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The Pro Porn Court?
WYLL.com, NEWSMAX.com, RFMNews.com, FederalObserver.com ^ | 4.17.2002 | Kevin McCullough

Posted on 04/17/2002 8:45:48 AM PDT by KMC1

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To: LouD
There is no such right to kiddy porn, and no redeeming social value from allowing the depiction of child sexual abuse.

The portions of the law that were struck down covered more than actual child porn. That's precisely why they were struck down.

161 posted on 04/17/2002 2:24:51 PM PDT by gdani
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To: Sandy
Gee, since you know so much, will you translate it all for me? (I've already explained that I have no legal expertise at all. What's your background?)
162 posted on 04/17/2002 2:28:35 PM PDT by Clara Lou
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To: general_re
You're forgetting that even if the police recover piles and piles of child porn, the defendent can claim that he created it all via computer. Then the police would have to prove he didn't - which is vitually impossible according to computer forensic standards.
163 posted on 04/17/2002 2:41:43 PM PDT by UnsinkableMollyBrown
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To: Clara Lou
What's your background?

St. Andrew's Elementary School, circa 1970.

164 posted on 04/17/2002 2:49:53 PM PDT by Sandy
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To: SunStar
"I think this decision may actually benefit children, because the sicko scumbags who enjoy child pornography may no longer seek out children to have sex with (and record it on video)."

The sickos you mention have access to their own imagination for imagining these acts. This type of "virtual sex" is obviously not adequate because they are going to the web to satiate the desire. It will provide a higher degree of "realism" for them.

Thus we have a precedence of abandoning one level of adult-child sex for a more realistic version.

We have an obviously complex system (pervert's desire).
We have a perturbation (new access to depictions of adult-child sex)

It's highly likely the system will diverge. He will need more. Reality is the best virtual reality.

Some slopes are slippery. To deny that, is a logical fallacy in itself.

165 posted on 04/17/2002 2:51:56 PM PDT by avg_freeper
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To: Sandy
You're certainly qualified, then.
166 posted on 04/17/2002 3:09:19 PM PDT by Clara Lou
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To: UnsinkableMollyBrown
You're forgetting that even if the police recover piles and piles of child porn, the defendent can claim that he created it all via computer. Then the police would have to prove he didn't - which is vitually impossible according to computer forensic standards.

You must not have read the decision you're criticizing, because Justice Thomas's opinion addresses this issue directly. He says that, under current technology, it is possible to tell computer-generated images from real ones, and that, if technology ever makes that impossible, it would be constitutional for Congress to put the burden on the defendant to prove that his image is virtual, not real.

167 posted on 04/17/2002 3:17:03 PM PDT by Lurking Libertarian
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To: Valpal1
One would think that since sex with children/sex between children/child sex with animals/ is patently illegal in all fifty states and federally as well, that virtual depictions of such could be found patently offensive in light of community standards.

"...AND lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value..."

Context is everything. :^)

168 posted on 04/17/2002 3:24:11 PM PDT by general_re
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To: tdadams
Murder (again, with your apples and oranges) is against the law because you've committed violence against another. You've violated their right to life. That's not permitted, nor will it ever be permitted.

What do you call 50,000,000 Unborn children who were slaughtered?

Your precious supreme court allowed murder. Where is your outrage? Where is the crying? Let me guess, they are not really worthy of a right to life, only libertarian hedonists can decide who lives and dies, and what is worthy of being seen and what isn't.

169 posted on 04/17/2002 3:24:44 PM PDT by FF578
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To: tdadams
Supreme Court of New York 1811, in the Case of the People V Ruggles, 8 Johns 545-547, Chief Justice Chancellor Kent Stated:

The defendant was indicted ... in December, 1810, for that he did, on the 2nd day of September, 1810 ... wickedly, maliciously, and blasphemously, utter, and with a loud voice publish, in the presence and hearing of divers good and Christian people, of and concerning the Christian religion, and of and concerning Jesus Christ, the false, scandalous, malicious, wicked and blasphemous words following: "Jesus Christ was a bastard, and his mother must be a whore," in contempt of the Christian religion. .. . The defendant was tried and found guilty, and was sentenced by the court to be imprisoned for three months, and to pay a fine of $500.

