Dapper Dan
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 136
- Location
- Austin, Texas
Personally, I'm a Christian. But I'm also 19, and liberal. And I strongly believe that the Constitution defends us as Americans so that we can watch all the filthy, disgusting, legal smut we can get our hands on. We can all bemoan that society is floundering. Who is to blame? The evil media, force-feeding us smut? Hardly. The media is merely an extension of ourselves. The media knows society will pay to see smut. Market forces.
The next argument is that the government should put some kind of check on this sort of debauchery. But the Constitution, the thing that makes America as free and equal as it is, denies Congress the right to impede upon the freedom of speech and the press. If pornography was limited, that freedom would be infringed upon. Should our government illegalize pornography because it is unsafe, because it makes us an unhealthy society? The leading cause of death in this country is heart disease. Should cheeseburgers be illegal because they contribute to widespread national fatalities?
Suppose we do illegalize pornography. Would we stop there? What if we went on a crusade to rid the evils of the world? Shall we destroy the imperfections of the world? The road to hell is paved with good intentions. First we illegalize pornography, then cigarettes, then alcohol, then unhealthy food. Where does it end? Eventually, this nation of wonderful freedom and beautiful self destination devolves into Nazi Germany. I'd much rather live in a world of self-determined destruction than endure a modern Savanorola dictating a Bonfire of the Vanities.
And would banning pornography really make our children safer? I wouldn't want my children to live in an aseptic world that denied them of anything that could be considered harmful, that denied the existence of human sexuality. Certainly I, as a parent, want to shelter my future children from harm, and in an ideal world, I would teach them of sexuality at a suitable time. But I do not believe in white-washing the world and deceiving my children. Truly, that is immoral and wrong. The job of the parent is to make their children ready and capable to take on the heartache and thousand natural shocks that flesh is heir to, to make them capable of being themselves and surviving in an imperfect world. I think that the consequences of illegalizing pornography would lead to a generation of children mere prey to the seedy, the immoral, and the unjust.
As for biblical condemnation of pornography, I don't believe Christ ever spoke against it. Certainly the act which pornography implies is forbidden in Leviticus, but so is eating pork, and I do that. The Bible also forbids wearing clothing of two fibers, and I am awfully fond of my linen/silk blend trousers. The only thing Jesus Himself spoke against was divorce. The divorce rate in this country is 50%. I'm sure many people who abstain from pornography also obtain divorces. Are they more moral, then, because of their abstinence from pornography?
But I do not, in any way, mean to be flippant or rude. I can appreciate that many of the ladies and gentleman on the other side of the fence abhor pornography, and I do not blame them. I, too, believe it should be available only to adults, and away from the prying eyes of children. I respect you for your strong personal convictions and morals. More over, I am happy that this forum is so full of morally upright individuals who hold themselves and their kith and kin to a higher standard than the undeniably low one set by today's society. But I also believe that the illegalization of pornography is a clear-cut violation of the First Amendment, and I cannot in good conscience endorse anything that compromises the freedom of America.
The next argument is that the government should put some kind of check on this sort of debauchery. But the Constitution, the thing that makes America as free and equal as it is, denies Congress the right to impede upon the freedom of speech and the press. If pornography was limited, that freedom would be infringed upon. Should our government illegalize pornography because it is unsafe, because it makes us an unhealthy society? The leading cause of death in this country is heart disease. Should cheeseburgers be illegal because they contribute to widespread national fatalities?
Suppose we do illegalize pornography. Would we stop there? What if we went on a crusade to rid the evils of the world? Shall we destroy the imperfections of the world? The road to hell is paved with good intentions. First we illegalize pornography, then cigarettes, then alcohol, then unhealthy food. Where does it end? Eventually, this nation of wonderful freedom and beautiful self destination devolves into Nazi Germany. I'd much rather live in a world of self-determined destruction than endure a modern Savanorola dictating a Bonfire of the Vanities.
And would banning pornography really make our children safer? I wouldn't want my children to live in an aseptic world that denied them of anything that could be considered harmful, that denied the existence of human sexuality. Certainly I, as a parent, want to shelter my future children from harm, and in an ideal world, I would teach them of sexuality at a suitable time. But I do not believe in white-washing the world and deceiving my children. Truly, that is immoral and wrong. The job of the parent is to make their children ready and capable to take on the heartache and thousand natural shocks that flesh is heir to, to make them capable of being themselves and surviving in an imperfect world. I think that the consequences of illegalizing pornography would lead to a generation of children mere prey to the seedy, the immoral, and the unjust.
As for biblical condemnation of pornography, I don't believe Christ ever spoke against it. Certainly the act which pornography implies is forbidden in Leviticus, but so is eating pork, and I do that. The Bible also forbids wearing clothing of two fibers, and I am awfully fond of my linen/silk blend trousers. The only thing Jesus Himself spoke against was divorce. The divorce rate in this country is 50%. I'm sure many people who abstain from pornography also obtain divorces. Are they more moral, then, because of their abstinence from pornography?
But I do not, in any way, mean to be flippant or rude. I can appreciate that many of the ladies and gentleman on the other side of the fence abhor pornography, and I do not blame them. I, too, believe it should be available only to adults, and away from the prying eyes of children. I respect you for your strong personal convictions and morals. More over, I am happy that this forum is so full of morally upright individuals who hold themselves and their kith and kin to a higher standard than the undeniably low one set by today's society. But I also believe that the illegalization of pornography is a clear-cut violation of the First Amendment, and I cannot in good conscience endorse anything that compromises the freedom of America.