?

    221. Re:Le sigh by anagama · · Score: 1

      You and I are using "sugar" differently. People certainly can survive without SUGAR (capped to distinguish), i.e., the dehydrated sap of sugar cane. Many things have sugars or are converted to sugars with chewing or digestion and I get that. But we don't need SUGAR specifically because we can survive on all kinds of sugars contained in fruits, berries, roots, or grains. I was specifically trying to give up SUGAR, and things similarly close like honey or maple syrup. I didn't stop eating fruits, sweet potatoes, or bread (without added SUGAR). I'm just saying, eat all the sugars you want, and you will still crave SUGAR. It hits a biological sweet spot like nothing else.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    222. Re:Le sigh by uninformedLuddite · · Score: 1

      Man arrested for "molesting" girls in park by tongue kissing them

      Before or after the story of the thug arrested for "mugging" passerby by hitting them with a beer bottle in the back of the head and taking their wallets?

      You can;t compare something that happens rarely with a regular event

      --
      The new right fascists are bilingual. They speak English and Bullshit.
    223. Re:Le sigh by shaitand · · Score: 1

      "Go try it in Amsterdam if you don't believe me."

      Been there, done that. I've grown better than you can find in any shop in Amsterdam.

      "Marijuana is a hallucinogen, and if you eat 4 grammes of good hash you will be having them."

      You can eat 4 grams of 99.9% pure THC budder and you still won't experience hallucinations. The active components in marijuana are psychoactive in the same sense that prozac is not hallucinogenic. Either you are lying and assume I'm as ignorant as the buddies you usually tell these lies to (most likely) or what you took wasn't hash (or at least not only hash). You are probably basing this nonsense on the latest police propaganda in the UK where they spread the hallucinogen myth.

      Hash isn't even particularly well suited to being eaten in the first place. Hash only contains about 20% THC, there are high grade buds that are as potent or more potent than hash.

      "There is definitely a functional difference - or at least a difference in how you function - between, say, smoking some shit weed, and eatying 4 grammes of ice hash."

      Actually there is a difference in the cannabinoid profile of the marijuana that is most popular and that of commercial varieties. Usually the popular variety is high in THC and low in CBD. This does result in different effects. The THC has the same effect but increased CBD causes the couch lock effect, other cannabinoids cause 'cotton mouth', 'munchies', etc. But there are high grade strains that have both a high THC and CBD profile.

      None of these from the 'shit weed' to the extremely high quality homegrown are in any way dangerous (at least not to someone without a genetic predisposition to schizophrenia or a heart condition, certainly a smaller danger zone than asprin).

    224. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd choose to have violence be seen as vulgar in the hopes there'd be less of it.

      Based on how sex is considered vulgar yet still prevalent, I find that this may or may not come true.

      Also, this existed in the 1930s-1960s (really was kind of useless near the end).

      Murder scenes had to be filmed in a way that would discourage imitations in real life, and brutal killings could not be shown in detail. Revenge in modern times was not to be justified.

      Also this thing for comics.

      Just something to think about.

    225. Re:Le sigh by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Ever notice it's the American Cancer Society, and the American Diabetes Society and so on, not the American Stamp Out Cancer Society, etc? Anyway here's the relevant passage:

      Myth: Eating too much sugar causes diabetes.
      Fact: No, it does not. Type 1 diabetes is caused by genetics and unknown factors that trigger the onset of the disease; type 2 diabetes is caused by genetics and lifestyle factors.

      Eating too much sugar is a lifestyle factor. It could also be an unknown factor. Nothing on that page actually supports your argument. You are welcome to try again, but I see no evidence that you should.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    226. Re:Le sigh by Thing+1 · · Score: 1

      Your argument sounds a lot like the broken window fallacy. To be clear, I propose that we would have far more hospitals/shelters/disaster relief efforts, if not for religion stealing part of the economy.

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    227. Re:Le sigh by Thing+1 · · Score: 1

      Complete belief that their god is the only moral right belief and everone else is sent from the devil to get them.

      There was an earlier very interesting comment that said people who see sticks as snakes survive longer than people who see snakes as sticks.

      So, we have evolved to see threats where there aren't any. This helps keep us on our toes, for the actual threats, and helps keep our system tuned to react to them, by constantly over-reacting.

      I like what you said, in combination with this: humans are wired to perceive that other humans are threats, and by using mythology, leaders can convince followers that humans from other tribes are less than human, and therefore "it is consistent with our religious teachings if you take up arms and go kill the other tribe. Really, son, it is consistent, now go to war!"

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    228. Re:Le sigh by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      the dehydrated sap of sugar cane

      That would be sucrose. It's a disaccaride (double-sugar) which is made of equal parts glucose and fructose.

      You'll also find it in virtually all plants, it's just present in a higher concentration in sugar cane and sugar beets...but there's also an enormous quantity of it in carrots, for example.

      because we can survive on all kinds of sugars contained in fruits, berries, roots, or grains

      Those all have varying quantities of sucrose and fructose. If you were eating them in the place of SUGAR, you weren't doing very well since you were still eating a lot of SUGAR.

      I didn't stop eating fruits

      Mostly fructose and sucrose with a little fiber

      sweet potatoes

      Sucrose and starch (which digests into glucose)

      bread (without added SUGAR)

      Ironically, the bread with sugar added would be one of the lowest sugar content item on your list. The sugar is 1) eaten by the yeast that causes bread to rise, and 2) a browning agent. The reaction which makes crust brown is a reaction between sucrose and starch. The sugar is consumed by the reaction.

      Keep in mind ingredient lists are of raw ingredients, not the final composition of the food. Just because it started with sucrose doesn't mean it ends with sucrose.

      I was specifically trying to give up SUGAR, and things similarly close like honey or maple syrup

      Honey is almost 100% glucose. It has no sucrose. It would be a good way to cut down on sucrose while still using a sweetener. And since it's the glucose we crave, using honey to satisfy a 'sweet tooth' would result in eating less sugar ('cause sucrose brings along a fructose with every glucose).

      I'm just saying, eat all the sugars you want, and you will still crave SUGAR

      No, if you consumed nothing but table sugar (another name for sucrose), you'd start craving other things. Such as protein.

    229. Re:Le sigh by Donkey_Hotey · · Score: 1

      Sorry, didn't catch that. Were you trying to be relevant?

      --
      (There is supposed to be a Sarcmark® here, but my $1.99 check hasn't cleared, yet...)
    230. Re:Le sigh by chgros · · Score: 1

      This is about as believable as the post about DuPont.
      Hemp is still being cultivated commercially. It hasn't revolutionized anything.

    231. Re:Le sigh by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      Our culture does not look favourably on ANY act of something being expelled from the human body. Deal with it.

      Breastfeeding is food. And I don't blame you for posting AC. If I was anti-baby feeding in public, I wouldn't want anyone to know who I was.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    232. Re:Le sigh by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      Why can't you take a shit in public? Some necessary bodily functions are best performed behind closed doors, according to our culture. Other cultures piss in public. Heck in China they don't use diapers, baby just shits whenever he feels the need, and most baby garments are of the wonderful "split-crotch" kind. Is it OK if our culture has some ideas about what is and isn't appropriate, and we all agree to respect the feelings of others even if we disagree with them? No, it must be the fault of ordinary Americans, who are always wrong about EVERYTHING. Drugs, prostitution, and gambling are all social ills with well-documented effects. Progressives campaigned tirelessly against them back in the 20s and 30s.

      Yes, and thank god we outlawed marijuana or those drug crazed negros would still be raping our white women. Same kind of backward thinking that believes that making something illegal will make it go away. And to compare breast feeding to public defecation shows how much of a complete asshole you really are. Go beat your wife and kids somewhere else, the 1940s are over.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    233. Re:Le sigh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can you post some backing for this? The part about Billy Graham creating a church like that, cause I am calling BS.

  3. FTS: by absurdist · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "The FCC's brief argues the court ruling would make it almost impossible to punish broadcasters that show nudity or profanity during hours when children are likely to be watching or listening."

    And this is bad how?

    1. Re:FTS: by countertrolling · · Score: 1

      And this is bad how?

      Because content is none of their damn business... God gave us the off switch and channel knob for a reason. Our children are our responsibility, certainly not the FCC's.

      --
      For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
    2. Re:FTS: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The previous requirement was only in place during hours children could be watching. Yet, no station would allow profanity or nudity during any other hours, even though it was legal. That is chilled speech.

    3. Re:FTS: by paeanblack · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "The FCC's brief argues the court ruling would make it almost impossible to punish broadcasters that show nudity or profanity during hours when children are likely to be watching or listening."

      It returns them to arbitrating the technical aspects of spectrum licensing instead of being an unregulated police agency. They are accustomed to being the gatekeepers of content distribution in American society. Losing that kind of power really undercuts a fiefdom...can't blame them for sulking about it.

    4. Re:FTS: by gorzek · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I thought the whole purpose of the V-chip and the TV-[X] ratings was so that content didn't have to be restricted. Parents could just set their TVs to not show anything above, say, TV-PG. And yet we still have this insane push to censor broadcast TV.

      Only in America can a show about investigating grisly murders run for 20 years but a couple seconds of titty is worth millions in fines.

      (But I love Law & Order.)

    5. Re:FTS: by sosume · · Score: 1

      Judge: "You have no authority to issue fines if you think a certain broadcast is indecent."
      FTC: "But how will we then be able to issue a fine if we think a certain broadcast is indecent??!"

    6. Re:FTS: by Conspiracy_Of_Doves · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You expect parents to exert effort and initiative and use any kind of their own judgment in raising their children? That is unAmerican!

      In this country, parenting means just being present until your children reach an arbitrary chronological age in a completely sterilized society.

    7. Re:FTS: by geekoid · · Score: 1

      For several reasons:
      1) there are a lot of citizens that want them to regulate them as a government body it is their duty to do so.

      2) Having known boundaries during certain times is a good thing. It is a took for raising children.

      And no the doesn't mean the TV is a baby sitter. While watching some TV with my child, I don't want some commercial coming on with Howard Stern berating some topless women.

      You can't unwatch something.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    8. Re:FTS: by gr8_phk · · Score: 1

      I was going to say the same thing. And since the V-chip was required in all digital TVs, and analog has been switched off we're all set now. Perhaps they should mandate that the V-chip be set to TV-PG only by default at the factory so only people who figure out how to operate it will get the "bad" stuff. Let them broadcast whatever they want, the FCC has already mandated technology that will allow people to censor to whatever level they are comfortable with. I still can't believe people think SpongeBob is a kids show and let 3 year olds watch it. In fact, Nick is now essentially the SpongeBob channel. Sex in the City is run on non-premium cable now uncensored ("Shit" and "Goldy-cocks" come to mind) but classic rock that's been on the air for 30 years is now edited. WTF?

    9. Re:FTS: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The fact that citizens want them to regulate is irrelevant if the Constitution says the government has no power to interfere with free speech.

    10. Re:FTS: by sjames · · Score: 1

      If they want to get rid of offensiveness on TV, how about they blast the commercials that offend against truth and intelligence? Those are FAR more offensive than fictional violence or boobies (which may also be "fictional" these days). They're also a lot more damaging to children and society in general.

    11. Re:FTS: by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

      Live broadcasts cannot be rated for "accidental" content. While the V-Chip could be used to prevent known racy shows from being presented to those opting out of them it does nothing for Janet Jackson's attempts to boost her career with "malfunctioning" wardrobes on live TV. Giving the FCC teeth to force compliance to the shows rating (if that's all it was) doesn't seem out of line. It might mean live broadcasts are forced to have a 5 minute time-to-live so that they can be pre-screened. But so what?

      In general I would agree with people that are claiming certain members of American culture get too worked up about certain parts of a person's anatomy. At the same time I'm not sure it's unreasonable to make it reasonably possible for such persons to "opt out." The present dilemma America seems to have is that the minority is as usual trying to force the majority live their lives as they do.

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
  4. Obsolete function by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    FCC's brief argues the court ruling would make it almost impossible to punish broadcasters that show nudity or profanity during hours when children are likely to be watching or listening."

    And that's a good thing. Sick bunch of prudes.

  5. Forget the FCC by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Whatever happened to parents being ultimately responsible for what their children are watching?

    --
    "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    1. Re:Forget the FCC by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 4, Informative

      We're living in the era of no responsibility in this country. At work everything is the fault of the corporation you're working for (convenient since a paper entity can't go to jail). At home it's the media's fault, the teacher's fault, the government's fault depending on the day of the week. No one is at fault for anything right now in the U.S.

    2. Re:Forget the FCC by 54mc · · Score: 1

      Whatever happened to parents being ultimately responsible for what their children are watching?

      This is America, that's what happened.

      On a related note, I live in perpetual fear of the current/coming wussification of America.

      --
      Joy! Beautiful spark of the gods!
    3. Re:Forget the FCC by orthancstone · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Most people like to proclaim they are responsible right up until the point that you try to hold them accountable for their actions. Then it suddenly becomes someone else's fault.

    4. Re:Forget the FCC by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

      They want tools to help. Namely, I would like to know more about the violence level of a program and to care less about sex. My kids will be punished more by going into the first than in the second.

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    5. Re:Forget the FCC by hodet · · Score: 1

      Exactly, we monitor our own kids tv watching. This is never something I would trust in the hands of a bureaucrat. Violence is much more of a concern to us then the odd booby flashing on tv. We got it covered.

    6. Re:Forget the FCC by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Funny thing being that the republican portion of the politicians who are in favor of these FCC indecency rules are the very same ones who complain that Obama is turning the US into a nanny state.

      Can you get any more "nanny" than this?

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
    7. Re:Forget the FCC by JxcelDolghmQ · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Because parents want everybody else to nanny their children, in spite of technology being widely available to make it easier for them to police their own children's viewing.

      It's like back when Marilyn Manson was so big, and was in the news everywhere. People were protesting at venues trying to get his shows canceled, using excuses such as "I don't want my children to see this filth!" Well guess what, people? If you don't want your kids to see it, then don't let them go see it! There's adults out there that do want to see such things (at least two or three :)) and adults should be free to decide for themselves and not have a bunch of lazy angsty parents pre-emptively make such decisions for them.

    8. Re:Forget the FCC by localman57 · · Score: 2, Informative

      We were watching the Super Bowl with our kids. And out popped Janet's nipple. Live, and unexpected. Parents who wanted to be "responsible" in preventing their children from seeing such things were caught totally by surprise. I think my kids will be OK, but it kinda puts a dent in that argument. On the other hand, it's perfectly possible to keep kids from watching certain channels, or all channels at certain times. Put whatever you want on then...

    9. Re:Forget the FCC by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > They want tools to help. Namely, I would like to know
      > more about the violence level of a program and to care
      > less about sex. My kids will be punished more by going
      > into the first than in the second.

      The only tool they need is their own eyeballs.

      They whine about the nanny state and then think they can use the FCC as one.

      You gotta watch this stuff for yourself. You can't trust the
      busybodies to not lie to you. They've been pretty blatant
      about it in the past. The same goes for the likes of the MPAA
      who rate content.

      You're the only one that can judge what is "appropriate".

      Being lazy about it is simply not going to cut it.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    10. Re:Forget the FCC by oodaloop · · Score: 1

      I like to think of myself as a responsible parent. But if I put on a kid's TV show, and there's nudity or violence on the commercials between the show, how I am supposed to block that? How am I supposed to know that's going to be there? I can prevent them from changing the channel to adult shows, and I'm present most the time when they're watching, but I can't do everything.

      --
      Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
    11. Re:Forget the FCC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't worry. Once I finish fucking your ass tonight you won't care. I'll slap you around and call you a bitch fag just like you like.

    12. Re:Forget the FCC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe you mean "pussification."

      Please get your George Carlin references in order.

      Show some respect for the dead!

    13. Re:Forget the FCC by Lunix+Nutcase · · Score: 1

      But if I put on a kid's TV show, and there's nudity or violence on the commercials between the show, how I am supposed to block that?

      Because this is such a regular and routine happening, right? Oh wait...

    14. Re:Forget the FCC by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      no kidding. Also, there are tvs that have hardware builtin that allows for the blocking of at least foul language. I know since one family I know personally has a tv like that for their own family.

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    15. Re:Forget the FCC by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      I tend to take one of two approaches with new shows.

      1) I'll watch the new show with them and will turn it off if something I don't care for happens. Then, I'll have a talk with them about why that was wrong and what the character should have done.

      2) I'll DVR the show and watch it before they do so as to pre-screen the show for inappropriate content.

      Practically, I've rarely had to turn off a show since they tend to self-limit what channels they watch to just the kids channels and they're young enough to not want to watch stuff with too much sex/violence/etc. Still, parents could use those 2 rules and we wouldn't need as much government involvement in what's on TV.

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    16. Re:Forget the FCC by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      no kidding.

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    17. Re:Forget the FCC by Grapes4Buddha · · Score: 1
      The only problem with that is that there are now television screens blaring at you in almost every establishment you go to. You can't always control what the dipshits out in the world choose to put on the screens in public places.

      Personally, I'd rather not have to worry about my little boy being traumatized by graphic violence when we drop in to pick up a pizza.

    18. Re:Forget the FCC by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      they make TV's with content control chips (including language filters). Pay attention to tv show ratings (though they seem to have disappeared from evening shows they are still present on many pre-4 pm shows).

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    19. Re:Forget the FCC by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      I'd also add that the level of sex/violence that is acceptable varies from household to household. I might let my seven year old watch Batman The Brave and The Bold while Batman is punching out bad guys. Someone else might think that's too violent and restrict them to shows like "Super Why" on PBS. Both approaches are perfectly acceptable, but there's no way the government can accomadate both of these, plus the millions of other permutations in between and to the extremes. Better for the parents to watch with the kids and make their own decisions.

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    20. Re:Forget the FCC by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      here here!

      Sir, I have some respect for you (only some because I don't know you).

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    21. Re:Forget the FCC by AmonTheMetalhead · · Score: 1

      If nudity wasn't so 'shocking' they'd have to use something else to come over shocking, this was about making the news, not about nudity.

    22. Re:Forget the FCC by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      no, you can't.

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    23. Re:Forget the FCC by Jason+Levine · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And the correct response, if you happened to think that was so awful, was to have a talk with your children about how Janet's exposed nipple was wrong and what she should have done instead. If you want to pass your values to your kids (as is your right), talk with them when "wrong" situations come up. Most kids would have listened to their parents and learned not to flash their body parts in public. (Yes, we've had to have this talk with our son about other body parts and, yes, he listened to us.)

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    24. Re:Forget the FCC by AmonTheMetalhead · · Score: 1

      Well, in Europe you might see the odd boob in a commercial... our youth hasn't gone bonkers yet because of it though

    25. Re:Forget the FCC by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      +5 insightful (:

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    26. Re:Forget the FCC by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      What kid's channels are your kids watching? Some don't even have commercials and the ones that do advertise kids toys. The worst you'll get is your kids clamoring for Bakugon toys or McDonald's chicken nuggets. They won't be telling you that the commercial showed Swiper stealing Dora's pants or anything!

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    27. Re:Forget the FCC by Killjoy_NL · · Score: 1

      He was being censored by the FCC :P

      --
      This is the sig that says NI (again)
    28. Re:Forget the FCC by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      Stuff happens. Was it so grievous you couldn't talk to your kids about it? Or are your kids old enough to even understand what was so wrong about it (at 4 and under, I doubt it, and doubt they will even remember it).

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    29. Re:Forget the FCC by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      If the pizza place you go to has shows like that on a regular basis, just don't bring your kid. Simple as that. Or even better, talk to the owner, and if s/he is sympathetic they will make sure such shows aren't shown in their establishment. Otherwise, a) don't bring your kid to that place or b) find another pizza joint.

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    30. Re:Forget the FCC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      We were watching the Super Bowl with our kids. And out popped Janet's nipple. Live, and unexpected. Parents who wanted to be "responsible" in preventing their children from seeing such things were caught totally by surprise. I think my kids will be OK, but it kinda puts a dent in that argument.

      A responsible parent would have leaped up from the couch at that moment screaming "THAT VULGAR CUNT," whilst backhanding his wife.

    31. Re:Forget the FCC by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      But if I put on a kid's TV show, and there's nudity or violence on the commercials between the show, how I am supposed to block that?

      If that suddenly becomes a problem in your mythical universe, I can think of a couple options:

      1) Streaming content.
      2) DVDs/Netflix/etc.
      3) Do something else.

      I know. Wild.

    32. Re:Forget the FCC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Republicans and Democrats are alike in that they desire control over the lives of others. They are only different in how they wish to control others, and they will criticize each other endlessly and portray the American people as victims whenever the other side is successful.

      And it is not funny.

    33. Re:Forget the FCC by DrgnDancer · · Score: 5, Informative

      Did you really *see* Janet's nipple? Really? I was watching, I saw a sudden movement from Justin Timberlake, some clothing pull away, and what may or make not have been a flash of jewelry. The actual nipple was on screen for less than 3 seconds, on a pulled away shot, and covered in a very large piece of jewelry. So far as I remember it took an hour or more for there to be verification that there actually *was* a nipple in the shot, after someone isolated the 30-40 frames where it was visible and zoomed in on it.

