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North Dakota bill redefines obscenity to cover more or less anything on public display
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| 4th March 2023
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| See article from xbiz.com |
A bill introduced by North Dakota Republican state senators would redefine obscene material and performance and explicit sexual material in extremely broad terms that would result in creating criminal liability for almost all instances of nudity and
references to sex outside of adult venues. Senate Bill 2360, aiming to amend Obscenity Control provisions, was introduced last week by State Sen. Keith Boehm and four fellow Republicans. State Rep. Jim Kasper sponsored the House version of the bill.
Although the purported aim of the bill is to address a questionable pornography crisis in North Dakota's school libraries, Boehm's bill would in fact redefine obscenity as Material or a performance which:
Taken as a whole, the average person, applying contemporary North Dakota standards, would find predominantly appeals to a prurient interest; depicts or describes in a patently offensive manner sexual conduct, whether
normal or perverted; and taken as a whole, the reasonable person would find lacking in serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value. Whether material or a performance is obscene must be judged with reference to
reasonable adults, unless it appears from the character of the material or the circumstances of its dissemination that the material or performance is designed for minors or other specially susceptible audience, in which case the material or performance
must be judged with reference to that type of audience.
Another section of the bill defines objectionable materials or performance and criminalizes anyone who may: Willfully display at
newsstands or any other business establishment frequented by minors, or where minors are or may be invited as a part of the general public, any photograph, book, paperback book, pamphlet, or magazine, the exposed cover or available content of which
either contains explicit sexual material that is harmful to minors or exploits, is devoted to, or contains depictions or written descriptions of nude or partially denuded human figures posed or presented in a manner to exploit sex, lust or perversion.
Then SB 2360 proceeds to specify a sweeping redefinition of explicit sexual material, which would now mean any written, pictorial, three-dimensional, or visual depiction that is patently offensive, including any photography, picture, or
computer-generated image, showing or describing:
- Human masturbation;
- Deviant sexual intercourse;
- Sexual intercourse;
- Direct physical stimulation of genitals;
- Sadomasochistic abuse;
- Postpubertal human genitals;
- Sexual activity;
- Sexual perversion; or
- Sex-based classifications.
Leaving nothing to chance, the Republican senators also defined nude or partially denuded human figures to mean less than completely and opaquely covered human genitals, pubic regions, female breasts or a female breast, if the breast or breasts are
exposed below a point immediately above the top of the areola, or human buttocks; and includes human male genitals in a discernibly turgid state even if completely and opaquely covered. Finally, ensuring that any public space not zoned as adult-only
would be covered by the censorship bill, the phrase where minors are or may be invited as a part of the general public was specifically clarified to mean any public roadway or public walkway, with the exception of a bona fide school, college, university,
museum, public library or art gallery. |
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Pastor's Mississippi bill to ban internet porn on grounds of moral decency fails
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| 17th April
2020
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| See article from avn.com
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The Mississippi House of Representatives quietly let die two unlikely bills that targeted online porn. Mississippi bills, House Bill 1116 and HB 1120 , would have relied on neighboring Southern states -- Georgia, Arkansas, Louisiana, Alabama,
Kentucky, Tennessee, West Virginia and Oklahoma -- to enter into an interstate compact for the purposes of banning online pornography and related marketing campaigns on social media platforms. The bills would also have established a Southern
states commission on obscenities prohibition and prescribe its powers and duties. The bills proposed by pastor Tracy Arnold were designed to find an area of moral decency for the Internet. |
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US adult industry unsurprisingly favour Barack Obama over Nutter Romney
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| 14th October
2012
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| See article from xbiz.com
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The adult entertainment industry overwhelmingly favors re-electing Barack Obama to a second term as president, according to the results of a new industry poll conducted by media organization XBIZ. Of the 339 respondents, 68% say
Obama, while only 13% favor Romney. Another 14% would like to see someone else in the White House, while 5% responded I don't care. Aside from economic considerations affecting voters' decisions in November, the
issue of federal obscenity prosecutions figures to be a major factor for adult film producers. According to the notorious pro-censorship organization Morality in Media, Mitt Romney earlier this year, along with other Republican candidates at the time,
offered assurances that if elected, they would direct the U.S. Department of Justice to prosecute porn producers for obscenity violations. ...Read the full article
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| 14th September 2012
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| Forbes discusses a possible anti-porn crackdown should nutter Romney get elected president See
article from forbes.com |
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Republicans adopt a policy line threatening to enforce anti-porn laws
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| 29th August 2012
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| From cnbc.com
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The US Republican Party is calling for a crackdown on pornography. As they prepare to nominate Mitt Romney as their presidential candidate for the Nov. 6 election, Republicans have added language to their official platform that anti-porn nutters said
would encourage the federal government to step up prosecution of pornography involving adults. Current laws on all forms of pornography and obscenity need to be vigorously enforced, the platform says, according to a draft obtained by
Reuters. Republicans are planning a Tuesday vote on the document, a nonbinding statement of principles that tackles everything from monetary policy to abortion. This appears to be the first time that the party has called for a crackdown on
sexually explicit material involving adults, a multi-billion-dollar industry. Adult obscenity cases have been exceedingly rare over the past 20 years. Though the administration of George W. Bush promised a crackdown, only the most extreme forms of
pornography have been targeted. Anti-pornography nutter Patrick Trueman said the language in the Republican platform would bolster a broader push against the type of sexually explicit material that is sold by convenience stores, by hotels via
pay-per-view television programming, and satellite and cable TV providers. According to Trueman's group, Romney promised earlier this year that he would push for strict enforcement of obscenity laws, as well as the broader use of blocking
software to screen out Internet porn.
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