The Prosecuting Attorney argued:

While the constitution of the State has saved the rights of conscience, and allowed a free and fair discussion of all points of controversy among religious sects, it has left the principal engrafted on the body of our common law, that Christianity is part of the laws of the State, untouched and unimpaired.

The Chief Justice delivered the opinion of the Court:

Such words uttered with such a disposition were an offense at common law. In Taylor's case the defendant was convicted upon information of speaking similar words, and the Court . . . said that Christianity was parcel of the law, and to cast contumelious reproaches upon it, tended to weaken the foundation of moral obligation, and the efficacy of oaths. And in the case of Rex v. Woolston, on a like conviction, the Court said . . . that whatever strikes at the root of Christianity tends manifestly to the dissolution of civil government. . . . The authorities show that blasphemy against God and . . . profane ridicule of Christ or the Holy Scriptures (which are equally treated as blasphemy), are offenses punishable at common law, whether uttered by words or writings . . . because it tends to corrupt the morals of the people, and to destroy good order. Such offenses have always been considered independent of any religious establishment or the rights of the Church. They are treated as affecting the essential interests of civil society. . . .

We stand equally in need, now as formerly, of all the moral discipline, and of those principles of virtue, which help to bind society together. The people of this State, in common with the people of this country, profess the general doctrines of Christianity, as the rule of their faith and practice; and to scandalize the author of these doctrines is not only ... impious, but . . . is a gross violation of decency and good order. Nothing could be more offensive to the virtuous part of the community, or more injurious to the tender morals of the young, than to declare such profanity lawful.. ..

The free, equal, and undisturbed enjoyment of religious' opinion, whatever it may be, and free and decent discussions on any religious subject, is granted and secured; but to revile ... the religion professed by almost the whole community, is an abuse of that right. . . . We are a Christian people, and the morality of the country is deeply engrafted upon Christianity, and not upon the doctrines or worship of those impostors [other religions].. .. [We are] people whose manners ... and whose morals have been elevated and inspired . . . by means of the Christian religion.

Though the constitution has discarded religious establishments, it does not forbid judicial cognizance of those offenses against religion and morality which have no reference to any such establishment. . . . This [constitutional] declaration (noble and magnanimous as it is, when duly understood) never meant to withdraw religion in general, and with it the best sanctions of moral and social obligation from all consideration and notice of the law. . . . To construe it as breaking down the common law barriers against licentious, wanton, and impious attacks upon Christianity itself, would be an enormous perversion of its meaning. . . . Christianity, in its enlarged sense, as a religion revealed and taught in the Bible, is not unknown to our law. . . . The Court are accordingly of opinion that the judgment below must be affirmed:

[that blasphemy against God, and contumelious reproaches, and profane ridicule of Christ or the Holy Scriptures, are offenses punishable at the common law, whether uttered by words or writings].

The Supreme Court in the case of Lidenmuller V The People, 33 Barbour, 561 Stated:

Christianity...is in fact, and ever has been, the religion of the people. The fact is everwhere prominent in all our civil and political history, and has been, from the first, recognized and acted upon by the people, and well as by constitutional conventions, by legislatures and by courts of justice.

The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania 1817, in the Case of The Commonwealth V Wolf stated the courts opinion as follows:

Laws cannot be administered in any civilized government unless the people are taught to revere the sanctity of an oath, and look to a future state of rewards and punishments for the deeds of this life, It is of the utmost moment, therefore, that they should be reminded of their religious duties at stated periods.... A wise policy would naturally lead to the formation of laws calculated to subserve those salutary purposes. The invaluable privilege of the rights of conscience secured to us by the constitution of the commonwealth, was never intended to shelter those persons, who, out of mere caprice, would directly oppose those laws for the pleasure of showing their contempt and abhorrence of the religious opinions of the great mass of the citizens.

The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania 1824, in the Case of Updegraph V The Commonwealth 11 Serg. & R. 393-394, 398-399, 402, 507 (1824) recorded the Courts Declaration that:

Abner Updegraph . . . on the 12th day of December [1821] . . .not having the fear of God before his eyes . . . contriving and intending to scandalize, and bring into disrepute, and vilify the Christian religion and the scriptures of truth, in the Presence and hearing of several persons ... did unlawfully, wickedly and premeditatively, despitefully and blasphemously say . . . : "That the Holy Scriptures were a mere fable: that they were a contradiction, and that although they contained a number of good things, yet they contained a great many lies." To the great dishonor of Almighty God, to the great scandal of the profession of the Christian religion.

