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Bill would make sale of sex toys illegal in South Carolina
AP ^ | 4/23/6 | Seanna Adcox

Posted on 04/23/2006 5:47:00 AM PDT by Crackingham

Lucy’s Love Shop employee Wanda Gillespie said she was flabbergasted that South Carolina’s Legislature is considering outlawing sex toys. But banning the sale of sex toys is actually quite common in some Southern states.

The South Carolina bill, proposed by Republican Rep. Ralph Davenport, would make it a felony to sell devices used primarily for sexual stimulation and allow law enforcement to seize sex toys from raided businesses.

"That would be the most terrible thing in the world," said Ms. Gillespie, an employee the Anderson shop. "That is just flabbergasting to me. We are supposed to be in a free country, and we’re supposed to be adults who can decide what want to do and don’t want to do in the privacy of our own homes."

Ms. Gillespie, 49, said she has worked in the store for nearly 20 years and has seen people from every walk of life, including "every Sunday churchgoers."

"I know of multiple marriages that sex toys have sold because some people need that. The people who are riding us (the adult novelty industry) so hard are probably at home buying it (sex toys and novelties) on the Internet. It’s ridiculous." The measure would add sex toys to the state’s obscenity laws, which already prohibit the dissemination and advertisement of obscene materials.

People convicted under obscenity laws face up to five years in prison and a $10,000 fine.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events; US: South Carolina
KEYWORDS: appliances; gardening; talibornagains
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To: rattrap

See my post #280


281 posted on 04/23/2006 7:48:37 PM PDT by Between the Lines (Be careful how you live your life, it may be the only gospel anyone reads.)
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To: billbears
I lived in Louisville, KY from 1968 til 2002.

Except for the first sentence, my reply was sarcastic.

Sorry you didn't pick up on that.

282 posted on 04/23/2006 8:03:41 PM PDT by upchuck (Wikipedia.com - the most unbelievable web site in the world.)
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To: Crackingham

Why is it so hard for sex toy prohibitionists to understand that outlawing sex toys only drives up their street value? How many innocent women must contract disease from cheap back-alley sex toys? Legalize all sex toys and defund the sex toy black market.


283 posted on 04/23/2006 8:08:24 PM PDT by Tailgunner Joe
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To: kalee

whatever will happen to the store around the block from where I went to college??? haha


284 posted on 04/23/2006 8:25:02 PM PDT by Cailleach
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To: Nova; robertpaulsen
Are you really contending that a ban would be within their rights even if no ill effect can be shown to actually exist?

South Carolina's obscenity laws already prohibit the dissemination and advertisement of obscene materials, this bill simply adds stimulation devices to that list.

In 1973 the SCOTUS ruled to define obscene as something "contemporary community standards" determine as "patently offensive" sexual conduct, which "lacks serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value."

SC, like other states that have already done so, has the right to ban these products. Obscenity does have ill effects even if some refuse to see it.

Personally, I don't care about this law one way or the other. Any ban in SC has little effect since there ain't no place in SC that isn't a short 2 hour drive from the state line.

285 posted on 04/23/2006 9:14:40 PM PDT by Between the Lines (Be careful how you live your life, it may be the only gospel anyone reads.)
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To: tpaine
Glad you're consistent about guns. -- Too bad we have no right to possess dildos, though. -- Seems this would be in conformity with bearing arms.

I think my earlier statement regarding a state regulating legal and moral tone may have been somewhat misunderstood in the overall context of the debate here, so I should have qualified it with a lot of subtext that I didn't provide. My approach is an attempt to be pragmatic with the current state of affairs we find ourselves in today, as opposed to what I consider the ideal.