      So essentially you're saying that kids can be mentally damaged but a second or two of viewing something that may or may not from the actual visual evidence on screen have been partial nudity. Regardless, the network (who got fined for indecency) had nothing to do with the plan that Justin and Janet came up with to get themselves some publicity. So even the most stringent fining system in the world would not have prevented the occurrence, because the people who were fined were not the people who planned and executed the stunt (and Justin and Janet couldn't have ever been fined because they're under no obligation to the TV station or the public to act a certain way just because cameras happen to be on them. Their contract is with the NFL).

      --
      I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.
    34. Re:Forget the FCC by Grapes4Buddha · · Score: 1

      Hey great idea. I'll just limit myself to always going to the same place. Guess what? That was just an example. My point is that there are television screens blaring everywhere and I can't help but be exposed to them unless I go hide under a rock.

    35. Re:Forget the FCC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      For me and my kids, it wan't so much the initial live moment, as when I rewound the tivo, and moved frame by frame, then paused it. It really messed up the kids. Damn you, CBS! Think of the children!

    36. Re:Forget the FCC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      unless of course an ground-level airburst pushes your car off an icy road (along with 5 others) - then all 6 drivers are charged with failure to maintain control, since it's "their" fault.

    37. Re:Forget the FCC by GrumblyStuff · · Score: 1

      OH GOD A NIPPLE!

      Just think that YOUR KIDS could look in the mirror and see TWO NIPPLES! Nipples could even be lurking... UNDER YOUR OWN SHIRT!

    38. Re:Forget the FCC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pre-recording and screening of shows?

      DVD box sets of old shows?

      Alternative activities to watching television?

    39. Re:Forget the FCC by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      And that is why, as a parent, you can explain to your child why what's on the tv is bad. Quit being lazy.

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    40. Re:Forget the FCC by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      Also, you completely missed the option of talking to the owner (or even the bartender, sounds like you're at a bar of some sort as I've never been in a place that didn't serve alcohol that had a tv with the sort of stuff in your example and if you're bringing your kid into a bar, shame on you).

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    41. Re:Forget the FCC by Grapes4Buddha · · Score: 1

      He knows it is bad. He's not stupid.

    42. Re:Forget the FCC by geekoid · · Score: 1

      They are being responsible parents. there insisting on a period of time where they can have know exceptions of boundaries on the TV. That is
      all.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    43. Re:Forget the FCC by geekoid · · Score: 1

      It's a line. the discussion SHOULD be where is that line. A booby popping out isn't gong to hurt any healthy child.

      Instead we just have people arguing an extreme and assuming because parents want certain expectation at certain times is somehow irresponsible.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    44. Re:Forget the FCC by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      They are being responsible by foisting that off onto the FCC? Makes no sense to me at all.

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    45. Re:Forget the FCC by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      Then what's your problem? If he knows it's bad then he probably won't pay any attention to it. Problem solved.

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    46. Re:Forget the FCC by gr8_phk · · Score: 1
      While I agree with you on almost all of that... The prevention would come about by having the networks include clauses in their contract to pass the fines (or at least a portion) along to the folks who caused the incident. If the network wants to take the risk it's up to them. If that doesn't work, increase the fines.

      I want to know where the fine is when SpongeBob says "penis". Oh right nobody notices because kids watch that - not the parents (and I think you can say that on TV anyway).

    47. Re:Forget the FCC by Grapes4Buddha · · Score: 1

      did you ignore the 9/11 attacks because you knew they were bad? I didn't think so.

    48. Re:Forget the FCC by clarkkent09 · · Score: 1

      True, but you can turn that around and say that the liberals who are against government interference in sex, drugs etc issues are the same ones who are in favor of more government control over us in general (higher taxes for more welfare, more regulation of business activity etc). As someone who is socially liberal and fiscally conservative (should say liberal in both cases but let's follow the American silly usage of the word liberal) I personally consider economic liberty to be far more important and "social" issues like these indecency rules, gay marriage prohibition, "war on drugs", prostitution laws etc to be silly distractions based on outdated religious morality that will change over time. I would like to get rid of them, but it's not as big of a problem as the idea that the product of one's work actually belongs to others should the majority vote so i.e that we are not independent individuals but part of some sort of Borg collective called "society", which is the basis of the progressive agenda.

      --
      Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
    49. Re:Forget the FCC by DrgnDancer · · Score: 1

      It's still ridiculous for live TV to try to pass the buck that way. It's fine for produced television, you know who is ultimately responsible for every word Spongebob says so there's no problem. Likewise there's little enough issue with the people on produced television saying or doing unexpected things.

      The problem is live TV. OK, so as part of their contract with the NFL, CBS makes the NFL responsible for any indecency fines that might accrue during the Super Bowl. Now you can feel comfortable knowing the responsible party is punished. Except the people in the halftime show don't work for the NFL, they work for some entertain group. So the NFL pushes the contractual requirement for fines down to the Entertain group, who then have to push them down to the entertainers... Who are prima-donas, pretty much by definition of playing the Superbowl halftime show, and they don't WANNA sign that that, so now you have to find *different* entertainers... and mean while some random fan in the stands flashes the camera and now the NFL has to pay an indecency fine for the action of some random unidentified person in the stands.

      Live TV is live. You never know what may happen, what zany person might do what crazy thing. Most if not all of the people in any live shot have no obligation AT ALL to the TV station. If you're really THAT worried about random people doing random stuff on live TV, don't watch live TV.

      --
      I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.
    50. Re:Forget the FCC by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      So anyone airing the 9/11 attacks should be fined? Go live in Saudi Arabia or Communist Cuba, you ninny.

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    51. Re:Forget the FCC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, actually, it's pretty much all my fault. Sorry about that.

    52. Re:Forget the FCC by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      We watching the Super Bowl with our kids

      And you pretend to be protective of your children?

      On the other hand, it's perfectly possible to keep kids from watching certain channels, or all channels at certain times.

      How about all channels all the time? Commercial TV is simply not suitable for children. You might as well demand that strip clubs open before 9pm keep their dancers dressed so that you can bring your children to be entertained by their sequined outfits.

    53. Re:Forget the FCC by Grapes4Buddha · · Score: 1
      That's not my argument.

      I was responding to your assertion that a five year old has the capacity to ignore scary, nightmare-inducing stimuli simply because it is "bad". You see, when something is disturbing, it is difficult for even an adult to ignore it.

      A child does not have the defenses that an adult may possess. The world is already a scary place when you're less than four feet tall and there could very well be monsters under the bed. Some of the shit that is on broadcast TV would give him nightmares for the rest of his childhood. And I'm talking about stuff that is on before bedtime.

      Now, as for you, DarkKnightRadick, you've demonstrated that you're just flamebaiting. Is this how you would talk to somebody in person? Grow up.

    54. Re:Forget the FCC by Sepodati · · Score: 1

      >> But if I put on a kid's TV show, and there's nudity or
      >> violence on the commercials between the show, how I am
      >> supposed to block that?

      Do you honestly expect that to happen? Even if it did, you have a talk with your child on why that's against your values and then YOU NEVER WATCH THE CHANNEL AGAIN. You really think Noggin or PBS is going to take that risk when they stand to lose all of their viewers?

      It's reasonable to expect some level of self-regulation by the stations and networks. I don't see why a government agency has to get involved.

      -John

    55. Re:Forget the FCC by oodaloop · · Score: 1
      We regularly see extremely scary movie previews for adult horror movies for example in between kid's shows. What is there to explain to my kids, other than reassure them we're not going to that movie? My 2-year old only understands that something scared him senseless while he was watching Spongebob. Telling my kids we're not going to watch an entire channel of their favorite shows is not an option. This comment is so patently ridiculous I frankly doubt you have kids.

      I don't see why a government agency has to get involved.

      We're talking about the FCC here. Isn't this their frakin job?

      --
      Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
    56. Re:Forget the FCC by gfreeman · · Score: 1

      They want tools to help. Namely, I would like to know more about the violence level of a program and to care less about sex. My kids will be punished more by going into the first than in the second.

      If you are in the US, then your TV has a V-Chip, and you can block anything more violent than (for example) a PG rating.

      --
      Ceci n'est pas un sig.
    57. Re:Forget the FCC by Sepodati · · Score: 1

      >> Telling my kids we're not going to watch an entire channel of their favorite shows is not an option.

      And obviously the best option is to get the government involved? Speaking of ridiculous comments.

      >> We're talking about the FCC here. Isn't this their frakin job?

      No, not entirely. The FCC has no jurisdiction to regulate violence or "extremely scary" material for 2 year-olds. They can regulate indecency over broadcast television. If you're watching Cartoon Network or Noggin, etc. then the FCC likely has no jurisdiction over those channels as they are not broadcast. (Not 100% sure those aren't broadcast stations somewhere, though, so those specific channels may not be good examples).

      What if my 3 year old is scared by SpongeBob and Patrick's fighting or those scary zapping jellyfish? Would you support the FCC regulating SpongeBob because my kid is scared? Now extrapolate that over thousands of kids and hundreds of programs. You really think this is the FCCs responsibility instead of the parents?

      -John

    58. Re:Forget the FCC by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      Actually at this point I would. Either you don't take your kid to a place where such imagery is being displayed or you ask for the channel to be changed or you don't get a right to complain when it is. It is as simple as that. Be responsible for what your child watches. And if I were speaking to you in person, I'd probably walk off after calling you a spine-less liberal.

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    59. Re:Forget the FCC by sjames · · Score: 1

      People seem to forget that. It takes a great deal of single frame stepping like a couple 12 year olds to actually find a frame that MIGHT actually show a bit of blurry nipple. Watching it real time you see nothing.

      So more properly the network was fined millions for allowing viewers to infer that Janet Jackson has nipples.

    60. Re:Forget the FCC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've missed the point entirely! We don't let our grandchildren watch Comedy Central. Perfectly reasonable.

      How could I have ever predicted they shouldn't have been watching the Superbowl?!

    61. Re:Forget the FCC by Grapes4Buddha · · Score: 1
      Oh I see. You're a conservative, name-calling, shit-for-brains, bible-thumping ass wipe.

      we're done here.

    62. Re:Forget the FCC by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      But that's not my fault.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    63. Re:Forget the FCC by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      No I haven't.

      That's when you turn the channel and turn to your kids and have a discussion with them. Quit trying to impose your nanny-state-wanting views on the rest of us.

      Turn the channel and or talk to your kids or you don't get to complain. Take responsibility as a parent for what they watch. When the occasional something does slip by (because not even the Almighty Government(TM) can predict and protect from everything), turn to your kid and tell them why that wasn't appropriate.

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
    64. Re:Forget the FCC by Omestes · · Score: 1

      Which is why I had mine surgically removed.

      It was almost impossible to go about my morning grooming with out viewing pornography. I lived a life of sin, until plastic surgery allowed me to be a virtuous Christian/Muslim/Other, and live life the way the good lord meant. If god wanted us to see nipples he would have given us all nipples.

      --
      A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
    65. Re:Forget the FCC by snadrus · · Score: 1

      Interesting when blame is psychologically equivalent to giving away your ability to make change. So a citizenry without responsibility also is disinterested to change out-of-control government entities.

      --
      Science & open-source build trust from peer review. Learn systems you can trust.
    66. Re:Forget the FCC by Omestes · · Score: 1

      NOTE: This is sarcasm.

      This might be why Europe is a socialist nanny state. All the exposure to female breasts had lead to the desire to suckle at the teats of Big Guberment. This is why America is a pristine free-market utopia, the lack of early exposure to breasts.

      Sorry, couldn't resist.

      --
      A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
    67. Re:Forget the FCC by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      I'm still mad that I saw Reagan get shot on live TV. Why didn't they fine those insensitive bastards!

    68. Re:Forget the FCC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But it brings up a general problem for parents. If you can't ever trust what will be on TV (as far as nudity and language) you have 2 choices: you could not let you children ever watch tv, or try to explain everything to your children. The problem I have with first solution is that I don't like to remove my children completely from technology / media because it makes a fake world for them. At some point they will confront it, and if I'm not there I can't help. Also it causes them to try and find it when I'm not looking. I would much rather be responsible by monitoring and being involved. I do block certain channels, but I don't want to worry about what is allowed to be broadcasted during Saturday morning cartoons.

      The problem with the second solution is that some children are too young to understand, or just shouldn't have to understand it yet.

      I'm not saying that the Janet Jackson thing is a big deal, I wasn't even watching. But I do like the idea that someone is trying to keep some of the airwaves clean during certain times. If I can't count on what commercials some dumb executive thinks is ok to show, then as a "responsible" parent I am only able to show my children TV which I have already viewed (like through a DVR).

      Don't get me wrong, I don't rely on TV ratings, as they are not a complete solution, but having some knowledge of what "should" and "shouldn't" be in a show does help.

    69. Re:Forget the FCC by DrgnDancer · · Score: 1

      As I posted elsewhere, I'm not normally a "The free market will solve all ills" kind of person, but in this case I think there's a reasonable argument for it. Television is a visual medium, there's no chemical analysis that only a qualified scientist can do, or fancy financial products that you need expertise to understand. There is no need for an expert to watch and say "That's OK, but that isn't". You watch it, if you like it you keep watching it. If it offends you or you don't like it for your kids, you don't watch it or don't let them watch it.

      Of course you let kids watch TV by themselves sometimes (all the self righteous types above who claim you shouldn't are either morons or have a WHOLE lot of time of their hands), but the nice thing is that you can reasonably rely on it to stay roughly the same day to day. If you watch the same show with your kids for three days, it's pretty damned unlikely to degenerate into porn on the fourth day when they watch by themselves. Even if it did, chances are that other parents WERE watching with their kids that day and will complain in your stead.

      I would imagine that if the FCC lost enforcement authority on this sort of thing you'd see changes. Mostly changes in certain channels and in certain time slots. Channels that have always billed themselves for kids will still be fine for kids. They'd be morons to do otherwise. What would Nickelodeon possibly gain by offending any significant subset of parents? Similarly, times that have always been set aside as "family friendly TV" would continue to be. Again, why would a network break a promise like that when it's perfectly obvious that anyone watching could tell. What you would get would more networks with adult themes (think like Spike TV only able to actually show whole boobs instead of bikini clad boobs), and late night TV would probably allow itself more leniency. You probably aren't letting you kids watch that stuff anyway.

      --
      I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.
    70. Re:Forget the FCC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For letting him get shot or not making sure it was fatal?

    71. Re:Forget the FCC by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      True, but you can turn that around and say that the liberals who are against government interference in sex, drugs etc issues are the same ones who are in favor of more government control over us in general (higher taxes for more welfare, more regulation of business activity etc).

      A tax isn't a control over what I do. Regulation of business activities (specifically corporations, especially publicly traded ones) isn't control over a person. The Republicans want to tell me what I can smoke, who I can marry, what I can do in my bedroom. The Democrats want to take a slightly larger percentage of my income (not actually controlling any action of mine) and control what non-human "legal persons" which exist solely on paper at the whims of the government anyway (AKA corporations) can do. No actual person had any action made illegal from the complaints you have over the Democrats. But the Republicans want to claim freedom of religion, then ban people from getting married (a religious issue). And they do that because their interpretation of their religion says it is wrong, again a religious issue. So they are very Puritanical in that they don't want freedom of religion, they want the freedom to impose their religion.

      I can see arguments about freedom being brought up on party lines, but to assert that outlawing sex and drugs is akin to a different tax rate and controls over non-person persons seems completely absurd. One makes a number of things explicitly illegal, the other is either a very minor change in a well-accepted practice or a control on something that isn't even human.

    72. Re:Forget the FCC by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      Namely, I would like to know more about the violence level of a program and to care less about sex.

      Typically the TV-[X] rating includes the reason why a show received a higher rating. Such as "V" for violence.

    73. Re:Forget the FCC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      kids can be mentally damaged but a second or two of viewing something that may or may not from the actual visual evidence on screen have been partial nudity

      Well, I'm not sure about harmed, but to say they couldn't catch it just because they couldn't really *say* what they saw is false.

      http://psychcentral.com/news/2008/04/29/subliminal-trigger-of-emotions/2200.html

      Psychologists Kirsten Ruys and Diedrick Stapel at Tillburg University in The Netherlands have uncovered the first empirical evidence to suggest humans do not need to be aware of the event that caused their mood or feelings in order to be affected by it.

      Now, I won't say nudity is or is not harmful and whether a brief flash of nudity would have long terms effects even if it was, but I'm just bringing up the point that a short flash can in fact affect people a bit.

  6. ...because by Some+Guy · · Score: 0

    ...because sex and swearing are leading to the downfall of society. Not greed and corruption.

    1. Re:...because by cptdondo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, if people didn't have sex, we wouldn't have had the current crop of corrupt bankers and politicians, now, would we?

      You gotta remember that the pilgrims didn't come to the US to "practice religious freedom". They got kicked out of Europe for being too puritanical. From the beginning the US has been at war with sex and "indecency".

      It amazed me that you could show the most awful slasher flick and at most get an R rating but typically get a PG-13. But if you so much as showed a few seconds of a tit that was R for sure. And male frontal nudity was an X.

    2. Re:...because by hazah · · Score: 1

      If people didn't have sex, methinks we wouldn't have the current crop of anyone :).

    3. Re:...because by cptdondo · · Score: 1

      Ahh... You begin to understand, grasshopper.

    4. Re:...because by Abstrackt · · Score: 1

      If people didn't have sex, methinks we wouldn't have the current crop of anyone :).

      Reminds me of a good joke. "Sex is hereditary. If your parents didn't have it, chances are you won't either."

      --
      They say a little knowledge is a dangerous thing, but it's not one half so bad as a lot of ignorance. - Terry Pratchett
    5. Re:...because by GofG · · Score: 1

      >> You gotta remember that the pilgrims didn't come to the US to "practice religious freedom".
      >> They got kicked out of Europe for being too puritanical.

      Sorry, but every time I see this myth I feel as though I must refute it. The pilgrims were not kicked out of Europe. They spent nearly twelve years in Holland, where they were able to practice religious freedom or whatever peacefully with other religious "refugees" from England and Spain and other places until they drove themselves into the ground financially through lack of wisdom and useful skills. That is the real reason they came to America; there wouldn't be competition for jobs from more skilled groups of people if they were alone at Plymouth.

      --
      GFA/M/S d-- s: a--- C++++ UBL++$ P+ L+++ !E- W++ N+ !o K- w--- !O !M !V PS++ PE Y+ PGP+ t+++ 5- X+ R tv@ b++ DI++++ D+ G
    6. Re:...because by geekoid · · Score: 1

      show me an actuakl slasher thats pg 13? You have that backwards.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    7. Re:...because by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      It amazed me that you could show the most awful slasher flick and at most get an R rating but typically get a PG-13. But if you so much as showed a few seconds of a tit that was R for sure. And male frontal nudity was an X.

      Come on now, let's not erode our valid argument with silly examples.

      Good luck finding *any* real slasher film with a PG-13 rating. Neither Boogie Nights nor Watchmen had an R rating.

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    8. Re:...because by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      And male frontal nudity was an X

      They did away with X shortly after Fritz the Cat (the only feature length animated film ever to get an X rating from the MPAA). It's NC-17 now.

      But, The Life of Brian had full frontal nudity, both sexes, and it was rated R.

  7. Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by Enry · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think there do need to be standards for what's shown at least on broadcast TV but I think the pants-wetting hysteria from the Family Research Council and their ilk isn't the answer.

    These airwaves are for the public use. Want to drop the f-/n-/q-bomb? Start up your own pay channel and go nuts.

  8. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by Pojut · · Score: 1

    When people say America is a "christian nation", I believe this is what they're referring to...

  9. Good 'ol American TV by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Where you can see people being killed on the news, gory operations showing lots of blood and innards, and pixelized nipples on anything remotely resembling a breast, even if it's a medical program. Where does this nipple-phobia come from? Clearly it's not the people. Even average soccer moms have breast implants.

  10. I don't get it... by AmonTheMetalhead · · Score: 1

    I can understand people not liking hard core porn in between sesame street & pokemon while the toddlers are watching (and i'm sure the toddlers don't want to see that neighter), but come on, the image of a boob ain't gonna kill them or turn them into rapist zombie bastards from hell, as for profanity, saying shit is a lot less harmful then showing torture, murder & explosions, hell, even McGyver is more harmful (who hasn't recreated anything shown in that show?) then letting kids hear profanity.

  11. do you know what happens if a kid sees a boob? by circletimessquare · · Score: 2, Funny

    their minds are scarred and they are ruined for life, they enter a death spiral of drug use and prostitution. all it takes is one glance of a boob, and the fate of your child's life will change on the spot to one of apathy, laziness, fatalism, and moribund lack of emotional affect

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:do you know what happens if a kid sees a boob? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Dear lord! What are we doing to our infants by breastfeeding them!?!

    2. Re:do you know what happens if a kid sees a boob? by sosume · · Score: 1

      I think you just found the answer to why all mankind is evil ... wait, you should patent it!