The jury . . . finds a malicious intention in the speaker to vilify the Christian religion and the scriptures, and this court cannot look beyond the record, nor take any notice of the allegation, that the words were uttered by the defendant, a member of a debating association, which convened weekly for discussion and mutual information... . That there is an association in which so serious a subject is treated with so much levity, indecency and scurrility ... I am sorry to hear, for it would prove a nursery of vice, a school of preparation to qualify young men for the gallows, and young women for the brothel, and there is not a skeptic of decent manners and good morals, who would not consider such debating clubs as a common nuisance and disgrace to the city. .. . It was the out-pouring of an invective, so vulgarly shocking and insulting, that the lowest grade of civil authority ought not to be subject to it, but when spoken in a Christian land, and to a Christian audience, the highest offence conna bones mores; and even if Christianity was not part of the law of the land, it is the popular religion of the country, an insult on which would be indictable.

The assertion is once more made, that Christianity never was received as part of the common law of this Christian land; and it is added, that if it was, it was virtually repealed by the constitution of the United States, and of this state. . . . If the argument be worth anything, all the laws which have Christianity for their object--all would be carried away at one fell swoop-the act against cursing and swearing, and breach of the Lord's day; the act forbidding incestuous marriages, perjury by taking a false oath upon the book, fornication and adultery ...for all these are founded on Christianity--- for all these are restraints upon civil liberty. ...

We will first dispose of what is considered the grand objection--the constitutionality of Christianity--for, in effect, that is the question. Christianity, general Christianity, is and always has been a part of the common law . . . not Christianity founded on any particular religious tenets; not Christianity with an established church ... but Christianity with liberty of conscience to all men.

Thus this wise legislature framed this great body of laws, for a Christian country and Christian people. This is the Christianity of the common law . . . and thus, it is irrefragably proved, that the laws and institutions of this state are built on the foundation of reverence for Christianity. . . . In this the constitution of the United States has made no alteration, nor in the great body of the laws which was an incorporation of the common-law doctrine of Christianity . . . without which no free government can long exist.

To prohibit the open, public and explicit denial of the popular religion of a country is a necessary measure to preserve the tranquillity of a government. Of this, no person in a Christian country can complain. . . . In the Supreme Court of New York it was solemnly determined, that Christianity was part of the law of the land, and that to revile the Holy Scriptures was an indictable offence. The case assumes, says Chief Justice Kent, that we are a Christian people, and the morality of the country is deeply engrafted on Christianity. The People v. Ruggles.

No society can tolerate a willful and despiteful attempt to subvert its religion, no more than it would to break down its laws--a general, malicious and deliberate intent to overthrow Christianity, general Christianity. Without these restraints no free government could long exist. It is liberty run mad to declaim against the punishment of these offences, or to assert that the punishment is hostile to the spirit and genius of our government. They are far from being true friends to liberty who support this doctrine, and the promulgation of such opinions, and general receipt of them among the people, would be the sure forerunners of anarchy, and finally, of despotism. No free government now exists in the world unless where Christianity is acknowledged, and is the religion of the country.... Its foundations are broad and strong, and deep. .. it is the purest system of morality, the firmest auxiliary, and only stable support of all human laws. . . .

Christianity is part of the common law; the act against blasphemy is neither obsolete nor virtually repealed; nor is Christianity inconsistent with our free governments or the genius of the people.

While our own free constitution secures liberty of conscience and freedom of religious worship to all, it is not necessary to maintain that any man should have the right publicly to vilify the religion of his neighbors and of the country; these two privileges are directly opposed.

The Supreme Court of the State of South Carolina in 1846 in the case of City of Charleston V S.A. Benjamin cites an individual who broke the Ordinance that stated: "No Person or persons whatsoever shall publicly expose to sale, or sell... any goods, wares or merchandise whatsoever upon the Lord's day."

The court convicted the man and came to the conclusion: "I agree fully to what is beautifully and appropriately said in Updengraph V The Commonwealth.... Christianity, general Christianity, is an always has been, a part of the common law; "not Christianity with an established church... but Christianity with liberty of conscience to all men."