I believe that our current form of government bears no resemblance to the one intended by the Founders. I believe that the Constitution was intended to restrict forcibly the power of government in the lives of citizens in all areas. In an ideal, fully functional libertarian republic, people would be responsible for the consequences of their own actions -- always and inherently. That would be part of dealing with the "harm to society" and "other taxpayers bailing you out of your own stupidity" angles that people try to use to justify government regulation. But once we (the American people, many years ago) began crossing certain lines in legislation and Supreme Court decisions, and accepting certain compromises in previous generations as it relates to the original Constitutional intent of the Founders, we accepted statism, socialism, regulation of personal behavior for societal good, and a whole host of cascading ill effects that have brought us to the place, very badly off course, where we find ourselves today.

So, a Constitutionally limited form of federalism seems like a reasonable compromise for now. (Sorry to be a cynic, but it's hard to envision enough collective awareness among our citizenry to turn the tide completely back the other way and return to the ideal). Some states will have weak-minded and feeble citizens, and will send representatives to office that will protect the People from themselves, because that's what the People indicate they want. There will constantly be horns locking over where the Constitution provides individual liberty vs. where the state may regulate personal behavior for the common good, but that will be the tone set by the government in that state, blessed by the voters who send those sorts of representatives to office.

Hopefully, you will also have states that decide to allow greater personal freedom, and the People will elect like-minded representatives to office. Ideally, people living in restrictive nanny-like states would see how much better the citizens of libertarian states have it, and would either elect representatives to office to pass the same laws in their state, or will move to a state with greater personal freedom.

But unless you can find in the Constitution where a dildo is a protected individual right, I'll pragmatically reckon it to be something that the People in some states may choose to regulate, whether it's to save themselves from temptation, or prevent others from having fun -- or from some perceived societal benefit to the overall moral tone of the place.

Personally, if the guy who proposed such legislation was my representative, I'd let his office know in no uncertain terms that I vehemently disagree with it, and consider it nanny-state legislation of the worst kind. I think some others indicated that this bill has no cosponsor, and I'd like to believe that it will never see the light of day. But I'm just not so sure that it's a specific right in the Constitution that would stop such legislation, so much as the will of the People, as expressed through their representatives. I don't think that even a strongly Southern Baptist/Fundamentalist state like South Carolina would have enough state reps that would be willing to go along with such a bill -- hopefully it wouldn't even be close. But many local governments may choose to make similar restrictions, and likely could muster enough political will among the People there to restrict such things as sex shops and other types of businesses. And if it can be regulated locally through a Constitutional means of elected representatives doing the will of the people, then I suppose if such restrictions can also reach a consensus at the state level, it should still be acceptable.

Do you agree or disagree with a state being able to restrict abortion? On what Constitutional basis?

286 posted on 04/23/2006 9:50:12 PM PDT by Ryan Spock (Former Internet Addict -- Making good progress with help from an online support group)
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To: Ryan Spock
"And if it can be regulated locally through a Constitutional means of elected representatives doing the will of the people"

It's your understanding that, basically, any town-council, of any state, could enact and enforce such a ban without any serious legal obstructions?

287 posted on 04/23/2006 11:02:46 PM PDT by Nova
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To: ExcursionGuy84
They're a real temptation

So you advocate the criminalization of objects that you believe tempt you? Why can you simply not excercise self-control and refrain from using them?

and worthless, silly items that are pale-alternatives to the genatilia that GOD blesses men & women with to celebrate sexual relations within the Holy union of Marriage.

I do not see how this is valid justification for legal prohibition.
288 posted on 04/23/2006 11:48:50 PM PDT by Dimensio (http://angryflower.com/bobsqu.gif <-- required reading before you use your next apostrophe!)
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To: Nova
"My question relates to your "appears to" comment."

I could just as easily said. "It appears to affect Obviously, it affects the lives of South Carolina citizens, however, and they have a right to ban them."

"Are you really contending that a ban would be within their rights even if no ill effect can be shown to actually exist?"

I contend that this falls within the police power of the state. Now if, as you postulate, there is no ill effect, the citizens may question the legislature as to the purpose of this law and make their voices known.

But I believe it would survive a constitutional test, yes.

