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Conservatives try to curtail hotel porn
AP via Yahoo! News ^ | August 22, 2006 | DAVID CRARY

Posted on 08/22/2006 12:04:00 PM PDT by King of Florida

NEW YORK - Pornographic movies now seem nearly as pervasive in America's hotel rooms as tiny shampoo bottles, and the lodging industry shows little concern as conservative activists rev up a protest campaign aimed at triggering a federal crackdown.

A coalition of 13 conservative groups — including the Family Research Council and Concerned Women for America — took out full-page ads in some editions of USA Today earlier this month urging the Justice Department and FBI to investigate whether some of the pay-per-view movies widely available in hotels violate federal and state obscenity laws.

The coalition also is trying to draw attention to CleanHotels.com, a directory of hotels and motels nationwide that pledge to exclude adult offerings from their in-room entertainment service.

(Excerpt) Read more at news.yahoo.com ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: adultmovies; churchlady; cwa; frc; harridans; hotels; mrsgrundy; nannies; obscenity; porn; puritans; toomuchfreetime
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To: freepatriot32

please add me to your libertarian ping list. Thanks!


361 posted on 08/23/2006 6:51:17 AM PDT by LongsforReagan (A Democrat is either a moron or a traitor. Perhaps both sometimes.)
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To: GulfBreeze
"You are wrong. No one was permitted to just have whatever ordinance they wanted."

Before the NFA in 1934, there were no restrictions. Anyone could and did build whatever they wanted to, as they saw fit to do. They could make and have whatever explosives they wanted. The NFA wasn't changed until the 60s. That's when the more draconian measures were put into place, as far as I know. The limit on caliber is .50 for modern weapons. Otherwise it's classified as a destructive device- the same as a good firecracker.

362 posted on 08/23/2006 6:51:47 AM PDT by spunkets
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To: ArGee
Well, I think that if the assumption that if someone who partakes knowing that watching porn is wrong, then there is not really a need to point out the wrong in them hiding it. I know what you are saying though, the fact that most who partake in porn do so in a secret hidden manner should make it obvious that they are doing wrong an know it, thier shame condemns them and they need to take a hard look at that. BUT there are those who are not ashamed of thier participation in porn, either as producers or consumers. They may not be as open because of obvious reasons which others have pointed out. Not everyone approves and they aren't interested in being constantly provocative or inviting a moral lecture, or being thrown in jail for public indecency.

SO the argument isn't that they participate in private because they feel ashamed, rather they participate in private out of respect for you and to avoid offending you.

363 posted on 08/23/2006 7:27:39 AM PDT by TheKidster
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To: ArGee
You have missed plenty, it seems.

Saloon

364 posted on 08/23/2006 7:54:02 AM PDT by Protagoras ("Minimum-wage laws are one of the most powerful tools in the arsenal of racists." - Walter Williams)
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To: GulfBreeze

Trust me, dcwusmc believes that every man is his own island, that we should be allowed to do whatever we want, whenever we want, and never ever think about paying taxes.


365 posted on 08/23/2006 7:59:14 AM PDT by Boiler Plate (Mom always said why be difficult, when with just a little more effort you can be impossible.)
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To: TheKidster
SO the argument isn't that they participate in private because they feel ashamed, rather they participate in private out of respect for you and to avoid offending you.

Possible, although people often do the opposite - try to force you to accept who they are and what they do.

Try this on and see what you think.

A group of conservatives ask hotel owners to make a personal moral decision not to offer a service. Libertarians should have no problem with this. It's a business decision that the hotel owners have a right to make. This particular service is one that most people would be ashamed to admit they use. Therefore it is a service that is reasonable for a moral man to refuse to offer.

The article is posted on FR and people scream bloody murder about nanny staters and people who don't want to have fun but don't want others to have fun either. "Don't like it, don't use it" they scream. Yet nobody is defending anything on his/her own behalf.

So, a perfectly reasonable request to make a personal decison to curtail a service that causes a recognizedly shameful behavior draws a great deal of ire from people who want to defend other people's rights to the service they don't admit wanting.

Shalom.

366 posted on 08/23/2006 8:07:10 AM PDT by ArGee (The Ring must not be allowed to fall into Hillary's hands!)
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To: spunkets

Bingo.

Many of the cannons used in our own revolution were privately owned.