    3. Re:do you know what happens if a kid sees a boob? by thijsh · · Score: 1

      Reading your post Poe's law comes to mind... Are you just kidding?

    4. Re:do you know what happens if a kid sees a boob? by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      lol, that's hilarious

      yes i'm kidding

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    5. Re:do you know what happens if a kid sees a boob? by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      Hey my two kids were breastfed and they're just fi..... Wait a second. They're both addicted to Dihydrogen Monoxide! They clamor for it every day, sometimes more than once! Oh my god, what have we done!!!!! *collapses to the ground in uncontrollable sobbing*

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    6. Re:do you know what happens if a kid sees a boob? by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      Shit. So THAT'S what happened to me

  12. God forbid... by firesyde424 · · Score: 1

    [sarcasm] that parents should take an interest in what their kids are watching because we all know that responsible parents are the last thing this world needs..... [/sarcasm]

  13. Hey FCC, the cold war is over by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good to know this agency is fighting to keep a leftover from the 50s. There are 100s of channels now, not just 3 or 4. Disregarding even that, this is a purely commercial medium, why not let the market decide? If what the broadcasters show is not in line with the "morals" of the advertisers or their demographic, then no more money and no more of that program, right? I'm not typically one of those "let the market decide" people, but, honestly, there is nothing good on anyway, so who cares? Let people say "asshole" instead of "ass****" on tv and see what happens, I have a hard time believing it could get worse than 90% of what is on already...

    1. Re:Hey FCC, the cold war is over by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You've hit on one of the primary contradictions in thinking in the U.S. of today. Most people are for the free market making decisions... that is until it makes a decision they don't like for some reason. Then they go to the government to "protect their interests" or to protect themselves through legislation. So many of the stories on Slashdot, especially the governmental and corporate stories, come down to that... a corporation or other group of people who were so gung-ho about the free market when things were going THEIR way now want governmental protection now that the market has changed. See also: FCC. See also: RIAA. See also: MPAA.

    2. Re:Hey FCC, the cold war is over by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a surprise. Sociopathic, amoral, emotionless entities are also liars.

  14. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by thijsh · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    "One nation under god, with all people born of immaculate conception and sex is a concept unheard of."
    Well, if you remove the 'god' part it would also apply to Slashdot. :)

  15. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 1

    Frankly, given all the cool things that you can do with a chunk of spectrum, the "airwaves are for public use" argument is much better ammunition for the extirpation of broadcast TV and the creation of vast chunks of spectrum that are either unrestricted or "free for use by all devices conforming to $OPEN_INDUSTRY_STANDARD_WIRELESS_PROTOCOL" rather than the bowdlerization of daytime TV.

  16. Great news everyone.... by NiteShaed · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The FCC's brief argues the court ruling would make it almost impossible to punish broadcasters that show nudity or profanity during hours when children are likely to be watching or listening."

    Good. The FCC has no business regulating the content of what gets broadcast, only the means of broadcasting it, ie: making sure everyone stays in their licensed frequencies and doesn't stomp on each others transmissions.
    We're now living in a time where it's trivially easy to block potentially offensive channels, or restrict their use with a code to keep them out of children's reach if their parents don't want them watching. If you don't like that channel X broadcasts unedited showings of "Porkey's", don't watch channel X. You, as a viewer, have no right to expect a government agency to protect you from being offended, and the government has no right to prevent a broadcaster from showing what they choose, or me from watching it if I like.

    --
    Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
    1. Re:Great news everyone.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not true. from the Communications Act of 1934; which created the FCC"

      CENSORSHIP; INDECENT LANGUAGE

      SEC. 326. Nothing in this Act shall be understood or construed to give the Commission the power of censorship over the radio communications or signals transmitted by any radio station, and no regulation or condition shall be promulgated or fixed by the Commission which shall interfere with the right of free speech by means of radio communication. No person within the jurisdiction of the United States shall utter any obscene, indecent, or profane language by means of radio communication.

    2. Re:Great news everyone.... by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      We're now living in a time where it's trivially easy to block potentially offensive channels, or restrict their use with a code to keep them out of children's reach if their parents don't want them watching.

      Broadcasting is DEAD anyway. Streaming is the future of video, period, the end. The FCC's loss of power here would be noticed by nearly no one of the future generations.

    3. Re:Great news everyone.... by TomXP411 · · Score: 1

      You're missing the point.

      PUBLIC airwaves belong to us, the people of the United States, and Federal law states that television is a public service, not a commercial venue.

      Part of being a public service is requiring that all TV and radio stations do a certain amount of public service programming. They're also required to hold to certain standards of decency, to ensure that television programming is safe for anyone to watch at any time. Federal law requires this.

      If you want to see and hear material the rest of us consider offensive, then you have plenty of options. You can buy DVD's, you can subscribe to cable, or you can find it on the Internet. But children should not be exposed to excessive violence, sex, or profanity on the PUBLIC airwaves.

    4. Re:Great news everyone.... by sjames · · Score: 1

      I would say that the FCC has a legitimate business in making sure that the shows are rated appropriately, and that's it. If ABC wants to show hard core porn at 8 P.M., fine so long as they rate it appropriately so that the V-Chip doesn't think it's children's programming. If they advertise it as a family show and tell the V-Chip that it's appropriate for all ages, the FCC should then have the power to fine them heavily.

      There are a few subtleties though. If all of the shows are rated X it may not be in the public interest to allow them to use limited public spectrum for OTA broadcast, the spectrum belongs to everyone including children. If it's cable, there is still some consideration since they secured right of way through imminent domain. There needs to be a balance. The current least common denominator approach isn't at all balanced.

    5. Re:Great news everyone.... by Sepodati · · Score: 1

      >> But children should not be exposed to excessive
      >> violence, sex, or profanity on the PUBLIC airwaves.

      Do the children see it floating through the air on the way to the television receivers?

      How come it's my responsibility to ensure my kids don't tune to channel 651 when watching cable but it's the government's responsibility to control what's broadcast on channel 4?

      I'm for indecency standards, in general. I think self-regulation by the stations and networks over all mediums would work best. I don't understand the separation and different treatment of "broadcast" television (I know the history of why it's treated this way, though).

      -John

    6. Re:Great news everyone.... by NiteShaed · · Score: 1

      They're also required to hold to certain standards of decency, to ensure that television programming is safe for anyone to watch at any time.

      And why are you the arbiter of what's "decent". Why, exactly, is a topless woman "indecent" for the purposes of broadcast, but showing someone being shot in the chest is perfectly fine? How is it that an appointed government body gets to decide what is "decent". No, I don't think I'm missing the point. The fact that you think the government should be in the decency business makes me think that you're the one missing the point.

      If you want to see and hear material the rest of us consider offensive, then you have plenty of options. You can buy DVD's, you can subscribe to cable, or you can find it on the Internet. But children should not be exposed to excessive violence, sex, or profanity on the PUBLIC airwaves.

      Who the hell are "the rest of us". Why is your view that a girl in a bikini is fine, but a more conservative view that it's "indecent" isn't, or that my view that full nudity isn't indecent is wrong? Why is your view that someone getting shot to death isn't "excessive violence" correct, vs someone who finds it shocking and disturbing? What do you think will happen to viewers of the gunshot-death I just mentioned if the character were to say "Holy shit, you fucking shot me!", instead of "Ouch." before he dies? Maybe we should go to the lowest common denominator then, and only allow children's programming, and educational material that isn't too racy by the most prudish available standards to be broadcast. After all, if you want something they find objectionable you can always buy a DVD, subscribe to cable, or look on the internet. Heaven forbid someone should get (gasp!) offended.

      Oh, and for the record, there's virtually nothing that I watch at this point on broadcast channels. For the most part, it's too sanitized, and bores me. My first choice is always video on demand, followed by cable, followed by, rarely, broadcast.

      --
      Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
    7. Re:Great news everyone.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good. The FCC has no business regulating the content of what gets broadcast, only the means of broadcasting it...

      Only you are wrong. They have to uphold Federal law.
      See Title 18 of the United States Code, Section 1464.

      http://www.fcc.gov/eb/oip/FAQ.html#TheLaw

      Aside: Does the captcha now use google adsense or something? Captcha: excites

    8. Re:Great news everyone.... by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      Good. The FCC has no business regulating the content of what gets broadcast, only the means of broadcasting it, ie: making sure everyone stays in their licensed frequencies and doesn't stomp on each others transmissions.

      This is the smartest thing I've read this month.

    9. Re:Great news everyone.... by NiteShaed · · Score: 1

      For the most part, I'd tend to agree. How the ratings are applied would probably be the tricky part, as I'm not sure who you'd trust to do it fairly. Maybe similar to the way movies are rated (although that's not without its problems), or allow the broadcasters to apply their own ratings with a system in place to examine challenges for "misrated" shows. Maybe even a moderation system, perhaps through Neilson where people could say whether they felt a given rating was appropriate. Honestly, I kind of doubt that broadcasters would go crazy putting racy stuff on with family ratings on it. They still have advertisers to answer to, and I just don't see broadcasters risking advertising accounts by telling "PlaySkool" a show is "Family Friendly" when it's actually something like an episode of "True Blood".

      --
      Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
    10. Re:Great news everyone.... by TomXP411 · · Score: 1

      Your argument hinges on the idea that society should have to seek to avoid indecent material, that nudity, sex, profanity, and violence should be the default, and that parents should have to take proactive measures to avoid those things in the media.

      But that's not the case. State and Federal laws make it clear that children should not be exposed to that kind of material. It's against the law to sell a Playboy to a minor, and it's against the law to expose children to "immoral acts".

      Broadcast television and radio are different than cable television for one simple reason: its signals are unencrypted and available to all. There's no way to control who can see and hear those signals, as long as they have a receiver, and even my 6 year old daughter knows how to work a radio and a television set. In fact, she had found my portable TV and tuned to a broadcast of The Family Guy before I even knew she had it.

      The First Amendment says you can have channel 651, but decency standards say that you have to take extra steps to get it. You have to ask your cable company for a box that can decode that encrypted signal, and once you have the ability to decode that signal, you have the legal obligation to prevent minors from watching that material.

      Imagine for a moment that the industry did police itself. Would that be a better situation than we have now? Would there be less indecent material on the air? Considering how many times Howard Stern was fined for content on his show, I think we can all agree the answer would be "No."

      I don't like government over-regulation more than anybody else, but I just don't see a solution that works without the involvement of the FCC (or a government body that does the same job.)

    11. Re:Great news everyone.... by TomXP411 · · Score: 1

      I don't think a graphic depiction of someone getting shot in the chest is any more acceptable than a graphic depiction of a woman baring her chest. However, our society does have standards of decency, and the government has the legal right to uphold those standards. Your indignation doesn't change that fact. You have every right to watch whatever disgusting filth you want, as long as you do it where kids can't see it. Nobody's taking that right away from you, but if you think it's acceptable expose children to the kind of material that can only be found on pay TV channels, then there's something seriously messed up about your grasp of right and wrong.

    12. Re:Great news everyone.... by NiteShaed · · Score: 1

      I don't think a graphic depiction of someone getting shot in the chest is any more acceptable than a graphic depiction of a woman baring her chest

      And yet, one is allowed on broadcast TV, and the other is not.

      However, our society does have standards of decency, and the government has the legal right to uphold those standards.

      Sorry, I missed the portion of the Constitution that says "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; except when use of those freedoms might offend or otherwise make someone uncomfortable". So, do tell me, upon what do you base this belief that the government holds such a right?

      You have every right to watch whatever disgusting filth you want, as long as you do it where kids can't see it.

      What makes you think I want to see "disgusting filth"? Is the scene from Titanic where Rose poses for a portrait without a top on "disgusting filth"? Further, what damage do you feel would be caused to children who see this? What makes you think all nudity should be treated the same as hard-core pornography?

      Nobody's taking that right away from you

      The government didn't take away James Cameron's right to present Titanic over the air without censorship? Again, the government has no "right" that I'm aware of to censor a work, but an artist does have the right to present that work without censorship.

      but if you think it's acceptable expose children to the kind of material that can only be found on pay TV channels, then there's something seriously messed up about your grasp of right and wrong.

      So what are you saying here? Due to the fact that a child *might* stumble into adult programming, none should be allowed? If this is really about protecting the innocent little children, why does it only apply to broadcast television? What if a child accidentally turns on HBO? What if a child accidentally sees a copy of Penthouse? And have you seen what's on this internet thing? My god, the very existence of these things threatens childhood as we know it! How about, if you have children, you either monitor their use of the television, or use the easily available systems to block what they have access to?

      --
      Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
    13. Re:Great news everyone.... by sjames · · Score: 1

      I also doubt it will be much of a problem, but it will let the FCC feel like they're still able to protect the purity of our children without letting them be censors. The FCC's contribution would likely be more along the lines of providing a framework for the ratings, perhaps addressing the concerns of parents who are concerned about violence.

      If they really want to make themselves useful though, they could try banning commercials that blow you through the back wall when you can barely hear the show. That and pick up the slack from the FTC failing to control deceptive advertising.

    14. Re:Great news everyone.... by Sepodati · · Score: 1

      Your argument hinges on the idea that society should have to seek to avoid indecent material, that nudity, sex, profanity, and violence should be the default, and that parents should have to take proactive measures to avoid those things in the media.

      I don't see where I've said that. I think it's becoming more prevalent, but not the default. 85% of the people in the States already have to do this (proactive measures), versus the 15% who receive over the air broadcasts.

      once you have the ability to decode that signal, you have the legal obligation to prevent minors from watching that material

      How is this any different from digital TV broadcast over the air? You choose to have a digital TV decoder in your house. Why is it the governments responsibility to control what's decoded on your reciever yet my responsibility on my cable receiver? My 7-year old working a cable TV remote is different from your 6-year old working a remote for a TV receiving OTA broadcasts?

      You make a good argument overall, though, so thank you for that. This is a hard area to decide what to regulate or not.

      -John

    15. Re:Great news everyone.... by NiteShaed · · Score: 1

      Your argument hinges on the idea that society should have to seek to avoid indecent material, that nudity, sex, profanity, and violence should be the default, and that parents should have to take proactive measures to avoid those things in the media.

      I'm not seeing the problem here. Parents are supposed to protect their children.

      But that's not the case. State and Federal laws make it clear that children should not be exposed to that kind of material. It's against the law to sell a Playboy to a minor

      But not to an adult. By censoring what is allowed to be broadcast, you're deciding what adults can have as well, and that's where the problem lies.

      and it's against the law to expose children to "immoral acts".

      Really? Could you define an "immoral act" for me? How about letting a child watch a news report about Enron, that was pretty immoral.

      Broadcast television and radio are different than cable television for one simple reason: its signals are unencrypted and available to all. There's no way to control who can see and hear those signals, as long as they have a receiver,

      bullshit.

      and even my 6 year old daughter knows how to work a radio and a television set. In fact, she had found my portable TV and tuned to a broadcast of The Family Guy before I even knew she had it.

      So because you can't put your portable TV on a shelf that a 6 year old can't reach, and you couldn't be bothered to activate the v-chip settings on that TV, we all have stick with programming that's appropriate for 6 year olds.

      The First Amendment says you can have channel 651, but decency standards say that you have to take extra steps to get it.

      Please explain how "decency standards" trump the United States Constitution. A real explanation please, not just "think of the children".

      Imagine for a moment that the industry did police itself. Would that be a better situation than we have now? Would there be less indecent material on the air? Considering how many times Howard Stern was fined for content on his show, I think we can all agree the answer would be "No."

      Again, I fail to see how this allows for a government agency to determine "decency", let alone implement it.

      I don't like government over-regulation more than anybody else,

      ooooo, I sense a "but" coming.

      but I just don't see a solution that works without the involvement of the FCC (or a government body that does the same job.)

      So really, you don't like over-regulation, except for when you do.

      --
      Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
    16. Re:Great news everyone.... by TomXP411 · · Score: 1

      I guess that what it comes down to is that broadcast television and radio are free: they are free, unencumbered signals that can be picked up by any compatible receiver. Because of that, the FCC, which is the legal entity established to govern the airwaves, has jurisdiction.

      Cable signals can't be: you don't have the legal right to jack in to a cable system without permission, and so the cable company gets to decide what they carry.

      By the same token, the city I live in gets to say what we can do in a public park, and I get to say what you can do in my house...

      And I like it that way. Someone needs to be in charge, or it'll be a nightmare.

    17. Re:Great news everyone.... by TomXP411 · · Score: 1

      So what's the better alternative... no regulation of television content at all? Allow any unregulated content on the radio (which has no V-chip)?

      Again, I'm not talking about specifics of what's allowed or not. I just don't think that removing the FCC's ability to enforce standards set up by the Federal government is a good idea.

      You want to change those standards? I'm all for common-sense changes, if need be. But to eliminate them altogether just doesn't seem like a good idea.

    18. Re:Great news everyone.... by NiteShaed · · Score: 1

      So what's the better alternative... no regulation of television content at all? Allow any unregulated content on the radio (which has no V-chip)?

      Yep. What exactly do you think will happen if that were the case? Broadcasters aren't going to try to trick you into listening to or watching things you don't want to see or hear. Since they rely on sponsors, I seriously doubt they'd change much of anything. Most corporate radio has far stricter rules for what the company will allow to broadcast than the FCC's own regulations. Why? Sponsors. They're terrified of getting complaints and losing ad revenue. If though you should flip through the dial and hear someone say "fuck" before you change the station, don't worry, your head won't explode and your children won't die.

      Again, I'm not talking about specifics of what's allowed or not. I just don't think that removing the FCC's ability to enforce standards set up by the Federal government is a good idea.

      Unless someone can come up with a reason why FCC content regulations aren't unconstitutional, removing that ability is the only answer. Our government is not meant to be able to say "except in this case" when the rules it's boud by are inconvenient.

      You want to change those standards? I'm all for common-sense changes, if need be. But to eliminate them altogether just doesn't seem like a good idea.

      I want to remove them as the issuing body has no authority to put them in place to start with. If you want a nice safe clean medium, pay for it. Stick to podcasts, get a satellite radio, but you do not have a constitutional right to not be offended, and the federal government does not have the constitutional authority to decide matters of content.

      You ignored every question I asked you, why is that?

      --
      Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
    19. Re:Great news everyone.... by NiteShaed · · Score: 1

      Only you are wrong. They have to uphold Federal law.
      See Title 18 of the United States Code, Section 1464.

      And this is the United States Constitution, amendment 1:
      Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

      Do you see anything there that implies that this amendment is somehow limited to things that aren't offensive? Does it say anything about "except for obscene or indecent"? The Constitution trumps ALL other laws, local, state or federal. Unless you can show me a constitutional basis for the government being allowed to censor speech due to offensive content, your link means only that the government has overstepped its bounds.

      --
      Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
    20. Re:Great news everyone.... by TomXP411 · · Score: 1

      Should a 9 year old be able to buy Hustler at the local grocery store? Of course not.

      If a minor can't buy Hustler magazines at the newsstand. How is that not a constitutional issue, under your definition? Doesn't Larry Flint have the right to free speech?

      Courts have stated over and over again that "free speech" doesn't mean indecent or obscene material. Yes, people can and have gone to jail for downloading obscene material, even though the constitution protects free speech.

    21. Re:Great news everyone.... by NiteShaed · · Score: 1

      I also doubt it will be much of a problem, but it will let the FCC feel like they're still able to protect the purity of our children without letting them be censors. The FCC's contribution would likely be more along the lines of providing a framework for the ratings, perhaps addressing the concerns of parents who are concerned about violence.

      True enough. I suppose as long as there's *someone* to appeal to, even if it's the courts, that would probably work well enough.

      If they really want to make themselves useful though, they could try banning commercials that blow you through the back wall when you can barely hear the show. That and pick up the slack from the FTC failing to control deceptive advertising.

      I dunno, those commercials have sharpened my reflexes to superhuman levels. I can hit that mute button so fast that I violate the laws of physics. :)

      --
      Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
    22. Re:Great news everyone.... by TomXP411 · · Score: 1

      Here are specific answers to your questions...

      So, do tell me, upon what do you base this belief that the government holds such a right?

      Courts have ruled over and over that obscenity isn't protected speech.

      What makes you think I want to see "disgusting filth"? Is the scene from Titanic where Rose poses for a portrait without a top on "disgusting filth"? Further, what damage do you feel would be caused to children who see this? What makes you think all nudity should be treated the same as hard-core pornography?

      I didn't say it was. I don't care about specific content. I care that the FCC (or someone) has the right to block obscene or indecent content. Quite frankly, I don't think that her being nude added anything to the scene, and I think that 90% of the nudity I've seen in movies is unnecessary - it's there purely to sell tickets. I don't think nudity is automatically pornographic, however. But my opinion of nudity doesn't matter; what matters is whether someone has the right to make that determination

      The government didn't take away James Cameron's right to present Titanic over the air without censorship?

      He has every right to present it, but having the right to make and present a movie is not the same as having the right to transmit it over the airwaves. The constitution preserves the right to speech, not radio transmission.

