ZENIT - The World Seen From Rome
Code: ZE04072921
Date: 2004-07-29
Pornography: the Degrading Behemoth (Part 2)
Alan Sears on Free Speech, Censorship -- and Fighting Back
SCOTTSDALE, Arizona, JULY 29, 2004 (Zenit.org).-
Pornography may be a thriving criminal enterprise, but a legal expert
in the field believes the Church and the laity can stunt its growth.
Alan Sears, president and general counsel of the Alliance Defense Fund, served as the executive director of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography under President Ronald Reagan.
Sears shared with ZENIT why pornography is not free speech, and why
clergy and lay people need to break their silence and take action.
Part 1 of this interview appeared Wednesday.
Q: Recently, the Supreme Court in the case of ACLU v. Ashcroft
struck down the Child Online Protection Act as violating the First
Amendment right to free speech. Why is pornography considered free
speech?
Sears: First, the opinion was wrong. Advocates of a culture that
supports the affirmation of life must reject any notion that most
pornography is even "speech."
Of the five forms of pornography I mentioned earlier, at least four
lack much, if any, constitutional protection even by the furthest
stretch of the high court's imagination.
Obscenity and child pornography have never been within the bounds
of "free speech," the First Amendment or equivalent state
constitutions, except according to erratic decisions by courts in a few
states such as Oregon and Hawaii that would amaze their founders.
Second, the term "pornography" is a generic, not legal, term. It
relates to a broad range of sexual materials, some of which are
protected by the First Amendment and some of which are not.
As noted by the Supreme Court in Miller v. California, in 1973:
"Pornography derives from the Greek ('harlot' and 'graphos,' writing).
The word now means 1) a description of prostitutes or prostitution 2) A
depiction (as in a writing or painting) of licentiousness or lewdness:
a portrayal of erotic behavior designed to cause sexual excitement."
The 1986 Attorney General's Commission on Pornography defined
pornography as "material that is predominately sexually explicit and
intended primarily for the purpose of sexual arousal."
In most First Amendment litigation, the outcome does not depend on
whether the materials are characterized as pornographic. Ordinarily,
courts begin by determining whether the restriction on free expression
is content based or content neutral.
The answer to this question then dictates the amount of deference
that is afforded to the governmental restriction and determines whether
the speech restriction is constitutional or not.
Content-based laws focus on and proscribe certain unlawful speech.
Such laws are based on objections to the "content" of the speech
itself. Content-based restrictions are presumptively unconstitutional.
However, there are certain content-based categories of expression,
including certain types of pornography, that have no First Amendment
protection. The Supreme Court, in the 1992 case R.A.V. v. St. Paul, has
said that these categories include "obscenity" and "child pornography."
If the Supreme Court determines that a restriction on pornography
is not aimed at the content of the speech, it analyzes the restriction
as a content-neutral restriction.
Content-neutral restrictions attempt to regulate the time, place
and manner of the speech. Such laws focus on the negative secondary
consequences or harmful effects, which certain speech and
speech-related activities cause. Their impact on speech is only
incidental in nature.
These laws regulate the time, place and manner of these activities
in order to minimize or vitiate the harmful effects. They generally
take the form of restrictive regulations governing the zoning and
licensing of sexually oriented businesses, or so-called adult
establishments.
It is much easier for speech restrictions to survive First
Amendment scrutiny if they are deemed content-neutral since the
government only needs to show that: the law is within the
constitutional power of the government; the law furthers an important
or substantial governmental interest; the governmental interest is
unrelated to the suppression of free expression; and the incidental
restriction on First Amendment freedoms is no greater than is essential
to the furtherance of that interest.
Q: Many people fear that limiting pornography is censorship. Is censorship bad?
Sears: How do we define either term? Bad for the profits lost by
organized criminal activity? Bad for a child molester who wasn't able
to trade his "collection" of trophy photographs with others?
Bad for potential child molesters who could not get a magazine at
the corner store that they would use to lower their inhibitions and
eventually end up acting out when they sexually abuse a neighbor's
child? Bad for the Internet provider who couldn't let 12-year-olds view
his wares at the tax-funded neighborhood library?
And what is meant by censorship? Enforcement of state and federal
laws prohibiting the distribution of proscribed forms of pornography is
not censorship.
I submit that the largest censorship organization in America is the
ACLU and its allies with their long and ongoing effort of fear,
intimidation and disinformation against religious liberty. Some radical
groups even believe libel and slander should not be "censored." As I
often say, "One man's censorship is another man's survival."
Q: How can the Church best combat pornography in the culture through the efforts of both clergy and laity?
Sears: First, as laity, let's first get on our knees and ask God to
forgive us for our silence, to forgive us for our sin of omission and
to forgive those who exploit others through this evil -- sins of
commission.
Then we must get educated, get organized and demand that our state
and community have laws as broad as the Constitution permits, and that
those laws be promptly and vigorously enforced.
As to non-prosecutable forms of pornography, such as so-called
men's magazines -- as if there is something manly about making women
and their sacred bodies and gifts into disposable commodities for
profit -- demand that your local merchants quit selling them. And be
persistent until we make a difference.
Second, the Church itself must first be willing to confront
and talk about this devastating issue because it is occurring within
its own walls.
We need to ask our leaders to provide leadership and guidance as to
God's beautiful plan for men, women and their sexual unity in marriage
as well as instruction on the sin of other behaviors and the subject of
the use and sale of pornography.
Individual clergy need to clearly present, without compromise, what
God has to say on these matters involving personal purity and how, as
individuals of faith, the laity can overcome pornography -- or, if
needed, how to seek assistance in recovering from such devastating
addictions.
Third, Church leaders need to implement focused and responsive
small group ministries -- in concert with effective counseling
ministries -- in which healthy accountability and confidential,
personal care can spring forth, like life-giving water for the souls of
each individual that chooses to become an intimate part of a group of
people whose goals include moral, spiritual and personal purity.
The time to get involved is now -- before your family is affected,
before your children are victimized by the pornographer who has no
regard whatsoever for their God-given life or sexuality.
May God find us faithful, as we work together by his grace, to stop
the further spread of pornography and its devastating effects upon on
our nation as we take back the moral high ground lost while we remained
silent.
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