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First Amendment Doesn't Protect Virtual Kiddie Porn
The Claremont Institute ^ | July 31, 2000 | John C. Eastman

Posted on 07/16/2002 2:03:35 PM PDT by aconservaguy

The Claremont Institute

This is the print version of http://www.claremont.org/projects/jurisprudence/000731eastman.html.

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First Amendment Doesn't Protect Virtual Kiddie Porn By John C. Eastman Posted July 31, 2000

For more than a quarter century, Congress and state legislatures have been trying to rid our land of child pornography. But with each new attempt, the purveyors of child porn find a loophole or a friendly judge who, relying on a misbegotten First Amendment reading, strikes down the law as unconstitutional.

The latest loophole is the result of technological advances in software that permit pornographers to produce virtual images of children engaged in sexual activity without using live children. These pornographic films are indistinguishable from the real thing, however, and thus cause many of the same harms that "real" child pornography cause by providing pedophiles with a tool to seduce children, titillating child molesters into action and undermining the morals of society. To close this loophole in existing law, Congress enacted the Child Pornography Prevention Act of 1996, which outlaws the interstate trafficking of materials that are, or appear to be of, minors engaging in sexual conduct.

Before the statute could be enforced, a group of pornographers brought a lawsuit in a California federal court to have the act declared unconstitutional as a violation of the pornographers' First Amendment right to free speech. The district court rejected their challenge, but a split panel of the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals reversed, with two judges appointed by President Clinton holding that the only governmental interest compelling enough to warrant restricting pornographers' First Amendment rights was the harm to actual children used in making the pornography, an interest not implicated by virtual reality kiddie porn. Free Speech Coalition v. Reno, 198 F.3d 1083 (9th Cir. 1999).

The rehearing was recently denied en banc, and the government will undoubtedly seek review in the U.S. Supreme Court. This should be an easy case.

As Justice Antonin Scalia noted in Barnes v. Glen Theatre Inc., a case in which the Supreme Court upheld a South Bend, Indiana ordinance prohibiting nude dancing, the First Amendment protects the freedom of speech and of the press, but not expressive conduct.

The purpose of the First Amendment is to prevent government from interfering with the free exchange of ideas, an exercise in human reason that was necessary for the perpetuation of our republican form of government. Although courts have since broadened the First Amendment to protect certain forms of conduct that express ideas normally conveyed by speech, the Supreme Court has rejected the notion that a limitless variety of conduct can be labeled "speech" whenever the person engaging in it intends to express some erotic, perverse or hateful idea.

Pornography, and especially child pornography, is the antithesis of the founding ideal of speech as reasoned discourse. It appeals not at all to human reason but rather to the basest of human passions. It is of such slight social value that, like fighting words, libel and obscenity, it constitutes no essential part of the exposition of ideas.

Even if one could credibly argue that there is some First Amendment value to such pornography, any minimal benefit is clearly outweighed by society's interest in order and morality. As a result, the Supreme Court held in New York v. Ferber nearly 20 years ago that child pornography fell outside First Amendment protections. The court's characterization should hold true whether or not real children are used to produce the pornographic materials.

As Judge Warren Ferguson noted in his Free Speech Coalition dissent, child pornography harms not just the children used to make it, but other children whom pedophiles might seduce by showing them virtual images of children engaging in sexual activity. More fundamentally, like the public nudity that was at issue in Barnes, child pornography has since time immemorial been considered an evil in itself.

Even the Ninth Circuit recognized that such images are morally repugnant. The prohibition of virtual reality child pornography is therefore permissible not just because of the harm it might cause others but because it is per se immoral. The Ninth Circuit panel's contrary holding not only ignores the legitimate governmental interests but denigrates the true meaning of the First Amendment.

This is not a case where we need to tolerate hateful speech in order to prevent gradual encroachments on legitimate First Amendment freedoms. Legitimate speech is not threatened by governmental restrictions on child pornography, and we need not suffer such affronts to public decency in order to fully vindicate the First Amendment. Hopefully, the U.S. Supreme Court will reverse the panel decision and uphold Congress's legitimate efforts to bring the virtual kiddie porn to a virtual halt.

John C. Eastman is a professor of constitutional law at Chapman University School of Law and the director of the Claremont Institute's Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence.

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© Copyright 2002, The Claremont Institute.


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Oops... the above reply is in response to #195, not 199.
201 posted on 07/22/2002 2:16:42 AM PDT by Sandy
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To: keri
No surprise - you won't because you can't.

Thanks for playing....

202 posted on 07/22/2002 4:47:29 AM PDT by general_re
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To: Sandy
So Miller doesn't apply to real-child porn. And Ferber doesn't apply to virtual-child porn. Make sense

Miller applies to obscenity, and is in deep doo-doo as far as the internet goes. I think "not otherwise obscene" may have thrown you? The court simply used these cases to help rationalize their decision that virtual child porn should be protected speech.

Although the Supreme Court has repeatedly said that obscenity is not protected speech, they have a very schizoid history of trying to actually define it. In 1995 there was a case the ACLU won that may have pretty much killed Miller as far as the internet goes. TN had brought federal obscenity charges against a a CA couple dealing in child porn. (US vs. Thomases, I think) The charges didn't stick because the ACLU twisted another Supreme Court decision. (Stanley)

I *understand* your point about obscene speech, but how many federal obscenity laws deal with computer communications? Working from memory the CDA, COPA, and CIPA have all been struck down. The internet is truly a no man's land, at least for now, and it appears the Supreme Court is very reluctant to uphold laws that attempt to regulate obscene speech on the internet.

When Justice gets obscenity charges to stick (wins) on virtual porn without challenge from the ACLU or the other innumerous pornographers, let me know. I don't think it will happen, but I hope you are right in this.

Finally, this is a difficult subject to talk about, in part because it is extremely complicated and there's no clearly established case law for computer communication. (Obscene or otherwise:-))

203 posted on 07/22/2002 12:01:45 PM PDT by keri
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To: keri
The charges didn't stick because the ACLU twisted another Supreme Court decision.

Nice way to let the judges off the hook. Blame the people who brought the lawsuit, not the ones who decided it.
204 posted on 07/22/2002 12:07:57 PM PDT by BikerNYC
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To: BikerNYC
Good point. Thanks for the correction.
205 posted on 07/22/2002 3:51:11 PM PDT by keri
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 204 | View Replies]


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