      So what are you saying here? Due to the fact that a child *might* stumble into adult programming, none should be allowed?

      I'm saying that you have the right to watch what you want, but I don't think that right extends to the public airwaves.

      Put it any way you want, but I don't think the right to free speech includes all forms of expression in any place at any time. When it comes to specific forms of "expression", there are things you're not allowed to do in public, and there's nothing more public than shooting a radio transmission from the top of a mountain with 50,000 watts of electricity.

    23. Re:Great news everyone.... by NiteShaed · · Score: 1

      If a minor can't buy Hustler magazines at the newsstand. How is that not a constitutional issue, under your definition? Doesn't Larry Flint have the right to free speech?

      He does, and his materials are available in those stores to adults. An adult bars the child's access to the material. Much like a parent might do when it comes to allowing the child to watch television. Saying that you can't always be there to watch the child would be analogous to saying nobody should be allowed to buy Hustler Magazine because you can't always watch children and prevent them from finding your copies of Hustler.

      Courts have stated over and over again that "free speech" doesn't mean indecent or obscene material. Yes, people can and have gone to jail for downloading obscene material, even though the constitution protects free speech.

      Which I wouldn't agree with, in my opinion the courts have been very wrong on this issue, but the legal definition of "obscene" goes a whole lot further than saying fuck, or showing a nude body. The FCC regulations do not deal with obscenity in that sense. If it can be shown legally in theaters, and on HBO, it's a pretty safe bet that it comes nowhere near approaching the legal definition of obscenity. In my earlier example using Titanic, that movie simply can not be shown in its entirety on broadcast TV. There is no way though that it would fail the Miller Test and be considered obscene material. Therefore, even under the badly flawed definitions that the courts have allowed, the FCC has gone off on its own and created much more broad restrictions of what is allowable. I ask again, where does the authority come from to do this?

      --
      Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
    24. Re:Great news everyone.... by NiteShaed · · Score: 1

      Courts have ruled over and over that obscenity isn't protected speech.

      I have a more complete response to this in another part of the thread, but the FCC doesn't deal with the legal definition of obscenity. HBO's "True Blood" is absolutely not obscene by the courts definition, therefore, the FCC should allow it to be broadcast, right?

      But my opinion of nudity doesn't matter; what matters is whether someone has the right to make that determination

      But since we've now established that obscenity in the legal sense, and your own personal definition aren't the same thing, from where do they draw that authority? Thin air is the only answer I've seen so far.

      He has every right to present it, but having the right to make and present a movie is not the same as having the right to transmit it over the airwaves. The constitution preserves the right to speech, not radio transmission.

      Oh isn't that cute. The constitution doesn't say you have the right to own a laptop computer either. Is it okay to make a law restricting owning one? Really now, that's just a stupid argument. The medium is irrelevant, or do you really, honestly believe that the only protected speech is that which comes from a hand-crank powered printing press as known in the late 1700s?

      I'm saying that you have the right to watch what you want, but I don't think that right extends to the public airwaves.

      Great, start your own country, write your own constitution, and say that. If you really like it here, then start the process of amending the constitution to allow the government to have the authority to do that. In the meantime, the constitution that we have doesn't include your right to not be offended.

      Put it any way you want, but I don't think the right to free speech includes all forms of expression in any place at any time. When it comes to specific forms of "expression", there are things you're not allowed to do in public, and there's nothing more public than shooting a radio transmission from the top of a mountain with 50,000 watts of electricity.

      It would have been very simple to state in the constitution that the right to free speech is limited to speech that is approved of by the community at large, and yet, it's not there. Until such a time comes as an amendment is added to the constitution granting this restriction, it does not exist as a legal ability of the government.

      --
      Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
    25. Re:Great news everyone.... by NiteShaed · · Score: 1

      Um, do you really not notice a certain glaring contradiction in that paragraph?

      --
      Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
  17. what ever happened to the V-Chip? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Shouldn't that take care of any think of the children issues?

    1. Re:what ever happened to the V-Chip? by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 1

      it would involve effort on the parent's part. FAIL.

  18. Hmmm by symes · · Score: 3, Interesting

    As a father I like the idea of being able to leave my kids at a computer or TV without having to continually monitor their activities. Here in the UK we have the BBC and thus their two fantastic advert, nudity, profanity free childrens channels. And on the home computers I've stuck K9, which seems to do a pretty good job without spoiling their use of the computer. Recently they went to a relatives house and log onto their PC. The eldest searched for "horses", as this is something she is interested in, and got links to, amongst what you would expect, "horses mating with humans". There must be a balance, of course, but I do not feel that I can let broadcasters, in the loosest definition, decide what is and what is not suitable for my children. I do not want them to grow up thinking profanity, nudity, violence or whatever is normal behaviour. Similarly, I do not want them subject to some of the adverts that appear on some childrens channels (e.g. give money to help save some poor kid's life... I feel there're more appropriate ways of teaching kids about these issues). So we need something in place, whether that is common sense or an impartial body. Unfortunately I don't think common sense is an abundant commodity and so the US would probably benefit from keeping the FCC's indecency policy in place. There's no K9 for live TV, alas.

    1. Re:Hmmm by MickyTheIdiot · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There are plenty of ways in the U.S. for a parent to decide what they want their kid to see without taking choices away from me as an adult. Again... it takes effort. Every device out there has parental controls... the finest grain parental controls we ever have had... so use them. And if you don't want your kid to see certain things then it's YOUR responsibility to keep him/her off of my computer that has parental controls turned off, not the other way around.

    2. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      So you like the TV and computer to babysit your children. Instead of letting technology or the government raise and watch over your kids why don't you try it for a change?

    3. Re:Hmmm by elixin77 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      So your saying that a government agency (or a private company) should monitor what your kids do, instead of you, the actual parent? Why should a government agency be concerned with what I'm watching on TV, or doing on the internet (oh wait...)? Take responsibility for your kids and what they watch/do on the TV and internet. Its people like you that pass and support laws that strip everyone else's rights by saying "but think of the children!" You know what? Fuck the children. I grew up just fine without some politician screaming that the children are in danger, and that we need to lose rights and pass ridiculous laws so that 'children can be safe.' Fuck that. I used to be out with my friends, and was told to come home when the street lights came on. I used to be forced outside (god forbid), and forced to do something on my own. And because of that, I consider myself a much better person than the generation thats coming up behind me, and guess what? I'm not alone in how I feel either. So do this: grow some balls, and be an active father figure in your kids life. If your kid finds a site on the internet where a horse fucks a person, than make sure your kids know that they can talk to you about it. Than you can be the active father figure and tell them what you feel about the subject, and let them come to their own conclusions on how they feel. The key word is 'active' - be active in their life. Numerous studies have shown that kids do a fuck load better in life if they have an active father figure - not some pussy who hides their kids behind a net filter.

    4. Re:Hmmm by BarryJacobsen · · Score: 4, Informative

      What search engine are you using where anywhere in the top 10 pages of results for "Horses" are there horses mating with humans? Google with Safe Search disabled doesn't even have anything like that.

    5. Re:Hmmm by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > The eldest searched for "horses", as this is something she is interested in, and got links to,
      > amongst what you would expect, "horses mating with humans". There must be a balance,

      Actually, based on my cursory search through the first 10 pages of Google Horse search results
      I would expect nothing of the sort. At this point, I would be rather suspicious of anyone that
      got results like that.

      The first obvious non-horse result was a reference to politics.

      Showing the user what they aren't looking for is obviously unproductive.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    6. Re:Hmmm by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      As a father I like the idea of being able to leave my kids at a computer or TV without having to continually monitor their activities.

      As a person who has to live on this planet with your children I am horrified that you believe that this is a valid means of parenting. Ever heard of Tivo, and pre-vetting what you permit them to watch? You CAN take responsibility for your crap style of parenting without subjecting the rest of us to your morality.

      Here in the UK we have the BBC and thus their two fantastic advert, nudity, profanity free childrens channels.

      And here in the US you can pay to get such things if you have children, but nobody forces you to pay for such things if you don't watch them.

      Recently they went to a relatives house and log onto their PC. The eldest searched for "horses", as this is something she is interested in, and got links to, amongst what you would expect, "horses mating with humans".

      I would expect you to make sure they have SafeSearch turned on and up. You didn't tell us if you did, so I feel free to assume you didn't. I would expect you to keep your children away from relatives who don't share your concerns on parenting, or for you to admit that they aren't really very important.

      There must be a balance, of course, but I do not feel that I can let broadcasters, in the loosest definition, decide what is and what is not suitable for my children.

      The people decide by voting with their eyeballs or dollars as appropriate. The market will produce acceptable content. It is not the government's job to keep your children from experiencing it to the detriment of others.

      I do not want them to grow up thinking profanity, nudity, violence or whatever is normal behaviour.

      Profanity is free expression of the amygdala. We are all born nude. Violence, I guess I'm with you on. Indeed, nudism is only harmful because society has made it so; most places you are punished for being unclothed. (There are notable exceptions; I come from Santa Cruz, CA, which is one of them.) You are encouraging persecution of natural activity.

      Similarly, I do not want them subject to some of the adverts that appear on some childrens channels (e.g. give money to help save some poor kid's life... I feel there're more appropriate ways of teaching kids about these issues).

      I agree on some levels, and I agree with your right to show your kids whatever you like, and teach them however you like. But I do think that showing children only happy niceness on television is a lie.

      So we need something in place, whether that is common sense or an impartial body.

      We have something in place, it is called the V-Chip. Content is rated and you can restrict content by classification. By and large, the system works; it leans towards false positives. If the FCC wants to be involved in television decency, this is the right way to do it. Ratings are voluntary, and you have a choice; you can refuse to consume media which comes without ratings. Again, let the market decide if it wants sanitized television. You and I both know that it will.

      Unfortunately I don't think common sense is an abundant commodity and so the US would probably benefit from keeping the FCC's indecency policy in place.

      Again, there is already a working system for keeping people away from content which they consider indecent, it is a combination technical and social solution, and it works great. If I put a set in a store window I'm going to set the chip to block content which I think might get me in trouble or drive away customers. If I somehow get roped into babysitting (hahahahahaha) then I'm going to be looking for a book.

      My mother considered the television to be a substitute for parenting, and I do

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    7. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, profanity is normal behavior, and nudity certainly isn't abnormal behavior.

    8. Re:Hmmm by Fallus+Shempus · · Score: 1

      In general I am the same, except I'm there when the kids are on the internet,

      I don't need any filter other than my eyes and l33t g00gle sk1llz (... search solo and bookmark for them).

      I've often wondered how you learn to trust web filters anyway, the only ones I've ever experienced have just always annoyed me.

    9. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here in the UK we have the BBC and thus their two fantastic advert, nudity, profanity free childrens channels.

      That's rather misleading. The BBC often has programming where people say bastard, tosser and shit. Even in gentle comedies like One foot in the grave. Are you sure you're not confusing BBC programming and the watershed rule?

    10. Re:Hmmm by Hatta · · Score: 2, Insightful

      As a father I like the idea of being able to leave my kids at a computer or TV without having to continually monitor their activities.

      As an adult, I don't really give a shit about your children. They are your responsibility. What you feel is appropriate for your children should never affect what is on my TV. If you feel something on TV is inappropriate for your children, you can censor it yourself by turning off the TV. If I feel that something on TV has been ruined by censorship, I can't undo the censorship.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    11. Re:Hmmm by DrgnDancer · · Score: 1

      One thing to keep in mind is that FCC decency standards are extremely broadly implemented. Imagine if the restrictions the BBC places on it's kids networks were in place on all networks until the end of Prime Time (which on the coasts doesn't end until 2200). After which most networks still self enforce a slightly less stringent version because they fear that if anyone complains the FCC itself might decide to just apply the same rules to all 24 hours a day. I'm not normally a "The Market will fix it" kind of guy, but in this case I think that there's a good chance this could be left to the market. Unlike in a lot of areas where the actual mechanisms of a process are hidden, the nature of TV is particularly "what you see is what you get".

      You don't really have to worry that there was a nipple involved somewhere in the the productions of the children's TV show you're watching. It's not like cell phones providers or ISPs who could be hiding something nefarious in the network that you can't see, or the stock market where people are doing mysterious things with other people's money. It's completely visible and transparent. Don't like it? Don't want your kids to see it? Don't watch it. It would be patently foolish to start putting sexual content in a family sitcom or a kids cartoon. People would simply not watch it. Kid's channels are not going to suddenly get adult content. "Family Hour Fridays on ABC" is not suddenly going to include porn. It's particularly easy to vote with your feet when it come to television, and I really think the FCC's stance on this is archaic.

      --
      I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.
    12. Re:Hmmm by AmonTheMetalhead · · Score: 1

      I do not want them to grow up thinking profanity, nudity, violence or whatever is normal behaviour

      Newsflash, it is normal human behavior, expose your kids to reality & learn them how to deal with it, they'll live longer

    13. Re:Hmmm by Culture20 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Google with Safe Search disabled doesn't even have anything like that.

      For _you_. The owner of that computer must have different Google habits than you.

    14. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Well, Google has some algorithms that will bring search results to the front based on what you've searched for in the past...

      Maybe the OP should stop sending them over to his horse-fucking relative's house.

    15. Re:Hmmm by stephows · · Score: 1

      The guy says he doesn't want to spend ONE HUNDRED PERCENT of his time watching over his kids. He didn't say that he doesn't want to spend ANY time with them. And as for growing some balls, yours won't let you live for a few hours of the afternoon without seeing porn on TV. I think Judi Dench said it best, "Perhaps, the advantage is I don't have to think with them all the time".

    16. Re:Hmmm by Phoobarnvaz · · Score: 1

      Similarly, I do not want them subject to some of the adverts that appear on some childrens channels (e.g. give money to help save some poor kid's life... I feel there're more appropriate ways of teaching kids about these issues).

      Had no idea they showed this BS on the TV outside the US. Guess people in the UK feel they don't need to have direct exposure to the poor either...so send them your money and your conscience tells you you've done something to help someone else you don't know.

      So we need something in place, whether that is common sense or an impartial body. Unfortunately I don't think common sense is an abundant commodity and so the US would probably benefit from keeping the FCC's indecency policy in place. There's no K9 for live TV, alas.

      Common sense has never been anything like a commodity. Example...friend of mine was working at the cable company in Tulsa, Oklahoma on the overnight shift. Being that Oklahoma is part of the Bible Noose and the cable company carried the Playboy Channel that you had to pay for if you wanted it...someone called in and told him he/the company were evil for carrying the programming that other people would subscribe to and want. He promptly told them if they don't like it...there were two knobs on their TV. One was the On/Off switch...the other the channel knob/remote he could use to watch anything else other than the Playboy Channel he didn't subscribe to or watch. The caller started throwing the F-bomb at him and finally hung up. The next day...his boss applauded him...but told him it was bad public relations as he was laughing/crying at the same time.

      --
      Don't worry about the world coming to an end today. It's already tomorrow in Australia. - Charles M. Schulz
    17. Re:Hmmm by FatOAP · · Score: 1

      He's referring to CBBC and CBeebies, two BBC channels for kids.I can safely say I've not heard anybody say bastard or shit on there. Tosser would probably be ok on something geared towards older kids.

      The only exception being on Balamory where every character refers to Archie as a cunt. The BBC have explained that this use of profanity is excusable as Archie lives in a pink castle, wears a dress and is a cunt.

    18. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What search engine are you using where anywhere in the top 10 pages of results for "Horses" are there horses mating with humans? Google with Safe Search disabled doesn't even have anything like that.

      Youtube.

    19. Re:Hmmm by jank1887 · · Score: 1

      maybe he uses a search engine that customizes results based on your past searches. sounds like somebody has some explaining to do.

    20. Re:Hmmm by Chowderbags · · Score: 1

      Since they were at a relative's house, I think the real question is why they're being left alone with that relative.

    21. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Problem being that most of those controls rely on the broadcaster to correctly rate the broadcast. So if they rate it as 'no boobies' and then show boobies, the parental controls are SOL.

    22. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      except they aren't thet fined grained. For example: If Dora suddenly said "Fuck you, swiper" it wouldn't pick that up.

      And if you think that sort of thing wouldn happen, think about this:

      When my sone was about 5 we sat down together to watch nickelodeon in the afternoon.

      Invader Zim came out. a relevantly new 'kids' cartoon, or so it was advertised.

      It was weird, but heh, I don't mind weird. The at one point Zim rips the eyeballs out of a child.
      There was nothing like that in the description and it wasn't rated properly.

      For the record, I liked invader Zim, but it should not have been on during that time, or at least had a warning. I had to deal with an upset child for a long time.

      So yeah, the V-Chip would work great if' The Betty' came on, but that's about it.

    23. Re:Hmmm by andymadigan · · Score: 1

      > And here in the US you can pay to get such things if you have children, but nobody forces you to pay for such things if you don't watch them.

      Actually, we also have PBS, publically funded, clean, educational television. I get at least 3 different PBS channels over ATSC. No "dirty" commercials to worry about either. If you really want to make sure your kids don't see anything bad just put it on that channel and lock it.

      Otherwise, let the commercial entities be commercial entities and show whatever gets them the most viewers.

      --
      The right to protest the State is more sacred than the State.
    24. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I do not want them to grow up thinking profanity, nudity, violence or whatever is normal behaviour

      Newsflash, it is normal human behavior, expose your kids to reality & learn them how to deal with it, they'll live longer

      Newsflash... TV isn't reality

    25. Re:Hmmm by symes · · Score: 1

      Well.. they are very active, well-rounded kids. The youngest doesn't use a computer on account of not being able to read as yet, but does like half an hour of TV now and then, but in general does like to be doing other activities. The eldest has homework that involves work on her laptop, and yes, she was the one that brought the horses mating with humans issue to our attention - and I trust her more than I would trust most adults, as it happens. What I most certainly do not want is disturbing images stuck in front of either of them in a way that removes their opportunity for choice. I do not want them to grow up in a world thinking guns, violence and death are normal - misperceptions that are probably one of the biggest reasons why people don't leave the safety of their houses any more and probably due to the over exposure of violence on tv, fiction and non-fiction. So, thanks, I am an active dad and am pleased to see them develop independence - I just don't want some some fucktard shoving their twisted view of reality down their throats.

    26. Re:Hmmm by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      What if you can't spell? "googal, pleez let me sea sum whorses"

    27. Re:Hmmm by symes · · Score: 1

      What search engine are you using where anywhere in the top 10 pages of results for "Horses" are there horses mating with humans? Google with Safe Search disabled doesn't even have anything like that.

      Youtube.

      I've asked - it was You Tube

    28. Re:Hmmm by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      Guess you shouldn't have turned off SafeSearch when you were browsing for lesbian left-handed albino midget eskimo porn. :D

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    29. Re:Hmmm by shaitand · · Score: 1

      "I do not want them to grow up thinking profanity, nudity, violence or whatever is normal behaviour."

      Of course that would be awful. I mean really, just because profanity, nudity, and violence ARE normal behavior is no reason for children to grow up thinking as much.

    30. Re:Hmmm by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      Even better: Teaching your child how to deal with that stuff. Precisely because you can't be there all the time. We as Americans seem to have this idea that we should protect our children from exposure to... well, everything. Because it might be harmful. Rather than teaching them coping skills, and not punishing them for accidental or even just curious excursions.

      If your kids are 3-10 years old (or whatever), yes, do what you can to shield them from the icky stuff. But they won't understand it and won't care for the most part about it, either, so don't punish them if they accidentally get to it. Just help them navigate away. They shouldn't be afraid of bad things. When they're getting older and curious, teach them what it is and how to deal with it and what you feel is appropriate and what isn't, and most importantly, WHY.

      You're raising a person, not a child. We've got too many children voting and in government as it is.

    31. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope. It doesn't pop up on the first page for me either.

    32. Re:Hmmm by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, TV will teach your children that violence is often acceptable, and that it can be a neat and effective solution to a problem. Can you direct me to the broadcast medium where I don't have to worry about the kid seeing people getting shot, or beaten up, or violently interrogated? I don't care if there's some sex, as I figure that's not going to have as many negative consequences.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    33. Re:Hmmm by Gabrosin · · Score: 1

      I am disturbed by the fact that you don't want your kids growing up thinking that nudity is normal behavior. Nudity is the natural human state. By your own words you are equating it with profanity and violence; you are teaching your children that nudity is wrong and shameful on the same level as harming or insulting another person. This is NOT healthy.

    34. Re:Hmmm by rjstanford · · Score: 1

      I do not want them to grow up thinking profanity, nudity, violence or whatever is normal behaviour.

      The thing is... it is normal. A lot of minor profanities are actually in common use. Nudity in the locker room is typical - and yet rarely if ever shown on television (thus when it is shown, its always a Big Deal). Violence sadly happens a lot too, but its covered (often live) on the evening news already. Pretending that these things aren't as commonplace as they really are just helps to distort the view of what the world is like - and, ironically, makes it harder to change that reality (if that's something you'd like to see happen).

      --
      You're special forces then? That's great! I just love your olympics!
    35. Re:Hmmm by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Why would they not be left alone with them? Are you arguing that people who watch horse porn are a danger to children? Or are you arguing that his children are horses?