367 posted on 08/23/2006 8:34:09 AM PDT by SJSAMPLE
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To: VRWCmember
Do you support the "community standards" of New York & Chicago regarding the ownership of handguns?

Equating the specifically enumerated second amendment protection of the right to bear arms, with the esoteric right to porn that must be inferred among the penumbras is about as ridiculous as the earlier comment equating porn and abortion.

State & local governments use community standards to justify their supposed 'power to prohibit' - guns, drugs, porn, whatever...

In other words, while the power to set community standards is rightly recognized under the 10th Amendment as reserved to the People and to the States,

You conveniently 'forget' that in the 10th - some powers are prohibited to States..

the power to set community standards regarding ownership of firearms is not as it is clearly prohibited by the 2nd Amendment.

Yep, that is one of the prohibited powers mentioned in the 10th.

I already stated on this thread that I would be loathe to petition the federal government to restrict what people can choose to buy for entertainment. But my citation of the 10th Amendment should have made it clear that the power to establish community standards is CLEARLY reserved to the people and to the states. For the Feds to enforce "community standards" on states would violate the 10th Amendment.

The "Law of the Land" applies to the States, and it is the duty of the feds to enforce it as written.

368 posted on 08/23/2006 8:42:06 AM PDT by tpaine
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To: GulfBreeze
However, these letters [or marque] were about behaviour and not ownership nor possession of any weapon.

...and getting back on topic, behaviors, not things, should be our concern here. One may behave in whatever bizarre manner they please, or own whatever unpleasant property they choose so long as others aren't harmed.

Generally speaking, you are allowed (read: should be allowed, were it not for gun banning busy bodies; but I digress...), under the Constitution, to own and use any weapon that may be accurately fired. A cannon can be directed at a specific target, but a nuke cannot. You may fire a weapon, such as a rifle or pistol, so long as uninvolved third parties are not harmed. The thing involved is not what matters; it's the use of that thing in relation to the rights of others that's important.

Porn, featuring performers who voluntarily participate, viewed by someone in a hotel room, who purchases it of their own free will, does not harm any disinterested third party. If it were forced upon hotel guests without their consent, then that would be another matter. That would be like firing a weapon indiscriminately.

Owning a weapon is a right, but that right does not give its owner the power to violate the rights of others. Viewing, owning, or making pornography is a right; but, not if others are forced to participate in some way. What's being discussed here is involves adults who consent to be involved. No third party is having their rights violated. If you view porn in your hotel room and I don't have to see it or hear it, then my rights aren't being violated. If I turn on The Sound Of Music in the next room and turn the volume up to 11, then your rights are being violated; even though the material in question in not generally regarded as offensive. It's all a matter of who consents to be involved.

369 posted on 08/23/2006 8:59:14 AM PDT by Redcloak (Speak softly and wear a loud shirt.)
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To: ArGee
I have never heard anyone say they were planning to spend quality time with Rosie Palm and a porn movie

I have and if you read this thread there have been many people who said that they have have watched porn or enjoy it on occasion. No one is showing any shame, which they shouldn't.

If you're getting that sort of response on one of the most conservative mainstream sites on the net, what do you think you'd get in the general public?

370 posted on 08/23/2006 9:49:28 AM PDT by JeffAtlanta
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To: ArGee
A community private organization approaching a business to request something like you described is fine. Let the market decide, BUT this (urging the Justice Department and FBI to investigate whether some of the pay-per-view movies widely available in hotels violate federal and state obscenity laws) type of behavior does justify the scorn of people who understand that the federal government is incapable of and has no business trying to legislate or police morality. That's why you get the extreme statements about the Taliban, and communist China and the apt statements about Nanny staters. It is apparent that if they can't get their way in the market place then they will resort to using the guns of the Fed government to force their will upon those whom offend their sense of right and wrong.

If you want to use the guns of the Federal Govt. to restrict actions (given those actions are not violently or coercively depriving others of life, liberty or property) then you are a nannystater and possess a perspective that is hostile to the constitution. I don't think this describes you though, right?

371 posted on 08/23/2006 9:50:27 AM PDT by TheKidster
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To: TheKidster
type of behavior does justify the scorn

Asking the government to enforce existing laws justifies scorn? I disagree. I think those who think the laws are wrong should work to repeal those laws.

