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Censorship in arts 'healthy,' Pat Boone says
washington times ^
| 4 23 04
| Steve Miller
Posted on 04/23/2004 4:32:12 PM PDT by freepatriot32
A healthy society needs censorship to survive, 1950s musical icon Pat Boone said yesterday. He added that he would welcome strong content restrictions governing movies and other artistic works. "I don't think censorship is a bad word, but it has become a bad word because everybody associates it with some kind of restriction on liberty," said Mr. Boone, who is in Washington making the rounds as the national spokesman for the 60-Plus Association, a conservative senior citizen lobby.
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtontimes.com ...
TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Extended News; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; Philosophy; Politics/Elections; US: District of Columbia
KEYWORDS: aclulist; anotherstupidexcerpt; arts; aynrandlist; boone; censorship; constitutionlist; govwatch; healthy; in; libertarians; noteworthy; pat; patboone; philosophytime; says
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To: cookcounty
But, just for argument's sake, name one culture that produced great art that did not also practice some form of censorship.Better yet, name one that survived for long without some form of it.
21
posted on
04/23/2004 5:56:59 PM PDT
by
templar
To: freepatriot32
So... Pat when can we expect your apology for covering all of Little Richard's songs waaaaay back when? Anytime soon?
22
posted on
04/23/2004 5:57:43 PM PDT
by
cyborg
(The 9-11 commission members have penis envy.)
To: Blue Screen of Death
HAHA! YEah, I was gonna say the same thing. His music is obscene!
23
posted on
04/23/2004 5:58:10 PM PDT
by
Stew Padasso
("That boy is nuttier than a squirrel turd.")
To: freepatriot32
Personally, I think I know where he's coming from. However, this statement is a serious contradiction of ideas:
"It must be majority approved ... voluntary ... and self-imposed," he said
It is either going to be majorally approved by law or self-imposed. It can't be both.
To: freepatriot32
I don't have much of a problem with some censorship if it is well defined, I mean it is written down and well known what the boundaries are, what the "seven dirty words" are and so forth, none of the "if I saw it I know it" deal. I can see it in free radio and TV, less so for cable channels. As I see what's going on, I'm becoming more and more for some form of it in that arena, I think it is showing how far we are becoming. Other such events again less so because you can choose not to go to the exhibit, museum, and so on. I know I'll be 38 in July, and yes, I kind of like Pat Boone and he does have some good things to say. He was a "born again Christian" even before the term became popular (was it around in the 1950's, I remember hearing it in the 1970's). I do see the other side's point though where it could extend to politics so yeah, we do have to be careful here and make sure the metes and bounds of such censorship stays out of politics and able to criticize our politicians, the system and so on.
25
posted on
04/23/2004 6:05:29 PM PDT
by
Nowhere Man
("Laws are the spider webs through which the big bugs fly past and the little ones get caught.")
To: squarebarb
Once the government has to do it, something has been lost.
I advocate the return of shame in the culture (i.e. young people realize that such animalistic displays hurt them, hurt thier marriages, hurt thier futures and thier health and their future happiness) but I ain't holding my breath.
I think that's what we mainly need, we lost the concept of shame. You're right, you have a slam dunk. Like in my last message, I can see it if the metes and bounds (I work in real estate titles, IT is dead B-)) are specific like "you can't show naked boobs on TV or say the 'seven dirty words'" but when you go further, you can jeopardize free speech to the point where if you yell "The King is a Fink" you'll get tossed into the cell with Mr. Spook (I love the Wizard of Id).
26
posted on
04/23/2004 6:10:05 PM PDT
by
Nowhere Man
("Laws are the spider webs through which the big bugs fly past and the little ones get caught.")
To: freepatriot32
We have censorship. Tape and watch the three broadcast news shows one night. Then read the newspapers and the internet. What was put on the networks represents a form of censorship.
To: freepatriot32
Has pat boone completely lost his freaking mind?Even a liberal like Pete Seeger once said that we do need censorship........ that there were things children shouldn't see or come into contact with.
The worst kind of censorship is being excercized by many public librarians with a liberal mind-set......They make "limited resource" decisions all of the time, and tilt things decidedly away from conservative or even what would be considered "wholesome" written material. Any attempt to hold them to account for thier decisions is labeled as censoship in itself.
And public librarians are GOVERNMENT employees.
28
posted on
04/23/2004 6:12:51 PM PDT
by
Tom Bombadil
(There are givers and takers. Be a giver and marry one.)
To: Tom Bombadil
Years back when the Web was very young, some staffer at Citizen Magazine (my favorite mag - put out by Focus on the Family - mostly about political issues that affect Christians) was searching around for references to their publication on the internet to see what others were saying about them. And lo and behold they found a very interesting reference on a bulletin board that was devoted to librarians.
This particular online conversation had started with one librarian pleading for help from fellow librarians. The dilemma they faced was that some library patron wanted to donate a multi-year subscription to Citizen Magazine to the library. This simply would not do! This librarian was determined that no scurrilous (i.e. conservative) magazine would ever be found desecrating the hallowed halls of THEIR sacred institution!
But of course the problem was that if s/he came right out and told the patron the true reason why their offer was being refused, it could potentially cause problems (if this person tried to press the issue). So the plea to the fellow librarians online was, "How do you handle situations like this?"
And there were a variety of helpful answers, all of them amounting to "Here are some nice, handy, believable sounding lies that we have found effective in preventing any rightwing trash from crossing our threshholds".
And yet these are always the first people to scream "censorship" when someone wants to install internet filters to keep out the child porn!.
To: CardCarryingMember.VastRightWC
Excellent post.