  19. it's unnatural, that's what that is by circletimessquare · · Score: 1, Funny

    the idea of bringing a boob to an innocent baby's mouth is obviously a severe injection of immorality into the family structure by people who have no consideration for a child's decency and psychological health. some people are just perverts, but why they can't do their perversions amongst themselves, why they have to drag an innocent darling child into their sleazy use of the human body by making a helpless infant suck on a boob... it really makes my blood boil at these decadent slime

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:it's unnatural, that's what that is by thijsh · · Score: 1

      Scoundrels! Especially those who attempt to convince us they have a *right* to perform this despicable practice in public places in plain view of other innocent darling kids!

  20. More "business ventures" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It always surprises me how stupid American law has gotten.
    Restaurants put "hot coffee" on cups for fear of being sued.
    People get worse sentences for stealing a song then if they would steal a whole business' inventory + more..

    God forbid a vagina or penis shows up on tv and it becomes a crazy national topic for a month.
    The fcc would love that kind of attention and be there to feed the parents with "we're doing it for the children" and also burp them afterwards...

    These kids will probably know more about sex then the collective minds of the fcc. The kids don't need censorship, the fcc needs censorship.

    - Yours truly, guy who thinks fcc needs to censor their own penises first before moving onto bigger fish.

  21. Nudity by Demonantis · · Score: 1

    I don't get it. Even the word nudity looks sexy. Isn't sexy suppose to be the in thing?

  22. Reading for comprehension, people... by absurdist · · Score: 1

    ...as in "this decision is bad how?"

  23. No harm by airfoobar · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What's wrong with kids seeing the odd tit on TV? It's just a part of the human body, and let's not forget we all came out of a vagina. All this bitching probably comes from a bunch of super-religious nuts who are trying to make people feel bad about their bodies, so they can keep telling them god will save them.

    1. Re:No harm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's wrong with kids seeing the odd tit on TV?

      Because humans generally have an even number of tits.

    2. Re:No harm by supersloshy · · Score: 1

      All this bitching probably comes from a bunch of super-religious nuts who are trying to make people feel bad about their bodies, so they can keep telling them god will save them.

      Read "Theology of the Body for Beginners" by Christopher West. It's a summary of a summary of Pope John Paul II's "Theology of the Body" lectures, and less than 150 pages so it's simple enough. What you're saying is completely false. God doesn't want us to be ashamed of our bodies. The shame comes from the fact that because of sin, we're seen as sex objects by nearly everyone and we need to cover that up to prevent us from being used as such. That "shame" should not exist at all; Adam and Eve, as you most likely know, were made naked and they were fine with that. As soon as they started being sinful they grew ashamed and covered themselves up. God will save us if we care enough, but there's so many different screwed-up definitions of Christianity we have now that it's nearly impossible to tell what God truly wants from us (Pope John Paul II is a master at explaining what God wants from us). If you want a more detailed explanation of how special the body is, "Theology of the Body Explained", also by Christopher West, is about 500 pages. You could also read the original "Theology of the Body", but you would need to be very patient.

      --
      "Our country is not nearly so overrun with the bigoted as it is overrun with the broadminded." -Archbishop Fulton Sheen
    3. Re:No harm by airfoobar · · Score: 1

      I don't give a toss what your god wants, because if I gave a toss your god would send me straight to hell. I hope you can see why I find myself at such a terrible impasse.

  24. planet/population rescue in evacuation mode by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that's raised from a 12 year space of crisis mode when things may have been resolved equitably. some of us are boarding our chariots of fire now. you will not be left alone (due to the impossibility of protecting yourselves from unprecedented evile et al (see also; corepirate nazi illuminati, advanced weaponry, media induced mindphuking etc...). the innocents (#ed in the billions) WILL be protected, gravitate towards them & become involved in their care/safety. a couple of important issues; the planet WILL repair itself. there's absolutely no doubt about that. the population's disposition during the 'remodeling' is precarious (many will be leaving). please allow help from something none of us understands very well, as what we've been trained to believe is absolutely useless now, & we have been abandoned (demise scheduled) by those who pretensed to dedicate themselves to service to their fellow humans. we're grateful to have had the chance to attempt to communicate with you, & have found that many of you are capable of much more than dismissive, fear based, sarcastic critical comment, without any reference to (or knowledge of) subject matter. that's good news/stuff that really matters. things are changing dramatically each day now. being open (to positive change) will serve us much better than presenting our rectum as a premier 'feature'. take care....... of each other. thanks again.

    meanwhile (& it may be a while); the corepirate nazi illuminati is always hunting that patch of red on almost everyones' neck. if they cannot find yours (greed, fear ego etc...) then you can go starve. that's their (slippery/slimy) 'platform' now. see also: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antisocial_personality_disorder

    never a better time to consult with/trust in our creators. the lights are coming up rapidly all over now. see you there?

    greed, fear & ego (in any order) are unprecedented evile's primary weapons. those, along with deception & coercion, helps most of us remain (unwittingly?) dependent on its' life0cidal hired goons' agenda. most of our dwindling resources are being squandered on the 'wars', & continuation of the billionerrors stock markup FraUD/pyramid schemes. nobody ever mentions the real long term costs of those debacles in both life & any notion of prosperity for us, or our children. not to mention the abuse of the consciences of those of us who still have one, & the terminal damage to our atmosphere (see also: manufactured 'weather', hot etc...). see you on the other side of it? the lights are coming up all over now. the fairytail is winding down now. let your conscience be your guide. you can be more helpful than you might have imagined. we now have some choices. meanwhile; don't forget to get a little more oxygen on your brain, & look up in the sky from time to time, starting early in the day. there's lots going on up there.

    "The current rate of extinction is around 10 to 100 times the usual background level, and has been elevated above the background level since the Pleistocene. The current extinction rate is more rapid than in any other extinction event in earth history, and 50% of species could be extinct by the end of this century. While the role of humans is unclear in the longer-term extinction pattern, it is clear that factors such as deforestation, habitat destruction, hunting, the introduction of non-native species, pollution and climate change have reduced biodiversity profoundly.' (wiki)

    "I think the bottom line is, what kind of a world do you want to leave for your children," Andrew Smith, a professor in the Arizona State University School of Life Sciences, said in a telephone interview. "How impoverished we would be if we lost 25 percent of the world's mammals," said Smith, one of more than 100 co-authors of the report. "Within our lifetime hundreds of species could be lost as a result of our own actions, a frightening sign of what is happening to the ecosystems where they live," added Julia Marton-Lefevre, IUCN director general. "We must

    1. Re:planet/population rescue in evacuation mode by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unreadable drivel. Learn about capital letters.

  25. a breast is not made for babies! by circletimessquare · · Score: 1, Funny

    get it into your sleazy perverted minds you immoral cretins: breasts were not made to be exposed to innocent babies!

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:a breast is not made for babies! by thijsh · · Score: 1

      Don't even get me started about babies and vagina's, the nasty sexual things (after all a vagina can only be sexual like breasts) some mothers do to their children will make you vomit! No wonder that no human being remembers anything from their first years, all memories from that time are so damaging they have to be repressed!

  26. Wow, I sure hope so by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    The FCC's brief argues the court ruling would make it almost impossible to punish broadcasters that show nudity or profanity during hours when children are likely to be watching or listening.

    Wow, I sure hope so. If someone feels that their child's fragile little mind has been warped by something that appeared on television they are free to cripple the court system by suing for civil damages. Or perhaps they could behave like a parent, and exert some control what their children are watching. Pretty tired of parents who claim this is not possible. It's possible if you do your job.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  27. Take there hands off of the non free channels by Joe+The+Dragon · · Score: 1

    Take there hands off of the non free channels I don't see why movies on TNT, USA, TBS, SCIFI, and others needs to have way less censorship. Don't even thing about trying to crack down even more on that.

  28. Kids aren't that fragile by grasshoppa · · Score: 1

    It's a tit. Or a dick. Not that big a deal here folks. Kids are pretty robust, so if you don't panic they won't.

    Not to mention most TVs come with parental controls and most stations have the ability to broadcast ratings...I fail to see what relevance the FCC has anymore. I can tell you, as a citizen of the US, I don't need or want them looking out for my child. I'm her parent, I get to decide what she sees and doesn't see.

    ( as far as profanity is concerned; it's just words. Pull the wad out of your ass and realize that children will learn these words anyway, no amount of filtering on TV will stop that. )

    --
    Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
    1. Re:Kids aren't that fragile by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      The content may not be harmful in itself, but don't overlook the trauma of watching sexual content with your parents. The FCC just wants to protect children from those awkward moments!

  29. Subject Verb Agreement by fuzznutz · · Score: 1

    s/was/were

  30. Parents Television Council by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

    The problem isn't so much the FCC or what's on TV. It's the Parents Television Council. They've appointed themselves the judge and jury of all things TV and will get their members to complain en masse about shows that offend their delicate sensibilities (such as nudity, cursing, homosexuality, etc).... even if they've never seen the show in question. They've even complained about a Spongebob Squarepants episode for cursing when the "cursing" was a dolphin noise (unrecognizable as a real curse word) and the main characters in the end learned not to curse. But the lesson and lack of real cursing didn't matter. They heard "cursing" and "Spongebob" and so were off to complain!

    --
    My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    1. Re:Parents Television Council by ZorinLynx · · Score: 1

      What annoys me even more is that people can't just ignore these idiots.

      If their whining was ignored, we wouldn't have these problems. They should just be treated as the fanatical idiots they are, and we should get on with our lives.

      But no, they make noise and people listen. WHY must people listen?

  31. Follow the money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Let's call a spade a spade here. The elite at the top of the pyramid don't give damn about "indecency". That's only a smokescreen for the real objective: money. Their visions are not of a perfect Mr. Rogers world, as they would like you to believe -- their visions are dollar signs and vast fortunes.

    The more laws, the more money it costs to run them all. Conformity isn't the end goal here, but merely a means to more money. Power isn't the end goal either, but merely an asset that can be leveraged for more control over the cash flow.

    At the top of the pyramid, the more money passing through your hands, the better positioned you are to exploit that cash flow for personal gain. That's what these "indecency" laws are really about, and for that matter, most everything government does.

  32. It's "live", people by Trevin · · Score: 1

    I believe the key element to the argument here is "shown on live television." If broadcasters are showing images in real-time, there may well be events in front of the camera that are beyond the broadcasters' control. Is it fair to hold them responsible for someone else's actions who just happens to be passing by?

    On they other hand they do have a measure of control at least over where they point their cameras, so they can take reasonable measures to avoid broadcasting scenes where they might expect objectionable material.

    If TV broadcasts were pre-recorded, then there would be no excuse for violating FCC guidelines. But those aren't the broadcasts under discussion.

  33. Re:Seven Dirty Words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The kind of shit that gets on these fucking cocksucker motherfurcker cunts' tits is really starting to piss me off.

    (Any replies to this post must also make use of all the seven dirty words)

    You forgot fart, turd, and twat. (the later additions to the list)

  34. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by Hatta · · Score: 1

    These airwaves are for the public use. Want to drop the f-/n-/q-bomb? Start up your own pay channel and go nuts.

    And why do you get to decide which sets of syllables are ok, and which are forbidden? How about if you want to control the content YOU start up your own pay channel and go nuts.

    --
    Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
  35. NPR last night... by 2obvious4u · · Score: 1

    Best story on NPR in a while. "FUCK YOU" by Cee Lo Green. Man I wanted them to have played it without censorship. I don't login to youtube so I had to find it someplace else, found it here. Would liked to have linked to Youtube directly, but they want you to login to view it.

  36. America... by Conspiracy_Of_Doves · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There is no country that is more simultaneously obsessed with and embarrassed by sex than the United States.

    America seriously needs to grow the fuck up.

    1. Re:America... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You obviously haven't been to the middle east. In America, we toy with sexuality and bicker over it, but in the uber-repressed parts (largely Muslim countries), people are actually maimed and killed because of obsessive-compulsive societal disorders over sexuality. Honestly, I can't recall the last time a woman was beaten in the US for showing too much ankle or forehead, or jailed for her own rape because she had sex with a man not her husband... As screwed up as the Japanese view of sexuality seems to US-ians, sometimes I wonder if treating it like a sometimes-bizarre toy isn't the best approach yet.

    2. Re:America... by Conspiracy_Of_Doves · · Score: 1

      I think the best approach would be to act like adults and show it. Acknowledge that displaying the human body is not shameful or harmful at all and get used to it.

      That would never happen because there are too many politicians that would use it as a talking point to get people worked up over.

    3. Re:America... by phyrexianshaw.ca · · Score: 1

      Here here!

      what were the stats? 84% of all porn sites are based out of the united states? over 20K people a minute were accessing porn during the 9-5 workday, most of them being american?

      america needs to grow the fuck up. I know, I know, it hurts that england didn't like you for all those years, but tough it out, keep your chin up, and get over the obsession with keeping everything behind closed doors.

      sometimes I think that americans just LIKE to hide things. as if it somehow makes them feel more important for keeping secrets. sheesh!

    4. Re:America... by snadrus · · Score: 1

      How? With all the censorship plus life-ruining events when teens just asking other teens for a photo, children are paranoid. This case is about finally helping Americans have the tools to let this fear/obsession go.

      --
      Science & open-source build trust from peer review. Learn systems you can trust.
    5. Re:America... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      America is trying, but it's in the awkward early teen phase, where anything to do with the body warrants a giggle + innuendo. Thankfully, by the looks of things, America is starting to enter the teen macho phase, where it will flex it's muscle as often as possible to show how cool it is.

      Only another 80 or so years and America will be in the "holy-crap-school's-done-and-I-have-to-be-an-adult-and-take-care-of-myself-please-can-I-live-in-your-basement,-mom-and-dad phase".

  37. i've heard rumors by circletimessquare · · Score: 1, Funny

    that, on first meeting their innocent babies, some mothers actually bring their babies into close contact with their nasty sexual organs

    what is wrong with these immoral perverts?

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:i've heard rumors by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      that, on first meeting their innocent babies, some mothers actually bring their babies into close contact with their nasty sexual organs

      It's a dirty little secret that's done by a huge percentage of the population. From a literary context: Macduff is the moral center of "Macbeth" because he was "from his mother's womb \ Untimely ripped", unlike all of the other traumatized people who could not harm Macbeth.

      We won't know true social harmony until we can grow all babies in test tubes away from their depraved egg-donors.

  38. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 0

    I cringe when I hear "christian nation". I consider myself a spiritual person, and believe that religion serves an important purpose in our daily lives. For the atheists out there that are tempted to comment that religion doesn't play any role in their lives, I hate to be the one to break it to you but atheism is just yet another form of religion.

    Phrases like "christian nation" and such are used by the following types of people:

    1) Politicians and "patriotic grass roots" special interest groups that use it to hide the fact that what they are actually doing is promoting bigotry and/or to insinuate that if you don't believe in their brand of politics then you aren't what they consider very christian. Yes I am saying that the "christian" politicians are using their religion base to extort fellow christians who may not fully understand or agree with their politics into being supporters.

    2) People who don't agree with the politics of these right-wingers and use "christian nation" to be snarky. What they don't realize is that they not only insult the right-wingers but basically most people of the christian faith. Therefore shooting themselves in the foot by alienating people who may otherwise be sympathetic to their cause.

    3) Angry atheists (as opposed to 'social' atheists) who also use the term "christian nation" sarcastically but not for any real political motivation but rather for their obsession to rebel against people who have faith in a higher power. They consider themselves intellectually superior to everyone else and reduce everybody else's faith into "imaginary man in the sky" religion. Even though they refuse to admit it, they not only actually believe in a higher power but also angry with it. They actively attack other individual's faith believing that this will ultimately hurt the higher power that they are fighting against.

    3a) I need to explain what I consider a 'social' atheist. Of course I meant social as opposed to angry, and this type of atheist don't agree with the dogma promoted by organized religion and tend to believe in scientific facts. They are respectful of others, but don't mind sharing their beliefs when asked. Most of my atheist friends fall into this category. They don't take issue with the use of God references in our customs, because they consider them customs. They tend to be some of the nicest people you could ever know and cringe at the thought of forcing their values onto others as much as they hate it being done to them by others.

    3b) Believing in scientific facts is not a prerequisite for being an atheist, nor prevents you from being a spiritual individual. Like I mentioned earlier I'm a spiritual person who works in the scientific field. I am fascinated by science and look forward to the next big discovery. I do get irritated by the thought that some of the discoveries I help make can and will be used against my faith by an angry athiest.

    3c) I think I covered my ass enough for this controversial topic.. Of course this is slashdot so someone will get offended.

    4) Jihadists use it as part of their speech to incite violence against the US.

    --
    These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
  39. I don't know anyone like that... by MikeRT · · Score: 4, Interesting

    and I know a lot of social conservatives who aren't happy with nudity and profanity on TV and radio when kids are awake. In fact, based on the ones I know, I'd say they'd far rather their child see some boobies than another child or a family get blown up.

    Of course, war is different for children, especially boys. There is a big difference between seeing soldiers fight one another and seeing senseless crime and atrocities. You can claim there isn't, but that doesn't make it so, and for millennia, civilizations have understood the difference between glorifying the warrior ethos and senseless violence. The former, is not inherently harmful to children, and is actually good for a society that wants its boys to grow up to be **men** and not overgrown boys who act like pansies in the face of a violent world. The US has lost sight of the value of that since unlike the rest of the modern world, no country has tried to invade us in almost 200 years come ~2013 (when the British invaded the US in the War of 1812).

    1. Re:I don't know anyone like that... by xquercus · · Score: 2, Informative

      The US has lost sight of the value of that since unlike the rest of the modern world, no country has tried to invade us in almost 200 years come ~2013 (when the British invaded the US in the War of 1812).

      While it didn't involve foreign troops operating freely within the Continental United States its very existence was at stake during WWII. Japan fully intended and tried to occupy the United States. There was combat in Hawaii and Alaska. Japanese subs operated freely along the West Coast and sunk a number of US, Canadian and Mexican vessels. Japanese built incendiary devices lit forest fires across the West. Naval action by Germany could be seen from the shores on the East Coast as well.

    2. Re:I don't know anyone like that... by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 3, Informative

      While I agree, to an extent, with what your are saying, your historical background leaves something to be desired. 1812 was not the last invasion of the territory of the US. While an argument could be made that America invaded Mexico first (if you believe the Mexican territorial claim was valid over the American territorial claim), President Polk's message to Congress on May 11, 1846 stated that “Mexico has passed the boundary of the United States, has invaded our territory and shed American blood upon American soil.”

      Further, during the Second World War the Japanese invaded several US holdings and territories, including but not limited to Alaska, Guam, the Philippines, etc. And they clearly would have invaded Hawaii if they could. So, in reality the US has not been invaded since 1941-44.

      --
      I support the Slashcott and will not be reading or commenting from 2/10/14 to 2/17/14. Beta is steaming pile of dog shit
    3. Re:I don't know anyone like that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a man, and a social conservative, I've never understood most of my country's values. Where I live, there are pickup trucks with "No Porn" window and bumper stickers, next to a picture of a rifle, deer, moose, or emblem of Cabela's or Bass Pro shop. Culling animals, that's cool, that's practical, that's cultural fun, but seeing porn in the privacy of your own home, hell, that has to be stopped. Apparently, it's okay for that man to bang his wife in his bedroom and with his kiddies listening half asleep across a couple of sheets of drywall, but if someone wants to whack off alone to a porn pic, hell no. We need to stop them activities.

      Then again, in this country, some people think it's okay to hit a 13 month baby in the face. In public. That's their "parental right."

      What I really hate is this value screwed up thing where in the US, you can be a complete dick, blowing your bass, screaming out of cars, playing music loud, annoying people, trying to get people into fights, but if you take a partial swing at someone even if you restrain yourself, well, that's assault, while there's nothing about wholesale provoking a fight. Run someone off the road, that's okay, but flip them off, you get cited. Drive through someone's driveway at high speed trespassing or for no other reason than to do it, you might get that person cited, but slap their car hood to get their attention when they're in your face and you're telling them to get off your property, you're in the wrong in some states.

      To the FCC issue, nothing wrong with indecency policies. Just that they are too encompassing for ALL shows and ALL hours of the day. But wasn't that something TV ratings was supposed to take care of. I guess not.

    4. Re:I don't know anyone like that... by Omestes · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Of course, war is different for children, especially boys. There is a big difference between seeing soldiers fight one another and seeing senseless crime and atrocities. You can claim there isn't, but that doesn't make it so, and for millennia, civilizations have understood the difference between glorifying the warrior ethos and senseless violence. The former, is not inherently harmful to children, and is actually good for a society that wants its boys to grow up to be **men** and not overgrown boys who act like pansies in the face of a violent world.