Do you believe that the citizens of South Carolina don't have the right to petition their state government to ban these items? That these items must be made available to those who want them? Taken a step further, do you believe the State of South Carolina should have the power to force stores to carry these products (eg., my State of Illinois forces, by law, Wal-Mart to carry the morning after pill)?

289 posted on 04/24/2006 4:39:34 AM PDT by robertpaulsen
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To: Ryan Spock
"Individual rights are Constitutionally protected, and RKBA falls under that."

Then why is concealed carry a state issue? If RKBA is protected by the second amendment of the U.S. Constitution, how can different states have different laws? Isn't there something about constitutional due process that requires uniformity?

How can one state require registration, and others don't? Why are age limits different in each state? Why are some guns prohibited in one state but legal in another?

Are you sure that the second amendment applies to the states? Or is each state guided solely by its State Constitution?

290 posted on 04/24/2006 4:47:31 AM PDT by robertpaulsen
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To: Nightshift

Did you see this?


291 posted on 04/24/2006 4:52:30 AM PDT by tutstar (Baptist Ping List Freepmail me if you want on or off this ping list.)
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To: Heyworth
"So your position is that the private ownership of sex toys by others is somehow forcing perversion on you?"

I'm not aware that the law covers private ownership. The title of the article is, "Bill would make sale of sex toys illegal in South Carolina". Did I read it wrong? Or didn't you see it?

The sale of sex toys in South Carolina does not force perversion on me, no. Then again, this isn't about me, now is it?

The citizens of South Carolina, however, seem to feel that the sale of sex toys in their state forces perversion on them.

Are you saying that the citizens should not be allowed to petition their state legislature to prohibit these products? Are you saying that they must allow this in the name of "freedom" -- the priciple being "Freedom for me and not for thee"?

292 posted on 04/24/2006 4:56:38 AM PDT by robertpaulsen
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To: Junior
"If the state can outlaw something like owning sex toys, which affects no one and cases no problems, then they can outlaw anything."

If the "outlawing" doesn't violate the state constitution, of course they can. Doesn't mean they have to, but they can under the state police power.

The state has tremendous powers -- every power not specifically given to the federal government is retained by the states. Which was exactly how the Founding Fathers wanted it.

293 posted on 04/24/2006 5:09:42 AM PDT by robertpaulsen
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To: Publius Valerius
So tell me again, how is their freedom affected? You want to buy a dildo? Drive to North Carolina--they can start selling them at "On the Border" with those tacky concrete lawn decorations.

Are your sure you're not thinking of "South of the Border"? "On the Border" is a southwestern-motif restaurant chain. Of course, "South of the Border" is in SC, not NC.

It could bring new meaning to the billboards that says "You never sausage a place - South of the Border 23 miles"
294 posted on 04/24/2006 5:16:50 AM PDT by NonLinear (He's dead, Jim)
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To: robertpaulsen
I am under the impression that this has the support of the people. Am I wrong?

Survey says: Yes! You are wrong.
295 posted on 04/24/2006 5:17:52 AM PDT by NonLinear (He's dead, Jim)
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To: Larry Lucido
Sorry That won't work - click here to find out why
296 posted on 04/24/2006 5:29:38 AM PDT by NonLinear (He's dead, Jim)
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To: Mikey

"What about toes, tongues,?"

Here in Virginia it's still "officially" illegal to use your tongue.


297 posted on 04/24/2006 5:35:52 AM PDT by Gone GF
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To: robertpaulsen

"I am under the impression that this has the support of the people. Am I wrong?"

In fact, you are. From what I can tell, it has the support of one legislator.


298 posted on 04/24/2006 5:42:52 AM PDT by Gone GF
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To: NonLinear

D'oh!


299 posted on 04/24/2006 5:44:59 AM PDT by Larry Lucido
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To: VadeRetro; PatrickHenry
Do they still allow sex?

Yes, but laying down only. Standing sex leads to dancing.

300 posted on 04/24/2006 5:46:12 AM PDT by Larry Lucido
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