I think you've reached the heart of the matter: censorship already exists, it's just a matter of what we as a society want censored and where we want it censored. Everybody has a line they don't want crossed, and it's up to us all to find that common line. Pat Boone's line is different from, say, Larry Flint's, but that doesn't mean we have to automatically accept Larry's threshold because it's the lowest common denominator. The middle of the bell curve is out there somewhere, and only robust, honest debate will find it.
30
posted on
04/23/2004 7:17:33 PM PDT
by
randog
(Everything works great 'til the current flows.)
To: JackRyanCIA
Since some of what is called "art" is cr*p like Jesus on a crucifix in a jar of urine, naked lesbians smearing chocolate on themselves or inviting the audience to look at their private parts with a speculum, a picture of the Virgin Mary decorated with elephant dung and pictures of female genitalia, I am in agreement with the concept of censorship.
Censorship has become a word meaning pure unadulterated evil. Censorship of ideas is wrong. Censorship of disgusting, mindless, foul violence depicted in such a way as to desensitise and attract the (immature) viewers, and explicit sex acts and obscene material is a societal good. We are seeing some results of the lack of such censorship, and it is not pretty.
31
posted on
04/23/2004 8:12:58 PM PDT
by
little jeremiah
(...men of intemperate minds can not be free. Their passions forge their fetters.)
To: CardCarryingMember.VastRightWC
Yes!! Let freedom ring! Only when kiddie porn and necrophilic porn and animal sex photos in full glossy poster size are surrounding us all day long, will we finally be able to say that for the very first time in American history the First Amendment's guarantee of Freedom Of Speech has come true!!!Don't despair, that day is coming soon!
Even as we discuss, the womens' mags at the local grocery store picture models and actresses with MOST of their breasts exposed, with articles the titles of which even a child could read, delineating the value of different sexual positions and methods to gratify numerous sexual partners!
32
posted on
04/23/2004 8:39:33 PM PDT
by
little jeremiah
(...men of intemperate minds can not be free. Their passions forge their fetters.)
To: freepatriot32
I saw him on Hannity and Colmes criticizing Howard Stern and was talking in detail about all the disgusting things Stern said about women, minorities, etc.
Why was he spending so much time listening to this show he wants banned?
To: little jeremiah
Since some of what is called "art" is cr*p like Jesus on a crucifix in a jar of urine, naked lesbians smearing chocolate on themselves or inviting the audience to look at their private parts with a speculum, a picture of the Virgin Mary decorated with elephant dung and pictures of female genitalia, I am in agreement with the concept of censorship.Let's go one step further and ban all images of Jesus on a crucifix. After all, I don't want my kids exposed to that kind of violent and barbaric imagery...
To: little jeremiah
Since some of what is called "art" is cr*p like Jesus on a crucifix in a jar of urine, naked lesbians smearing chocolate on themselves or inviting the audience to look at their private parts with a speculum, a picture of the Virgin Mary decorated with elephant dung and pictures of female genitalia, I am in agreement with the concept of censorship. How about taking the first step and not have the government subsidize this psuedo-art? I can't wait for the Republicans to get control of the House, Senate and White House so the NRA will be defunded.
35
posted on
04/23/2004 9:05:17 PM PDT
by
KarlInOhio
(Clinton, advised by Dick Clarke, did nothing. - Ann Coulter 4/1/04, How 9-11 Happened)
To: KarlInOhio
You mean the NEA - National Endowment for the "Arts"?
If the gov't reduced spending by at least 50%, it would be a good start.
Who in heck would spend personal money for any of this sick cr*p anyway? The so-called artists would then have to make stuff regular people like, or take up farming or car repair, or something else productive and useful.
36
posted on
04/23/2004 9:12:04 PM PDT
by
little jeremiah
(...men of intemperate minds can not be free. Their passions forge their fetters.)
To: little jeremiah
You mean the NEA - National Endowment for the "Arts"? Oops. I blame fat fingers and posting after midnight.
37
posted on
04/23/2004 9:17:18 PM PDT
by
KarlInOhio
(Clinton, advised by Dick Clarke, did nothing. - Ann Coulter 4/1/04, How 9-11 Happened)
To: KarlInOhio
Come on, wimp - the night is still young! (on the west coast at least...)
Then there's the NEA, N History something or other, HUD, AFDC, etcetcetc.
(once Mr. Little Jeremiah (was a contractor at that time) did a job for HUD. It was so horrible he vowed to starve rather than do another HUD job. They waste an incredible amount of money.)
38
posted on
04/23/2004 9:39:52 PM PDT
by
little jeremiah
(...men of intemperate minds can not be free. Their passions forge their fetters.)
To: freepatriot32
thats all well and good but if the goverment censors tv to the extent pat wants it to the only station we will have is pbs! have you ever watched pbs? its more boring then c span on a sunday afternoon Well now, that's rather odd. I have fond memories of spending hour upon hour with my family in the 60's and 70's watching all kinds of TV in the evenings. And there were a lot of very good, entertaining programs and a few boring ones. But I don't remember any of this X-rated dialog or other filth we have now.
And here's where my memories part ways with yours - For some strange reason, I don't remember there being just the one single PBS station on the airwaves. I coulda sworn there were 5 Denver stations. But from what you say, PBS must have been the only station on, because censorship was so much heavier back then.
Maybe I just dreamed up all of my childhood?
To: freepatriot32
The best I can say about Pat Boone is that he didn't ruin "Journey to the Centre of the Earth," and he shows a good sense of humor about himself. Unfortunately, he's to rock and roll what Kenny G is to jazz.
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