      **checks pants**

      Last I checked, I am a man, and I find mindless nationalism and international chest-bumping to be completely, and totally, irrational and idiotic. Especially nationalism, nationalism is one of the dumbest social constructs we can train our children to uphold (outside of, maybe, various flavors of extreme religious dogma). Training our young men to go kill other young men because their flag is different, and they might speak a different language, is stupid, not "manly". As history shows, having a glut of young men glorifying war leads to war. If all you have is a war hammer, everything starts looking like a war nail, etc... I, personally, would rather we have a glut of young men (and women) glorifying something interesting, like reason.

      I read your comment in the voice of R. Lee Ermey, by the way, it didn't help make your point.

      War should be seen as a terrible necessity of last resort, not as some glorious brojuajua. We like war too much, in my opinion, hence our two largely unjustified and wasteful (both in money and human life) wars of the moment. How much glory is there in Iraq or Afghanistan? Everyone I know who has been involved in either didn't find it very glorious. Same with all the Vietnam and WWII veterans I know. My grandfather was one of the first US troops to hit Auschwitz, and he never talked about it, ever. I very much doubt he found any glory in that experience. Or at least he found as much glory in war as all of the hordes of suicidal and PTSD suffering current "glorious warriors".

      Most war is nothing but senseless violence. America hasn't been in a justifiable war since WWII, the rest has been nothing but moronic slaughter for political ends. How glorious! How manly! How idiotic. Being there is no glory in being a disposable tool for your government.

      --
      A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
    5. Re:I don't know anyone like that... by Aurisor · · Score: 1

      I think the distinction between war and senseless violence is pretty academic.

      http://www.faithdoubt.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/09/calving.gif

    6. Re:I don't know anyone like that... by turgid · · Score: 1

      Well said.

    7. Re:I don't know anyone like that... by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      So, in reality the US has not been invaded since 1941-44.

      You're talking about incursions, not invasions. There was a rather significant incursion in 2001 as well.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    8. Re:I don't know anyone like that... by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 1

      Yeah, 2001 did not involve logistically supported troops in force occupying and governing territory for several years . If that's not an invasion, what is?

      --
      I support the Slashcott and will not be reading or commenting from 2/10/14 to 2/17/14. Beta is steaming pile of dog shit
  40. Democratic. by SirRedTooth · · Score: 1

    I think it should be up to the people to decide whats indecent or not. If enough people complain the FCC should be called into action. Or we could simply use a 'vote with your feet' system, the result of this would be some TV channels with very strict guidelines appealing to the strict families with young children. And other TV channels with varying degrees of nudity and profanity. As our culture evolves our idea of whats indecent and what isn't changes so there shouldn't be a organisation deciding for everybody else what should and shouldn't be shown on TV.

  41. Live shows for children. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In reality, how much live television do children really watch? I doubt any of these live shows are going to evolve into masses of preplanned nudity and foul language. Broadcasters don't want to flak from their advertisers, so they're going to continue to caution their sportscasters and speakers to watch their language.

  42. yeah! by circletimessquare · · Score: 1, Funny

    who gave these walking incubators the right to vote!

    {and here is where obvious parody dangerously approaches the reality of some people's thoughts, and so must be noted as parody}

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:yeah! by thijsh · · Score: 1

      Yeah, you wouldn't want the fundamentalist feminists showing up at your house with torches and pitchforks. ;)

    2. Re:yeah! by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      {and here is where obvious parody dangerously approaches the reality of some people's thoughts, and so must be noted as parody}

      Wait, you were kidding?


      ...Just kidding.

    3. Re:yeah! by Donkey_Hotey · · Score: 1

      As long as they're delivering some toasted ham and cheese sammiches, I'm OK with that...

      --
      (There is supposed to be a Sarcmark® here, but my $1.99 check hasn't cleared, yet...)
  43. Really about the nipples, not the breasts by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

    Because I've seen movies lately where the only change to the nude scene is that the lady's nipples are blurred away. So you see the entire breast- just not the nipples. But you can see the guy's nipples.

    It beats having dialogue cut away like the old days.

    --
    She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
  44. So what is too much by m0s3m8n · · Score: 1

    Reading these posts, has anyone asked what is too much. Is Janet Jackson's boob too much? Some will say yes, some no. What if she decided to give Justin a blowjob instead? Too much? Do you want you six year old daughter to see that? The issue is that there is no agreed upon definition of how much is too little or too much. It seems that in this case simply not allowing any would be most prudent. If you want to watch blowjobs, go to that channel. I can police what my children watch based on descriptions and ratings, it is the unknown that I can't. The "fleeting expletive" is another issue to me. In a live broadcast, participants sometimes do curse. That in my opinion is something out of the control of a broadcaster. When VP Biden mutters the f-bomb over an open mic, I don't think the broadcasters should be held accountable.

    --
    Conservative, mod down for violating /. political norms.
    1. Re:So what is too much by Gabrosin · · Score: 1

      The issue is that there is no agreed upon definition of how much is too little or too much. It seems that in this case simply not allowing any would be most prudent.

      This is NOT a true statement. If it were true, we would be held at the mercy of whichever viewer were the most easily offended on all matters. I'm certain I could find people who are still offended by the sight of a man and a woman sleeping fully clothed in the same bed. Or those who are offended by the sight of black people, or gays, or Muslims, etc. etc.

      There will never be an agreed-upon definition of how much is "too little" or "too much". There are too many people to ever come to such agreement in a way that satisfies everybody. The "most prudent" decision would be for people who are offended by something to simply TURN IT OFF, whether on behalf of yourself or your children.

  45. Fuck you fucking fuckers by Arancaytar · · Score: 1

    Shove that nanny attitude and show some teeth for network neutrality instead.

  46. More Honest Summary by _KiTA_ · · Score: 1

    Your Rights Online: FCC Fights To Maintain Control over Culture
    "The FCC filed Thursday to appeal a recent court decision that struck down its policy of fining broadcasters for offending puritanical Christian moral majority groups such as Parents Television Council. The FCC's brief argues the court ruling would make it almost impossible to punish broadcasters that deviate from 1950s morality during hours when children are likely to be watching or listening."

    Just as a reminder, most of these "complaints" are coming from dittohead idiots following form letter emails from the PTC and other such "watchdog" groups. It's not real outrage, it's manufactured in order to push a political agenda -- namely, the repression of sexuality in the US. If you want to try and influence and repress culture, a really good place to start is sexuality, after all.

  47. Inveting your own terms to describe your ignorance by GungaDan · · Score: 1

    doesn't help your feeble argument. Anyone with an ounce of sense could stop reading at "atheism is just yet another form of religion." Sure, Skippy - the absence of something is another form of that thing. And black is just a darker shade of white. Moron.

    --
    Eloi are stupid, throw morlocks at them!
  48. Shame and the Herd by Fuseboy · · Score: 1

    On the surface, it seems strange that nudity and sex are more taboo than violence and gore, despite the fact that we generally don't really mind if people are nude and having sex (in private), but we don't especially want people violently hurt anywhere (even in private). But I think this is the cause.

    If a child sees nudity/sex on TV, it can bring up shameful mixed feelings for the parents, because we keep this side of ourselves hidden from children. Yep, mommy and daddy do that, but god forbid we talk about it. So we're all harboring this shameful secret. We're drawn to it, but we don't like the uncomfortable conversations it invites. "Yes, for God's sake we admit it, we're having sex.. but please don't tell our kids."

    Violence, on the other hand, is something that most people have no trouble feeling unadulterated (hah!) condemnation for - so if our kids see it, we can point at it and go "That's bad!" without the confusing, mixed feelings.

    Secondly, I think there are people frightened about losing the idea of a common definition of 'obscenity'. It takes courage to accept that someone's nasty fetish is actually perfectly harmless, and the revulsion has to do with your preferences. I mean, what's next? Are my kids going to start doing this? It'll be everywhere! Soon we'll be walking past rows of Poo Weekly in the 7/11. It's a lot easier to stand in a herd and point at the scapegoat. To those who are comfortable with their positions in the herd, this is an important tool. Witness how often politicians are discredited by sexual indiscretions.

  49. Look at the big picture by orthancstone · · Score: 1

    While I don't dispute your point that live television presents responsibility problems for parents, let's face some facts here: During any Super Bowl, your kids are being bombarded by scantily clad women in commercials, endless beer ads, and a sport that does involve violent contact amongst the players on the field.

    Which is to say, is a second and a half of displayed nipple really the most questionable thing your kids' impressionable young minds saw that night?

  50. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by DrgnDancer · · Score: 1

    1) Atheism is not a Religion. It has no tenants, and the lack of belief in something cannot be considered a "tenant". It's a state of belief. Now "Secular Humanism" is a set of beliefs exposed by many (though by no means all) Atheists, and it could be a called a "Godless Religion". Not all Atheists are Secular Humanists though, and Atheism cannot, by any reasonable definition of the word, be called a religion. It's vaguely insulting to the term "religion" to imply that it can be. (No, I am not an Atheist)

    2) The reason the term "Christian Nation" is so widely mocked outside of "Christian Nation" circles is not merely because the far right seems to love using it so much, but because it is factually inaccurate. (And as a point of fact here, something on the order of eight or nine percent of the population is neither Christian nor Atheist, it may not be a humongous number, but it's hardly "nobody" either. On top of this many believing Christians mock the "Christian Nation" concept. Putting the entire blame on "Atheists" probably ignores the majority of the people who actually mock this concept.) The Constitution, in the one place that it makes mention religion at all, does so to declaim that there is no official religion of this country, and all people shall have to right to practice their own religion. Something on the order of 20-30% (depending on the polls) of the population claims either a lack of religious affiliation, or a specifically non-Christian affiliation. So while it may be accurate to say that the US is a majority Christian nation, that's not what is meant by those who proclaim it a "Christian Nation". Those people are therefore wrong.

    3) People who are offended by others mocking the "Christian Nation" concept are either: (a) In the first group you describe above, and therefore among those being mocked, or (b) not comprehending what is being mocked. Mocking the concept espoused by puffed up, self appointed guardians of morality is not the same as mocking the values of the religion being used. Jesus himself mocked these people, see Mathew 6:5 for details.

    --
    I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.
  51. Good. by npsimons · · Score: 2, Informative

    The government has no business restricting speech, even if it weren't written into our consitution. To all those who cry "think of the children", let's just list a few glaring problems with that argument, any one of which would invalidate it:

    • There are more than children living in this country.
    • Since when are images of the human body and messages of love harmful? "Sin" is a harmful, destructive idea that should be abolished.
    • Children will find out about these things sooner or later. Parents: if you have a problem with this, take responsibility and teach them so they will be prepared. Don't have time? Don't have kids.
    • Children grow up. How are they going to handle things as adults if they've never encountered them before? You think there's some magic switch that happens when they turn 18? Sure, you shouldn't just bombard them from the get go, but cutting them off completely will be worse in the long run.

    I recently watched the "Penn & Teller: Bullshit!" episode on sex/virginity and it's really obvious but needs to be restated: ABSTINENCE-ONLY EDUCATION DOESN'T FUCKING WORK. Get a clue and get a grip: sex is not bad, and people (including children) should not be punished for being curious or having sexual impulses. Factual, scientific, rational education is the answer.

    1. Re:Good. by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      While I agree that you are correct about the First, you're completely and totally incorrect with the rest of your statements...

      There are more than children living in this country.

      False. Everyone living in this country is either a child or a former child. There's no excuse for lack of empathy for childhood innocence. Even if you, personally, lived some kind of hellishly messed up childhood nightmare, you shouldn't be in favor of seeing that happen to other children.

      Since when are images of the human body and messages of love harmful?

      They're not. Sexualizing young children, however, is repugnant. For the same reason you would not have sex with a child, or have sex adjacent to a child, you should not be viewing others having sex along with a child. This should NOT need to be explained, as it is a basic moral value.

      Children will find out about these things sooner or later.

      Later being the preference.

      Parents: if you have a problem with this, take responsibility and teach them so they will be prepared.

      Yes! Definitely!

      Don't have time? Don't have kids.

      No! By the time any non-parent thinks about whether or not television is okay for kids to watch, the kids already exist. Unless you're advocating these parents un-have the kids in some way, this policy is an absurd rebuttal to decency standards.

      Sure, you shouldn't just bombard them from the get go, but cutting them off completely will be worse in the long run.

      And here's the part where you make my point...

      Get a clue and get a grip: sex is not bad

      Sex is also not 'good'. It can lead to either. Sex can bring joy and happiness, or abortion and AIDS. Monogamous relationships are the only safe environment for sexual activity, and anyone to immature to conduct one of those successfully has NO BUSINESS experimenting with sex. This is a simple, common sense argument to which there genuinely can be no sound rebuttal, religion or not.

      Factual, scientific, rational education is the answer.

      Indeed it is. Given at the appropriate age, of course, to the correct audience. Further you'll need to add some semblance of values to the discussion, perhaps from a psychologist or sociologist to be in keeping with your atheist beliefs. Your advocacy of leaving the entire discussion to the biology class, however, is absurdly disastrous.

      Please don't go so far in pushing your religious atheism that you wind up doing more harm that those you're fighting against. Organized religion is indeed the enemy, but unfortunately this includes organized atheists such as yourself...

    2. Re:Good. by phyrexianshaw.ca · · Score: 1

      Sex is also not 'good'. It can lead to either. Sex can bring joy and happiness, or abortion and AIDS. Monogamous relationships are the only safe environment for sexual activity, Sex is also not 'good'. It can lead to either. Sex can bring joy and happiness, or abortion and AIDS. Monogamous relationships are the only safe environment for sexual activity,

      I'd ensue with a long string of $chr(72) + $chr(65) + $chr(32)'s, but I expect it'll serve little good.

      I'm sorry, but the vast majority of people on the earth, would disagree with you there. if sex were not a good thing: we as a race would cease to exist. point and fact.

      just because people feel that they're "above nature" and somehow we need to "take the moral high ground" does not mean that we are not animals like the rest of the world. it's not up to us to "protect" our children from the rest of the world, it's up to us to make sure they have what it takes to survive in it.

      you explicitly mention "common sense" yet fail to give reference. there is no "global common sense". to a child growing up in a country that needs to be taught to steal food to survive: it's not common sense to treat peoples property as private. to a child growing up with a fairly high chance of not surviving, it's not "common sense" to prevent yourself from enjoying what little life they may have left.

      sex is a fact of life. if people would stop treating it like it's some sort of taboo, and start educating people about what it it, how it works, what to watch out for, and that YOU CAN TRUST PEOPLE! (even those that you don't have sex with!) maybe we'd continue to advance as a people, instead of tearing ourself apart trying to hide what we are.

    3. Re:Good. by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but the vast majority of people on the earth, would disagree with you there. if sex were not a good thing: we as a race would cease to exist. point and fact.

      'Sex' 'procreation'

      For example, please explain to me how homosexual sex and/or oral sex furthers the survival of the race.

      just because people feel that they're "above nature" and somehow we need to "take the moral high ground" does not mean that we are not animals like the rest of the world. it's not up to us to "protect" our children from the rest of the world, it's up to us to make sure they have what it takes to survive in it.

      (Why do you capitalize things in one case, but not in the other?)

      We both are and are not like animals. I see us as 'animal plus'. We get the added feature of being able to share our experiences and learn from them. Animals, not so much. The simple fact that we're all biological creatures should not exclude our ability to reason and learn.

      Morals are a result of that. Once individuals learn the same lessons over and over and over again, they begin to cement them in their minds. Eventually these become important enough to teach to others, and that expounds into laws and ethics.

      Further if we cannot impart morals onto our children as a function of 'making sure they have what it takes', then what is the point of teaching them anything at all?

      you explicitly mention "common sense" yet fail to give reference

      You likewise fail to rebut it, so what is your exact point here?

      sex is a fact of life. if people would stop treating it like it's some sort of taboo

      Killing is a fact of life as well, and yet this behavior is also taboo in certain situations. We laud our soldiers as effective killers and decry young men of the same age, using the same weapons and tactics I might add, for killing their enemies in the streets. This is due to social order, which is intrinsic to being human.

      I am not at all against sexual education, and your asserting otherwise is offensive. You're setting up the most casual of terrible arguments, and if you're going to make a habit of it, you're probably on the wrong site.

      YOU CAN TRUST PEOPLE! (even those that you don't have sex with!)

      You can trust people. You can trust them to be stupid, reckless, and make idiotic choices. Particularly when they are young children. The opposite can be true, of course, but I'm at a loss as to understand how the television set can be built with the ability to determine which is which.

      That's for people to decide. Not - certainly not - the Federal government, but we as consumers of the content. We should protest and complain and failing that vote with our wallets.

      maybe we'd continue to advance as a people, instead of tearing ourself apart trying to hide what we are.

      Unfortunately, I'm going to have to accuse you of doing exactly what you're trying to prevent. Your attitude would mean that we cannot obstruct our more basic nature by virtue of learning from our past. We'd not have farming, conservation, or anything even close to a 'green' movement. Our very culture would evaporate. The concept that this is a good idea is absolutely absurd.

      Again, as with the other post, I see where you're trying to reach. You see the oppression of certain people as wrong (as do I) and seek to oppose it (as do I). Where you diverge is by taking this 'they have gone too far' observation and taking it into insanity land. 'We should be animals' is patently absurd, when we have already realized that we are much, much, much more.

    4. Re:Good. by Doctor+Faustus · · Score: 1

      Monogamous relationships are the only safe environment for sexual activity, and anyone to immature to conduct one of those successfully has NO BUSINESS experimenting with sex

      This is going to sound really weird, but pre-fertile kids experimenting only with each other is also safe. There will be no pregnancy, and there's no way for disease to get introduced.

      Apart from that, an awful lot of life is about picking what risks are acceptable to you, considering what you gain by taking them. Yes, monogamy and abstinence are safer, but so is never leaving your house.

    5. Re:Good. by thej1nx · · Score: 1
      For the same reason you would not have sex with a child, or have sex adjacent to a child, you should not be viewing others having sex along with a child. This should NOT need to be explained, as it is a basic moral value

      Dear moron, have you considered simply switching the TV off? Or perhaps subscribing only to channels that cater to what you wish to watch? Why do you feel someone else should do your job for you? Do you need others to come and wipe your ass as well, just because you are too dumb to find it? It is immoral for idiots like you to have kids and pollute the gene pool.

  52. Why is this a problem. by Murdoch5 · · Score: 1

    I remember as a Kid I was only allowed certain channels, so why not put this into a nation wide scale. First of all fine heavily if any thing that is deamed out of line happens on a kid channel. Second ignore any other channels. It should be the parents job to police what the kids watch not the FCC.

  53. In Soviet America, Fox stands up for YOUR RIGHTS! by BobMcD · · Score: 1

    I had to 'lol' on this one... All those poor, indignant, Fox-bashing slashdotters must be gnashing teeth over this one:

    The Commission ruled in 2006 that, under its new policy, both Billboard broadcasts were indecent. Fox, which broadcast the awards shows, responded by appealing that decision. In its appeal Fox was joined by other broadcasters who opposed the FCC's stricter enforcement policies.

    So who does the seething liberal root for? The government and their 'think of the children' stance, or the devil incarnate, Fox?

  54. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    These airwaves are for the public use. Want to drop the f-/n-/q-bomb? Start up your own pay channel and go nuts.

    Channeling Ralph Nader here, but if they are truly public airwaves then why aren't broadcasters paying rent for their commercial use?

  55. American dichotomy. by MaWeiTao · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I don't have a problem with nudity or profanity. I'd argue nudity and profanity is much less harmful than glorified violence. On the other hand, American culture suffers from this odd dichotomy of prudishness taking things way too far. A lot of people seem incapable of anything other than shocking and offensive entertainment. Americans seem to be the source of some of the most depraved content in the world when it comes to mainstream entertainment. It's like Americans have this desperate, immature need to prove they're "adults" by enjoying excessively violent, shocking and offensive and overly sexualized entertainment. It's like writers, directors and producers are comprised of wannabee iconoclasts. I'm not saying I can't enjoy this sort of thing, but simply that I don't need to be bombarded with it constantly. It's nice to experience entertainment with a bit more maturity.

    For parents with children, like myself, the solution is simple: don't let them watch television or don't let them watch broadcast television. That way you're in total control of what they're watching. And better yet, they're not being bombarded with constant advertising, which I think is a far larger problem for society compared to any tv show which can easily be dismissed as fantasy. It's not like there's much of substance on television anyway. Kids should be occupying their time with other activities anyway. The last thing we need is to perpetuate this dependency on television for entertainment.

  56. This is a Christian nation! by Benfea · · Score: 1

    And because of that, we are just like Muslim countries in this regard: violence is good, sex is bad bad bad BAD yer goin' to HELL yew sinnah! *froth* *foam*

    I'm sorry. Where was I?

    Yeah, anyway, just look at the American public's response to the movie Kick Ass. No one batted an eye at the depiction of an 11 year old girl brutally slaughtering dozens of human beings, but the thought of a movie depicting an 11 year old girl using dirty words sent everyone into apoplectic seizures. We can tell little Johnny that's it is acceptable to use murder as a means of conflict resolution, but he must never come to think that it is acceptable to use a bad word or see a boobie.

    Like I said: just like the Muslim countries.