170 posted on 04/17/2002 3:27:32 PM PDT by FF578
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To: Clara Lou
No more qualified than you are. All you need is an ability to read. Click the link, and start at the top of the page. Seriously, it's easy reading.
171 posted on 04/17/2002 3:30:05 PM PDT by Sandy
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To: UnsinkableMollyBrown
You're forgetting that even if the police recover piles and piles of child porn, the defendent can claim that he created it all via computer. Then the police would have to prove he didn't - which is vitually impossible according to computer forensic standards.

Don't be an idiot. It is, in fact, trivial to prove beyond a reasonable doubt -- just sit the alleged perp in front of a computer and see what he can "create" from scratch.

That's exactly how a Dutch painter, accused of helping the Nazis steal the nation's art treasures, proved that he was merely guilty of forgery.

172 posted on 04/17/2002 3:35:25 PM PDT by steve-b
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To: Lurking Libertarian
And I'm telling you the technology we have right now, can make it impossible to tell the difference between actual children and digitally produced children. That was useless as an excuse. And for the Supreme Court to say "Congress will fix it, when it happens" is a weasley and cowardly response to a problem that is here now.
You read the opinion again. What I say is true.
173 posted on 04/17/2002 3:38:11 PM PDT by UnsinkableMollyBrown
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To: FF578
The authorities show that blasphemy against God . . . are offenses punishable at common law, whether uttered by words or writings . . . because it tends to corrupt the morals of the people, and to destroy good order.

         

Webcam view of FF578's wall shrine.

174 posted on 04/17/2002 3:39:51 PM PDT by steve-b
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To: FF578
Save your outrage you hypocrite. First you mock and demean the Supreme Court that rules in favor of abortion, then you cite case after case where the Supreme Court has seen fit to align itself with your religion.

Which is it, man, an evil institution that allows murder or a noble one that protects the integrity of a religious nation, the 1st Amendment anti-establishment clause notwithstanding?

175 posted on 04/17/2002 3:40:58 PM PDT by tdadams
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To: UnsinkableMollyBrown
And I'm telling you the technology we have right now, can make it impossible to tell the difference between actual children and digitally produced children.

Go rent Toy Story, a megabudget picture which attempts to render real people. Then, either 'fess up to your ignorance or make an appointment with a qualified optometrist.

176 posted on 04/17/2002 3:42:22 PM PDT by steve-b
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To: LouD
There are plenty of studies which demonstrate the impact of TV and video game violence to actual violence.

The ones I've seen have been questionable at best, often showing correlation but not causation. But even if there is a statistically significant impact, does that mean that violent TV shows and video games should be banned?

Therefore, if you give society's stamp of approval to this simulated activity

There is a huge difference between something being legal and "society" approving of it. Racist speech is legal, but not approved of. Computer-generated kiddie porn falls into the same category.

On the other hand, if you do not allow this narrowly defined class of non-political, non-religous, purely pornographic "speech"

Once again, read the law and the ruling. It was not "narrowly defined".

you have only deprived a few perverts of an opportunity to indulge their baser instincts

Or possibly, you have removed a legal outlet for their perversion, thus making them more likely to satisfy their desires by abusing real children.

177 posted on 04/17/2002 3:47:34 PM PDT by ThinkDifferent
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To: steve-b
First, act like a grownup and don't call people names.

Second, it will never fly in a court of law, because the police must prove that it is an actual child. The perp does not have to prove he has the skill to create a digital image.

178 posted on 04/17/2002 3:48:33 PM PDT by UnsinkableMollyBrown
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To: FF578
That the Holy Scriptures were a mere fable: that they were a contradiction, and that although they contained a number of good things, yet they contained a great many lies.
1 Kings 7:23
And he made a molten sea, ten cubits from the one brim to the other: it was round all about, and his height was five cubits: and a line of thirty cubits did compass it round about.

179 posted on 04/17/2002 3:50:16 PM PDT by steve-b
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To: steve-b
As one who has done computer graphics, and follows it closely, I am not ignorant of the graphic technology available. Do you think that Toy Story's digital animation was cartoonlike because it was for children?
180 posted on 04/17/2002 3:52:36 PM PDT by UnsinkableMollyBrown
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