I'm not sure what laws they are talking about. If the hotels are not being sufficiently careful to ensure that minors can not get access to pornography without their parents' consent (and I know this happens) then I agree with the groups. If the laws say that people can't watch what they want to in a hotel room once rented, then I would disagree with those laws.

Was the original article specific?

Shalom.

372 posted on 08/23/2006 10:12:18 AM PDT by ArGee (The Ring must not be allowed to fall into Hillary's hands!)
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To: JeffAtlanta
I have and if you read this thread there have been many people who said that they have have watched porn or enjoy it on occasion. No one is showing any shame, which they shouldn't.

This particular business arose because people felt and feel shame. Bully for you if you don't. We'll save the argument over whether you should for another time.

BTW: Once I have left active participation in a thread, I don't always go back and read everything written since I've left. I look at pings to me, but not everything in-between. Yours is the first such post that I have seen.

Shalom.

373 posted on 08/23/2006 10:14:23 AM PDT by ArGee (The Ring must not be allowed to fall into Hillary's hands!)
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To: dcwusmc
"They NEVER intended that government ever have the sort of power that you are so willing to hand it..."

Really? Please post threads of mine showing what powers I want the Federal Government to exercise that violate the Constitution.

You are reading something else into my postings. On this topic, I have argued against the "Taliban=Christian" comparison. Like I said to someone else, this is the same sloppy tactics the libs use when they call Bush a Nazi.

If you oppose what people say, fine. Just don't compare apples to oranges, and don't use sloppy name calling. It's ineffectual.

Sincerely
374 posted on 08/23/2006 10:18:59 AM PDT by ScubieNuc
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To: ArGee

They are trying to use the FED to legislate morality and that never works and never will. No matter how hard they clamp down someone, somewhere will be able to get away with it.
The whole contention as I understand it was based on a fear that kids are being exposed to porn because the hotels have pay per view porn.
Any rational person who understands the principles of individual freedom and accountability knows dragging the FED into this sort of thing is a veiled attempt at using government force to impose thier morality. Kids watching porn is not at the level of a crisis even if it happens every once in a while and certainly doesn't warrant the expense incurred by a national FBI inventigation. We have more pressing matters for our federal government to attend to.


375 posted on 08/23/2006 10:24:29 AM PDT by TheKidster
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To: King of Florida

Why not just have them bring there laptops with their own porn on them. That way everyone is fine because nobody will be forced to watch it or even on the schedule. Sounds like a fair way of handling it. With porn all over the web it should make porn junkies happy.


376 posted on 08/23/2006 10:31:11 AM PDT by napscoordinator
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To: rabidralph

Wow! You are stretching. I can't believe you compare poor little dead kids with "needing a cold shower". You either are extremely rigid or sarcastic.


377 posted on 08/23/2006 10:37:14 AM PDT by napscoordinator
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To: madprof98

And I doubt highly that these youngish teens had any use for porn...I believe they had other ideas.


378 posted on 08/23/2006 10:49:22 AM PDT by napscoordinator
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To: TheKidster
They are trying to use the FED to legislate morality and that never works and never will.

Based on the quote you posted they were trying to use the FED to enforce existing legislation. That's a very different thing.

I have been in rooms where cable access channels had pornographic material available without any access restriction whatsoever. Granted this was at 2:00 am. I would not put it past many children to be up at that hour watching TV while their parents sleep.

That said, I agree with you for the most part. Pay per view is a private agreement between the traveller and the hotel owner and there is nothing but trouble trying to legislate this. Since I haven't read the laws being discussed I can't comment on whether what FoTF and the others are trying to do falls into this category or not.

I will also say that I would not be unhappy if the hotel owners of America decided they didn't want to provide ppv smut and people who REALLY wanted to view it could not get access anywhere but at hotels that charge by the hour. America is not best served where every vice that interests a man is catered to. But I would not want to see laws banning same.

Shalom.

379 posted on 08/23/2006 10:50:49 AM PDT by ArGee (The Ring must not be allowed to fall into Hillary's hands!)
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To: stands2reason
groan....

Or moan. :-)

380 posted on 08/23/2006 1:38:40 PM PDT by PistolPaknMama (Al-Queda can recruit on college campuses but the US military can't! --FReeper airborne)
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