  57. I've given this one a lot of thought .... by King_TJ · · Score: 1

    I, too, am a parent and find it a very good and useful thing that my kid can watch television without me having to worry constantly about what they might be showing her that's not appropriate for her age group. BUT, that doesn't justify the "indecency laws" enforced by the FCC either.

    For one thing, when these were first conceived, television was a far different animal than it is today. There were no such things as cable TV or satellite broadcasting, with people getting hundreds of channels at a time. You had a few locals and that was pretty much it. The idea was, the free television stations were there to perform a public service, and as such, should be catering to as many potential viewers as possible.

    These days, you have stations segmented by their content. Even with nothing more than an antenna on my digital TV, I can pick up stations like "PBS Kids" or a station showing nothing but DYI/Home Improvement content. Another has nothing but weather info on it. If I'm willing to pay a little bit for satellite or cable, I've got all sorts of choices including stations that only show kid's cartoons all day long and channels made by Disney that don't show any "adult" content either.

    The need just isn't there anymore to punish a station for its content choices. At most, legislation should be aimed towards "truth in labeling" so viewers are always made aware of the type of content the station intends to show. IMHO, your basic local stations aren't going to express much interest in deviating from the type of material that broadcast now - regardless of FCC regulations. If they start allowing too much cursing and nudity, they're going to lose too many viewers, in a market where consumers have more options than ever before and tend to time-shift record programming anyway (sometimes even stripping out the commercials).

  58. Re:Inveting your own terms to describe your ignora by astar · · Score: 1

    The dictionary does not seem to me to be a product of divine revelation.

    But suppose you get pissy about everything around you and go off and be a hermit. It seems obvious to me that you have chosen to define your existence in terms of whatever you are pissy about in your old environment. But yet all the pissy things are not around you any more.

    As far as "christian nation" is concerned, there are lot of occasions where people like to think that if you name something, then the object is in fact what you have named it. Some sort of magic? I think the word "nominalism" applies. :-) This is hardly a particularly fundie problem, but perhaps there is an association with literalism. But I don't know anything.

  59. I don't know which is worse anymore: by kheldan · · Score: 1

    The FCC, a government bureaucracy that wants to tell us what we can watch and, to a certain extent, how we can live, or corporate America, that wants to dictate what we see/hear/taste/smell/feel based on how much money they can make off it. They can all go fuck themselves, so far as I'm concerned.

    --
    Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
  60. Is it just me? by phyrexianshaw.ca · · Score: 1

    or does ANYBODY else in the world really love their kids enough to WANT to spend more time with them?

    instead of just leaving them behind and abandoning them to a TV, maybe somebody might want to take responsibility for their parenting and spend some time raising their kids?

    Oh, right. I forgot. apparently people want to have kids, but want everyone else in the world to do all the work for them. it's funny how people have completely lost the motivation to be responsible for their actions anymore.

  61. I really don't care if my kid sees a boob by barzok · · Score: 1

    But the latest "quit smoking" PSAs they're airing in New York are absolutely disgusting. I don't have YouTube available to link to the actual video, but here's the gist of it:

    It shows a man lighting a cigarette using the flame from his stove. The picture then cuts to a surgeon, opening up an aorta, and squeezing out fat and plaque that has accumulated inside the vessel. It's the aorta of a 32-year-old smoker.

    The description doesn't really capture how vile the video is. It's enough to completely ruin your appetite for a while. This can pop up anytime you're watching TV, but it's most common between 5 & 8 PM.

    It's apparently acceptable under the guise of "public health" but I doubt you'd get a pro-breastfeeding commercial approved that actually showed a woman nursing.

  62. I think you mean.... by Zaphod-AVA · · Score: 1

    Fuck the FCC. Fuck them. It's a perfectly good word that millions of Americans use every day. Don't shy away from it, particularly when we are discussing censorship through decency laws. The Constitution didn't protect freedom of speech as long as no one can hear you.

    1. Re:I think you mean.... by DarkKnightRadick · · Score: 1

      Just because I disagree with censorship through decency laws means I want to be exposed to filth. I can very well turn the channel, mute the tv, or get rid of my cable service very easily.

      Just because millions of American's use it, doesn't mean they should.

      --
      "There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way of death." Proverbs 16:25 (NKJV)
  63. All irrelevant... by bjk002 · · Score: 1

    While I agree with what you are saying, you're missing the point.

    The network was not fined because a nipple was shown or because kids may have been harmed.

    The network was fined because the FCC could fine them for and incident in-congruent with stated law.

    Its equivalent to someone standing in front of you waving a $20 bill and saying "here take it"... what do you expect?

    Law exists to:

    (1) Grant or repeal power from an entity
    (2) Displace monies from one entity to another
    (3) Promote or suppress the political agenda of an entity

    All the rest is just fluff...

    --
    Opinion:=TMyOpinion.Create(Me);
    1. Re:All irrelevant... by DrgnDancer · · Score: 1

      You are completely legally correct, but you are the one missing the point. The FCC fined CBS legally (as defined by law at that time). The courts are considering whether the FCC actually has that legal authority (based on higher law). The parent of my original post argues that the FCC should have this legal authority, because a "bad" thing happened and the FCC should have the legal authority to prevent it from happening again and punish those who perpetrate it. I counter that:

      a) The thing that happened wasn't actually all that bad, and parent makes it sound worse than it was for effect.
      b) Leaving the FCC with the authority to fine networks would not have prevented it, because
      c) They did not and cannot fine those actually responsible. Only the network that (inadvertently) broadcast the results.

      Therefore parents arguments are invalid. No one (or at least I am not) is saying that the FCC acted inappropriately according to the laws as they were understood at the time. Merely that the parent's reason for why those laws should continue to be interrupted as they are is not valid.

      --
      I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.
  64. I hate stupid, pompous AC mod ups... by bjk002 · · Score: 1

    Come on mods... +5 interesting?!?

    The GP was not saying he chained his kids to the front of the TV/Computer 24/7 here..

    Surely we are not saying there is no place for a kid on a computer or in front of a TV at all?!?

    Stupid modding at it finest.

    --
    Opinion:=TMyOpinion.Create(Me);
  65. Re:Inveting your own terms to describe your ignora by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

    ...doesn't help your feeble argument. Anyone with an ounce of sense could stop reading at "atheism is just yet another form of religion."

    We're splitting hairs here but the existence or lack thereof of a higher power does not define a religion. How people choose to live their lives based on their belief that the higher power does or does not exist defines a religion.

    Sure purists will say that to be truly a religion then a higher power must be worshiped, but I prefer the "if it looks like a religion and acts like a religion then it therefore must be a religion" test. Atheists have been known to congregate, they mock other belief systems, they take any comments about their beliefs personally, and they like to preach their gospel (take the movie 'Invention of lying" for example or just google "magic man in the sky" ). Looks like a religion to me... hurts to find out that you're human and therefore like everybody else doesn't it?

    Sure, Skippy - the absence of something is another form of that thing. And black is just a darker shade of white.

    Even though black is the absence of reflected or transmitted light it like While is still considered a color. By the same token, even though atheism is the belief that a higher power does not exist, it can still be considered a religion.

    Moron.

    So I can count you as an angry atheist then?

    --
    These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
  66. FCC your go to place for decency by slick7 · · Score: 1

    The biggest obscenity is the FCC itself. The issues alone with Howard Stern show that the FCC has no business being in business at all. The first line of censorship is the individual. If you don't like what you see or hear, TURN IT OFF! That's how simple it is. Unfortunately, the sheep of this country need to be led by the wolves. You find more violence and aberrant behavior on the nightly news than any show on TV or the radio.

    --
    The mind conceives, the body achieves, the spirit manifests.
  67. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by vnaughtdeltat · · Score: 1

    q-bomb?

    qunt?

  68. Re:Le sigh .. and sigh again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Belief? I don't think so.
    Religion is their EXCUSE.

  69. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

    1) Atheism is not a Religion. It has no tenants, and the lack of belief in something cannot be considered a "tenant". It's a state of belief.

    A tenet is a religious doctrine that is proclaimed as true without proof. Atheism proclaims that there is no god yet does not offer any proof. Sounds like a tenet.

    One of the definitions of religion is "a pursuit or interest to which someone ascribes supreme importance". Atheist appear to ascribe to the fact that there is no god with supreme importance.

    People who are offended by others mocking the "Christian Nation" concept are either: (a) In the first group you describe above, and therefore among those being mocked, or (b) not comprehending what is being mocked.

    Unfortunately, you can not tell a segment of the population to judge what is meant instead of what is being said. It doesn't help that some of those people take things literally (and I do mean literally).

    You can't expect to accomplish your goal if you give potential supporters a reason to feel slighted, or worse give your opposition something to galvanize their political base against you.

    --
    These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
  70. Broadcast model is dead! by cdn-programmer · · Score: 1

    It is my opinion that the broadcast business model is dead and if not dead then it is sure getting smelly. The idea these people have dreamed up to broadcast inappropriate material and this includes porn in my humble opinion is a symptom of the problem. Somehow they think this will attract market share and perhaps even keep them in business.

    Bell ExpressView tried this on me. On one of the movie channels I used to subscribe to, lo and behold "Cat House" showed up.

    Even though I do not have any young children at home and no grandchildren, Bell ExpressView found that from this moment on their bills went directly from my mail box to the trash bag. I tried to phone them to cancel the service and when they didn't answer the phone then I hung up and gave up and I figured eventually they will find their source of revenue from me has dried up and maybe they will catch on. Sure enough - eventually they caught on.

    My TV service has been canceled now for over two (2) years! I breath a sigh of relief that I no longer get the advertising and especially the Kotex Commercials!

    About the only thing that happens is that once in a while I get a phone call from a collection agency but it is quite easy to hang up on them. Eventually they will catch on as well.

    I will urge everyone who detests what they broadcast to simply cart the bill to the trash bin. Eventually they will catch on!

    What I find is that here in Calgary we have a WONDERFUL library service. There are 1000's of DVDs on every subject imaginable except I have not seen any porn in the library.

    A library card costs a lot less than the $60++ per month I use to pay for the satellite service. So in a way I'm glad they broadcast the porn because it prompted me to take action. Now I have commercial free programming and at a much lower cost. My service has improved.

    Now the next issue is content offered via the net. What I want to see which is primarily business related is generally available on the net. The problem is the dummies have not woken up to the fact that I use Ogg Theora and that unless they make their programming available in a format which I can store on my hard drive so I can watch it when I want and where I want and this may well be while in a fishing camp far from the net - then I ain't gonna be their customer no more!

    If they want to be in business they will catch on and if not - who cares!
     

    1. Re:Broadcast model is dead! by Sepodati · · Score: 1

      So you stopped paying your bill because of one show coming on while you were watching TV? I mean, it's better than whining to the government to fix things, but sounds kind of odd. Why not just change the channel? Sounds like you didn't have a need for television in the first place and this just kinda sealed the deal.

      Kudos for taking things into your own hands instead of expecting someone else to solve your problem, though. :)

      -John

    2. Re:Broadcast model is dead! by cdn-programmer · · Score: 1

      I didn't shut it off for me. Somewhere some little kid may be up with the flu while mommy and daddy are sleeping and kids will turn the TV on looking for something to watch while they lay down on the couch. Little kids flip channels too.

      Our broadcasters have to realize they have some moral responsibility and if they can't get common sense into their thick greedy skulls then they need to realize some people like me won't do business with them.

      They say reputation is hard to earn and easy to lose.

      When my kids were little I didn't bother trying to censor the net. When they are too little they really aren't interested so they won't go looking for it (usually). When they are older and are interested then they can't be stopped. The thing about the net is they need to (usually) actually look. With TV they can just flip channels which is something they grew up with.

      That being said, I would prefer if our search engines had a kiddie channel. I'm sure Google can organize something like this.

      What I would really like to see is an access card of some sort. I know passwords can do the same thing but people forget to log out. As I see it there is a problem and people who bitch do have a very legitimate bitch . Responsibility to limit access needs to rest with those who make this garbage available. It should not be the reponsibility of the parents and grandparents, brothers and sisters, aunts and uncles and friends of those who have children.

      However since Bell doesn't see it my way I accepted the responsibility they shirk and I canceled their service. Problem solved.

      Also - I have no complaint if someone wants to subscribe to a porn channel. This is unless the kid is 10 years old! I just don't want to see the porn on channels ordinarily sold to families and as I see it - this includes the standard movie package I subscribed to several years ago which at that time didn't have porn and which were not sold as porn channels.

  71. Re:Inveting your own terms to describe your ignora by jahudabudy · · Score: 1

    Atheism is not a religion, but there are militantly dogmatic atheists that are just as annoying about shoving their belief about the existence of a deity in your face as any religious person. I always figure "atheism is a religion" to be a shorthand way of expressing this idea.

    --
    ...sometimes, in order to hurt someone very badly, you have to tell that person terrible lies. - PA
  72. you insensitive clod! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We all did the search and found that his kid is not searching for just "horses" on the internet.
    We got a laugh.
    Then you had to go and tell him.

  73. Brits also binge drink, probably more than USans. by billstewart · · Score: 1

    As far as I can tell from the UK press, binge drinking is actually much more of a problem in the UK than in the US - over here it's most college students that do it, while in the UK it's common for actual grown-up adults to go get rat-arsed on a frequent basis.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
  74. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's such a good line, it has to be repeated here:

    "Atheism is a religion like not collecting stamps is a hobby."

    A tenet is a religious doctrine that is proclaimed as true without proof.

    Your definition of "tenet" is flawed. There was no reason to include the word "religious" in your definition, as tenets exist outside of religions. For example, software development has tenets, but it is not a religion. Atheism can have a tenet without being a religion. Atheism is merely the state of holding one simple tenet: there are no gods.

    One of the definitions of religion is "a pursuit or interest to which someone ascribes supreme importance".

    While there are some atheists who seem to be on a crusade of some sort (Dawkins comes to mind), to most, atheism is merely an attribute like many others. I am a brown-haired atheist. Neither my lack of belief in any gods, nor my brown hair, is my religion. They are both simple attributes, and I am irreligious.

    With respect to those like Dawkins who are on an atheist crusade, I would argue that anything can be made to be a religion (at least, to that individual), but that doesn't make that thing inherently a religion. Linux is an OS. Some people treat it as a religion. That doesn't mean Linux is a religion, just that those individuals have made a religion out of it.

  75. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by DrgnDancer · · Score: 1

    A tenet is a religious doctrine that is proclaimed as true without proof. Atheism proclaims that there is no god yet does not offer any proof. Sounds like a tenet.

    One of the definitions of religion is "a pursuit or interest to which someone ascribes supreme importance". Atheist appear to ascribe to the fact that there is no god with supreme importance.

    Logic dictates that you can never prove a negative. It is therefore impossible to prove a lack of God; one could always argue an increasingly more subtle God that hides itself within its own omnipotent powers. It is therefore ALWAYS incumbent on those who believe something does exist to prove it. We cannot ask Atheists to produce proof in the lack of something, for they will never be able to do so. Personally I don't care enough about the matter to worry about it. I think that there are beings, akin to if not actually Gods, that have some influence over the world (perhaps the Universe, perhaps not), but I also think those beings are largely beyond caring whether we believe in them or worship them (though they may be willing to help us out if we ask nicely). So be whatever you want to be, as long as you aren't trying to enforce your beliefs as laws.

    Unfortunately, you can not tell a segment of the population to judge what is meant instead of what is being said. It doesn't help that some of those people take things literally (and I do mean literally).

    You can't expect to accomplish your goal if you give potential supporters a reason to feel slighted, or worse give your opposition something to galvanize their political base against you

    No one is asking them to judge what is meant rather than what is said. What we're asking is for them to listen to what is said. If I say "America is not a "Christian Nation", but rather a nation of many people with many faiths (and sometimes none at all)" I am in no way saying anything bad about Christians. Not literally, not figuratively, not at all. Unless it is offensive to imply that not everyone agrees with them. If that's the case, I'm not sure where my ground for further argument lies, so I may as well just give up. If I "Make people feel slighted" simply by stating the bedrock argument upon which all of my other logic or rhetoric might be built, I'm never going to win anyway, so I need to be talking to other "people" with a more reasonable worldview.

    --
    I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.
  76. WTF is this only a 2 (currently)? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I realize I'm ac so this will probably never see the light of day but the parent hits the nail squarely on the head! regardless of what you think about nudity, profanity, etc this boils down to the FCC complaining that they can't do something unconstitutional if a court tells them they can't do something unconstitutional... um, DUH!, that's kind of the point, Einstein!

  77. Re:Inveting your own terms to describe your ignora by sexconker · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    doesn't help your feeble argument. Anyone with an ounce of sense could stop reading at "atheism is just yet another form of religion." Sure, Skippy - the absence of something is another form of that thing. And black is just a darker shade of white. Moron.

    Spoken like a true Atheist. Atheists cling on to their rabid ideals with a zeal equivalent to that of the best of religious nutjobs. Atheists are constantly claiming to be under assault for their beliefs. Atheists are constantly trying to convert people and thus "better" their lives. Atheists engage in any and all religious topics with a fervor and hate that would make Pope Gregory IX proud. Atheists claim to be objective, scientific, rational, reasonable, generous, and empathetic while actually being nothing but a bunch of incessantly-screeching, hypocritical, self-serving baboons. Atheists claim to KNOW FOR A FACT that there is nothing spiritual in the universe, just as any religious person will claim to KNOW FOR A FACT that there is. They both have the exact same amount of evidence.

    I'm not religious in any way, but Atheists are fucking retards. All hail Atheismo!

  78. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by stewbacca · · Score: 1

    These airwaves are for the public use. Want to drop the f-/n-/q-bomb? Start up your own pay channel and go nuts.

    Yeah, except the government has their grubby sensor fingers all up in that as well. Name a cable tv channel (fits your requirement) that drops f-bombs and shows sex and naked chicks, that isn't a premium channel like HBO or Showtime.

    I want Jon Stewart and Steve Colbert to be able to say FUCK and show titties on their CABLE tv shows. I pay extra for those sort of features, but I don't get them.

  79. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by Omestes · · Score: 1

    For the atheists out there that are tempted to comment that religion doesn't play any role in their lives, I hate to be the one to break it to you but atheism is just yet another form of religion.

    A statement this bizarre needs some explanation. First, I am an atheist, I am not religious by definition. Second, I never would claim religion doesn't play a role in my life. I was raised Catholic, and most of my family still is, this influenced my upbringing, and thus who I currently am. Also I live in a religious country, thus religious people constantly meddle in my affairs and tell me what I should think or do by their standards. Religion either plays a cultural role, or a regrettable tyrannical role in my life, and the life of everyone else in America, atheist or not.

    to risk building strawmen, if your going to say atheists are religious because they have faith in science then you still are wrong. Since faith in science has nothing to do with atheism, some atheists are materialists, but not all. I could draw a Venn diagram. I, personally, am very skeptical of science as well as religion. I am not a practitioner of "scientism". I don't see the religious bit there.

    3) Angry atheists (as opposed to 'social' atheists) who also use the term "christian nation" sarcastically but not for any real political motivation but rather for their obsession to rebel against people who have faith in a higher power. They consider themselves intellectually superior to everyone else and reduce everybody else's faith into "imaginary man in the sky" religion. Even though they refuse to admit it, they not only actually believe in a higher power but also angry with it. They actively attack other individual's faith believing that this will ultimately hurt the higher power that they are fighting against.

    I am an angry atheist, I stubbed my toe this morning on my way to making coffee. You really don't understand atheists, do you? I am not intellectually superior to anyone by default. Yes, I think the religious are deluded, and hold erroneous beliefs (they think the same of me, and of any other religious dogma that is not their own), this says nothing about their intelligence. I know some VERY smart religious people, and some very dumb atheists. Your choice of world view has nothing to do with innate intelligence. I have something against having subjective principles enforced upon me, though. Ruling from religion is a bad thing. Governance should be non-theistic. Why shouldn't we have a government that enforces Muslim principles, or Buddhist, or Janist, or Hindu, or whatnot? Would this be tyranny to the non-Muslim/Buddhist/etc... citizens? Forcing a certain sect of Christian values on people against their will is tyranny to all who don't share the common beliefs and justifications with the ruling sect. A Christian government is tyrannical to more people than it could ever benefit, even other, more moderate Christian sects. People who buy whatever restrictive beliefs have the choice to individually avoid whatever disturbs them. (aside, a core tenet of Christian morality is free will. We choose to avoid evil, that is the definition of virtue. But for some reason certain sects want to remove the "choice" factor, and thus abolish free will. Making virtue an enforced matter, and not one of choice. This destroys the very concept of virtue, and is against their own stated theology)

    This is why I am against the idea of a "Christian nation", not because I am "smarter" than them.

    Of course I meant social as opposed to angry, and this type of atheist don't agree with the dogma promoted by organized religion and tend to believe in scientific facts. They are respectful of others, but don't mind sharing their beliefs when asked.

    Wait, most atheists fall that first category. Your second catagory is silly. "Good" atheists keep their mouths shut unless spoken too (this sounds frighteningly familiar, I think you can replace "atheist" in that statement with various

    --
    A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
  80. Re:Inveting your own terms to describe your ignora by Omestes · · Score: 1

    Atheists have been known to congregate, they mock other belief systems, they take any comments about their beliefs personally, and they like to preach their gospel (take the movie 'Invention of lying" for example or just google "magic man in the sky" ). Looks like a religion to me... hurts to find out that you're human and therefore like everybody else doesn't it?

    Sports fans have been known to congregate, they mock other sports teams, they take comments about their sports team personally, the like to talk about the supremacy of their team to others. Looks like a religion to me.

    Linux people have been known to congregate, they mock other operating systems, the take comments about Linux personally, they like to preach about OSS. Looks like a religion to me.

    Members of a political party have been known to congregate, they mock other political parties, they take comments about their political party personally, they like to preach about their parties platform. Looks like a religion to me.

    Should I go on?

    --
    A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
  81. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by rjstanford · · Score: 1

    These airwaves are for the public use. Want to drop the f-/n-/q-bomb? Start up your own pay channel and go nuts.

    Not even sure I disagree with you but, when you get right down to it, you said it in your first sentence. Public use. Why does the public who wants to show a nipple have to go elsewhere, whereas the public who wants to show an exploding nipple get to do whatever they want? Or a dancing purple dinosaur for that matter? "Public" doesn't just mean "the part of the public who's views coincide with mine," you know.

    --
    You're special forces then? That's great! I just love your olympics!
  82. Ratings? by AliasMarlowe · · Score: 1

    Parents could just set their TVs to not show anything above, say, TV-PG.

    The problem with this idea is that I would classify shows differently to those responsible for producing such ratings. Ratings such as PG are applied to material with repugnant violence, while material with healthy nudity or sexual behavior is likely to be rated as R.
    Just as others have mentioned, we have no objection to our kids seeing nudity in most contexts (they've been to nude beaches, FWIW), and sexual behavior in many contexts. However, we do not want them seeing some of the kinds of violence which are considered suitable for kids by the rating agencies. Accordingly, the movies they watch range from G to R, but require parental approval - we must be familiar with the material to assess its suitability. Luckily, for TV they are mostly interested in science and nature type shows.

    --
    Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. - Voltaire
    1. Re:Ratings? by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      The problem with this idea is that I would classify shows differently to those responsible for producing such ratings

      Fortunately for you, the ratings include the reason why it was rated TV-[X]. That's what the additional letters are for. My TV can filter on those as well as the main rating.

      Of course, there's a far better solution: Put the damn TV in the living room where you can keep track of what your kids are watching, regardless of it's rating.

  83. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by Enry · · Score: 1

    Because you need to have a common base to start from. A dancing purple dinosaur (or a Presbyterian minister) can be shown to have educational value.

    Nip-slip? It's hard to argue it has any kind of redeeming societal value. That's not to say that people need to be fired over it, but I think the 'public' can agree on some baseline of standards. ...and as I write this, I think of some of the dreck that's on broadcast TV now. Lowest common denominator indeed...*sigh*

  84. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    A tenet is a religious doctrine that is proclaimed as true without proof. Atheism proclaims that there is no god yet does not offer any proof. Sounds like a tenet.

    Atheism is a religion like not collecting stamps is a hobby.

    You say "A tenet is a religious doctrine that is proclaimed as true without proof." Let's just accept that as 100% true.

    You also say "Atheism proclaims that there is no god yet does not offer any proof." Let's also accept that as 100% true.

    But then you say "Sounds like a tenet." But wait. Where's the link? You defined tenet. But you never defined religion. You are begging the question. You assume atheism to be a religion, then use the definition of a part of religion to prove that it is a religion. Your argument can't work unless you also can assume the opposite and come to the same conclusion. If we define Atheism to not be a religion, then your first statement, while true, has no bearing on atheism. And your second statement, also true, wouldn't be a tenet, since by definition those only apply to religions.

    So, since your argument has the hidden assumption/requirement that atheism be a religion in order to prove atheism is a religion, it begs the question and the circular logic doesn't actually prove anything. Let us know when you have a proof that can assume that atheism isn't a religion and still prove it is anyway. That's a real proof.

  85. but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But who rates the raters?
    HAHAHAHahahaha!!!

  86. Re:Inveting your own terms to describe your ignora by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

    What college football isn't a religion? Tell that to the SEC fans. ;)

    The only problem I see with your Sport, Linux, and Politics examples is that they aren't within the same domain as religion in the traditional sense.

    The basis of Atheism is that there is no god, not the New Orleans Saints ability to have another successful season, Ubuntu's user friendliness, or Democrats idea of social engineering (thought give equal time to the other party).

    Black is a color despite the lack of light, Zero is a number despite the null quantity, and Atheism is a religion despite no faith in a god.

    BTW, I don't mean to offend anybody just having a discussion.

    --
    These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
  87. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

    "Atheism is a religion like not collecting stamps is a hobby."

    Good one. Except a more appropriate analogy would be:

    Black is a color despite the lack of light, Zero is a number despite the null quantity, and Atheism is a religion despite no faith in a god. (yes I'm recycling what I said in another comment)

    There was no reason to include the word "religious" in your definition, as tenets exist outside of religions.

    Well that was a copy and paste definition from a Google lookup. Another handy one from the Apple dictionary is "a principle or belief, esp. one of the main principles of a religion or philosophy : the tenets of classical liberalism"

    While there are some atheists who seem to be on a crusade of some sort (Dawkins comes to mind), to most, atheism is merely an attribute like many others. I am a brown-haired atheist. Neither my lack of belief in any gods, nor my brown hair, is my religion. They are both simple attributes, and I am irreligious.

    First of all I mean no offense to any atheist except maybe the angry ones I described in my OP. Just kidding...

    Anyway, you'll find that within pretty much any religion. I consider myself a christian yet I'm not a "practicing" one. I don't attend church, I don't do mission work, and I most definitely don't preach the gospel. Yet I do believe in a higher being. So I must admit that like you my faith is simply an attribute just like my hair color.

    With respect to those like Dawkins who are on an atheist crusade, I would argue that anything can be made to be a religion (at least, to that individual), but that doesn't make that thing inherently a religion. Linux is an OS. Some people treat it as a religion. That doesn't mean Linux is a religion, just that those individuals have made a religion out of it.

    I agree. However unlike Linux, atheism is in the domain of the traditional definition of religion since it deals directly with the belief that there is no god (as opposed to GPL versus BSD).

    --
    These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
  88. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

    Logic dictates that you can never prove a negative. It is therefore impossible to prove a lack of God;

    But you're looking for logic where none exists! ;)

    Unfortunately people who argue either outcome to "is there a god?" base their decision on faith. I could substitute "gut feeling" for faith to make it more palatable to the atheists. Both sides assume they are right, and that is all they have. There is no absolute proof.

    Despite the inability to prove a negative, atheist still assume there is no god. They do this without proof.

    I can look inside my thermos and know there is no soup. You can't do the same with religion.

    Again I fall back to the "if it looks like a duck, and sounds like a duck" argument for atheism as a religion. Even if it is not technically correct to state that atheism is a religion, it is practically close enough for all intents and purpose to qualify as one.

    No one is asking them to judge what is meant rather than what is said. What we're asking is for them to listen to what is said. If I say "America is not a "Christian Nation", but rather a nation of many people with many faiths (and sometimes none at all)" I am in no way saying anything bad about Christians.

    You are absolutely correct, and we aren't talking about the same thing. The confusion is my fault.

    When you say "The US is not a Christian Nation" you are absolutely correct and I don't think many people will be upset with your assertion except for maybe the right-wingers (hence my point #1). They try to promote the falsehood of a christian nation to cajole fellow christians to their cause.

    What I meant by point #2 is when people use the term "christian nation" sarcastically. They also create the falsehood of a "christian nation" to use as an effigy to burn in order to make a point (I know it sounds corny - but I'm tired). Some would point to "Letter to a Christian Nation" by Sam Harris. It's just an example that I Googled, and I have no opinion about the book because I haven't read it and I would not want to slight Sam Harris without giving his book a fair reading. I do know it caused quite a stir and here is an excerpt from good ol' wikipedia:

    Writing in an editorial in The Seattle Times, David Klinghoffer said that Letter to a Christian Nation and Richard Dawkins's The God Delusion were the top two bestselling religious books. However, he went on to say that ". . . Dawkins and Harris seem unfamiliar with religious tradition as biblical monotheists know it from personal experience and deep study. Frankly, the success of the new atheist faith would be hard to imagine without today's soaring levels of societal religious illiteracy."[8]

    Writing in The Observer, Stephanie Merritt described Harris as providing "concise anti-religious apologetics," but said that "[h]e does not seem to comprehend the mindset of those he addresses."

    --
    These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
  89. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

    But then you say "Sounds like a tenet." But wait. Where's the link? You defined tenet. But you never defined religion.

    what about the following that is quoted from the same comment you pulled tenet.

    One of the definitions of religion is "a pursuit or interest to which someone ascribes supreme importance". Atheist appear to ascribe to the fact that there is no god with supreme importance.

    I think I posted enough to the two other replies to address the rest of your comment.

    I mean no disrespect.. just tired.

    --
    These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
  90. Competing Approaches by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

    Religion is politics, a means of controlling the distribution of wealth and authority within a population.

    Allow me to propose that you're almost right here. I used to think this.

    I now think the better explanation is that Religion, Government, and Markets are all approaches that can accomplish these goals. We see the Barbaric, the Platonic, and the Stoic approaches there.

    Really, nothing has changed since Xeno.

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  91. Beam me up, Scotty by Something+Witty+Here · · Score: 1

    What is the FCC's excuse for censorship now that they have killed
    off analog TV and thus all TVs have the V-chip?

    Even medical education shows have everything blurred out.

    Violence is offensive.

    American football is violent and therefore offensive.

    Janet Jackson is offensive with or without a "costume malfunction".

    Nearly everything coming out of a politicion's mouth is offensive,
    but they are constantly on the news.

    Beam me up, Scotty, the USA has "jumped the shark".

  92. The point by Other+Than+That... · · Score: 1

    This is a fairly common sentiment, often apposed by those without children, which misses the point.

    Yes, parents want to be able to make sure their kids don't watch things they don't want them to see. They want to pay attention to what their kids are watching. The problem comes when there is no guaranty that any given show won't contain 'bad' things, thus they cannot make as intelligent a choice* unless they watch every single show all the way through before they show it to their children. And parents who care still don't have infinite time on their hands.

    *Yes some shows can be ruled out immediately, but others could have things you wouldn't think they would.

    1. Re:The point by rhakka · · Score: 1

      you could say the exact same thing about life. you have no control over the other people in the world around you. they might, believe it or not, swear in front of your kids. or act like assholes. or use violent language (or even engage in violence).

      As a parent, our job is to make DECISIONS about where to take our kids and how to deal with situations we don't expect. We can minimize exposure to violence and swearing, if we wish, by, say, avoiding bars and parties and spending more time at the library.

      You don't get to sanitize the entire world just because you decided to reproduce. It is up to you to provide the CONTEXT your children need to deal with "accidental exposure" to things you do not think they are prepared to handle. If you absolutely do not want them to see a certain act, then your job is to make sure they only watch shows you are sure will not show that act. LUCKILY, there is a gigantic industry out there churning out electronic entertainment sanitized to an incredible degree, JUST FOR YOU! It's not that hard to make sure they are only watching appropriate shows. Unless, of course, you aren't parenting your kids.

      And yes, if the collective possessive pronoun didn't clue you in, I am a parent. I just don't expect the rest of the world to do my job. I do hope that the people I choose to associate with, and most people, will behave like civilized human beings in front of my daughter. But that is not always a fair assumption.

  93. Time to adjourn self serving institutions by Pigskin-Referee · · Score: 0

    The European Commission of the European Union and the FTC are both useless bureaucratic agencies attempting to justify their existence. Neither has done anything to warrant their continued existence. Only die-hard control freaks, or Socialist/Fascist have any use for either. Both stifle freedom of expression and free enterprise.

    --
    Pigskin-Referee
    Linux: Yesterday's technology, tomorrow ...
  94. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    One of the definitions of religion is "a pursuit or interest to which someone ascribes supreme importance". Atheist appear to ascribe to the fact that there is no god with supreme importance.

    That's not the spiritual definition. "Baseball is a religion" is something I've heard long before Slashdot was around. It fits that definition. Most parents of only children would have their child be their religion. That definition is so broad that most everything is a religion. The Lost TV show, Star Wars, Star Trek, even Slashdot to some are religions. With a definition that broad, it is almost meaningless. WoW is a religion, I even know some people for whom sudoku or Scrabble would be religions, even when they know for a fact that's there's no god of sudoku or Scrabble. So yeah, I understand that definition, but it is unrelated to the spiritual definition of religion.

    And you are asserting what an atheist ascibes to and asserting that your generalization applies to all such members of that group. What about the class of apathetic atheists? Most I know have the stance of "If you can't know, then the default position is disbelief." Much like their stance on the Tooth Fairy or Santa Claus, so is their stance with God. And unless you are asserting that there is a religion consisting of those who don't believe in unicorns, dragons, elves, the Easter Bunny, Luke Skywalker or such, then there can't be a religion of those who don't believe in God.

    And no, that isn't agnosticism. There are no agnostics. Everyone I know who claims to be agnostic is atheist but not willing to take on the social stigma. Either you believe there is a God or you do not. Believing you can't know is unrelated to which of the two previous cases you fall under. I can't know for sure whether my car will or won't start tomorrow. However, I currently believe that it will start tomorrow. If my car develops a problem and becomes very unreliable, then I'll likely believe it won't start, but that won't affect my independent belief that I will never be able to know for sure whether it will or won't start tomorrow. The closes to agnostic I see bantered around now is something like the deists where the deity is the laws of nature. But then, that's just a definition of "god" that makes god something other than an entity that falls under the normal definitions of god, and the uncertainty isn't in their beliefs, but in what you label their beliefs.

  95. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by khallow · · Score: 1

    And no, that isn't agnosticism. There are no agnostics. Everyone I know who claims to be agnostic is atheist but not willing to take on the social stigma. Either you believe there is a God or you do not.

    Well, I'm a genuine agnostic. Glad to meet you. As I see it, holding any supernatural belief which is inherently unknowable is in error. But it gets worse, the statements are ill-defined and hence need not follow normal rules of logic. Keep in mind that the assumption you make here is that the statement, "I believe there is a god" (where "god" refers to some sort of supreme, perfect being, characteristics which can be established later) can have a definite truth value. As I see it, no one would understand the nature of a being with attributes commonly associated to "God" or existence at that level, no one would be able to distinguish between God and a sufficiently sophisticated fake, and no one can explain why a belief in God has any meaningful relevance to existence as we know it. So to sum up, it's not even clear to me that humans (or any imperfect being for that matter) are capable of believing in the existence of God.

    Given the unresolvable problems with even defining the statement, how can one have or not have that belief?

  96. Re:Inveting your own terms to describe your ignora by Omestes · · Score: 1

    The only problem I see with your Sport, Linux, and Politics examples is that they aren't within the same domain as religion in the traditional sense.

    But you used these criteria to define atheism as a religion. I, in the silliest possible manner, showed that these criteria are a bit silly.

    Black is a color despite the lack of light, Zero is a number despite the null quantity, and Atheism is a religion despite no faith in a god.

    I don't see this. You run into the whole "not collecting stamps isn't a hobby" problem. You would be correct if I defined my world view by its contrast to religion. I don't. My day to day existence as an atheist doesn't ever refer to my own opposition to religion. It isn't a counter. It just is. I might not be expressing myself well here, but I hope you get the gist. My atheism is completely unconnected to religion.

    Your, I think, defining atheism by its opposition to religion. My living atheism is completely apathetic towards religion. They are separate and unconnected classes. Its like saying Zero is a Color.

    Here is a question; is it possible to NOT be religious? How would one be completely devoid of religion? If not holding a religion is a religion in-itself, then how can one ever not be religious?

    Perhaps you are over generalizing. Not all atheists are connected to each other, there is no single group of atheists. Its like lumping all non-Republicans (or Democrats, or whatnot) into a single unified class. Yes, Democrats, Libertarians, Socialists and Greens all share a trait (not being Republican), but this trait alone is not enough to classify them into a unitary entity.

    --
    A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
  97. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    Well, I'm a genuine agnostic. Glad to meet you. As I see it, holding any supernatural belief which is inherently unknowable is in error.

    Do you believe in Santa Claus? If not, how can you know? And if you hold no belief in god, that means you are atheist. I just did a search on the definition and one of the top results was "Atheism: Belief in no God, or no belief in God." I like that one. Why? Because it agrees with me, so it must be right. You state holding an unknowable belief is in error. As such, belief in god is unknowable, and thus in error. Assuming you don't purposefully choose error, that means you don't believe in god. "No belief in god" is atheism.

    Given the unresolvable problems with even defining the statement, how can one have or not have that belief?

    I believe you are in error. You assume people won't deliberately choose "error" knowing it's an error and lashing out violently against those who call it an error. Many religions over time have worked like that. One reason why religious discussions are verboten is because they are rational discussions about the irrational, and thus we might as well be arguing the color of "seven" or the height of "quickly." People will knowingly pick a wrong answer and stick with it because it's more convenient than the truth (not just religion, but for many other things as well). You may think it illogical, but it happens, and based on your assessment of religion, happens quite often and with a much larger percentage of the population than who don't exhibit that behavior.

  98. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by khallow · · Score: 1

    "No belief in god" is atheism.

    That's not a commonly accepted definition of atheism. Sure in philosophy, they consider agnosticism as part of atheism, but that seems to me a semantic sleigh of hand and not useful.

    Do you believe in Santa Claus?

    He didn't give me gifts or coal last Christmas so no I don't. That's a supernatural claim with an observable outcome.

    I believe you are in error. You assume people won't deliberately choose "error" knowing it's an error and lashing out violently against those who call it an error.

    You have evidence that I've made this assumption? Looking at my words, I didn't make any assumption about people not deliberately choosing error.

  99. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    That's not a commonly accepted definition of atheism.

    "I do not believe in god" seems to be a clear statement of atheism. What definitions do you use?

  100. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by khallow · · Score: 1

    But that's not agnostism. Agnostism is neither believing in god nor not believing in god.

  101. does anyone else find it strange... by vuffi_raa · · Score: 1

    does anyone else find it strange that this case is coming down to an appeal of a ruling initiated by fox, the same company whose news network purports itself to be the voice of decency and wholesomeness in an otherwise dirty world.

  102. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    Agnostism is neither believing in god nor not believing in god.

    I assert that's impossible. People can't do that. Explain Schrodinger's cat to someone on the street. They will think you nuts when you say the cat is both alive and dead at the same time. The mind has great trouble holding paradoxes. So people will pick one. They might pick neither. They'll almost never pick both.

    Lets just take your statement and eliminate one negative. Then you are left with "Agnosticism is not believing in god and believing in god." That's a correct linguistic parsing of your sentence, even if you don't accept it to be a correct rhetorical one. I assert that there are few, if any, who believe that statement. As such, I'd assert the logical equivalent, what you stated, is similarly rare. It just sounds more plausible because the extra negative makes it just confusing enough that people agreeing with it don't understand what they are agreeing to.

    The lack of an opinion on the matter is, by definition, atheist. Holding no belief at all with regards as to whether there is or is not a god is to not belief in god. God requires an affirmative belief. The lack of that affirmative belief is atheism. You are apparently asserting that the default condition is agnostic as they do not yet believe in no god. That is a lack of belief in god. No matter how you try to soften the statement, there is no belief at all in god.

  103. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by khallow · · Score: 1

    I assert that's impossible.

    And I already explained why it is possible. Ill-defined statements often don't have a defined truth value.

    The lack of an opinion on the matter is, by definition, atheist.

    Not by the dictionary. Atheism is a denial of the existence of gods. Agnosticism is merely a position of not knowing whether gods exist or not.

  104. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    Not by the dictionary.

    I posted one link from a dictionary that disagrees with you. You've never posted anything that agrees with you.

    Atheism is a denial of the existence of gods.

    Atheism is not believing in gods.

    Agnosticism is merely a position of not knowing whether gods exist or not.

    Agnosticism is, based on your previous statements, the religion of believing that god doesn't exist and does exist at the same time. I'll call agnosticism "Schrodinger's Religion."

  105. Re:Indecency, yes. Whiny 'Family Values', no by turbidostato · · Score: 1

    "And I already explained why it is possible. Ill-defined statements often don't have a defined truth value."

    That's not a counter-argument: he already knows that ill-defined statements often don't have a defined truth value. What he holds is that no matter what, your mind tubes are forced to choose one anyway.

    For really ill-defined statements, like "number seven is either green or red" you will choose the question to be false because you declare the attribute to be unholdable for the subject. With regards of existance (or more strictly, being) there's no way to get off the question: things either are or are not. Since it's a proper question the one about "do god exists or it doesn't?" there's no way for a human mind to not answer to itself either "yes, it does exist" or "no, it doesn't exist", even if the question really wouldn't hold a defined value of truth.