Posts Tagged ‘BoingBoing’

Another Thoughtcrime Victory! Manga Porn = 15 years

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009

Just when you thought it was safe to possess a pen and paper, we hear about the disturbing case of Manga1 collector Christopher Handley’s prosecution and guilty plea (disappointing the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund) for violating the 2003 Protect Act, which outlaws cartoons, drawings, sculptures or paintings depicting minors engaging in sexually explicit conduct, and which lack “serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.” The maximum sentence is 15 years. It’s likely that Handley pled that down significantly.2 What did he possess to get him in so much trouble? Depictions of cartoon children being sexually abused.3

Some call him sick for collecting such things. Some feel he should be locked up. They feel that sick things should be prohibited. What is this really a case about? Sexuality? Pedophilia? Puritanism? Regardless, there has been an uproar in the comic book community, and the point I made last December is being reiterated.4 My “underage” stick-figure sex depiction (daring someone to prosecute me) has been, in a variety of ways, repeated.5

Where’s the victim? The ink? The paper? Are the prosecutors the type of people who believe that fictional characters have feelings or rights? And why isn’t everyone who has a copy of Nabokov’s Lolita (in book or movie form, or, heck, is there a graphic novel?) currently being prosecuted? Heck, why isn’t the government clamping down on Amazon and Barnes & Noble for selling both artistic and literary depictions of underage sex, rape, and torture? If you think it doesn’t exist, if you think it’s not purchasable by the general public, perhaps you’re the myopic kind of person who would cheer to see Handley thrown in jail while you simultaneously forgive the Catholic Church for harboring men who actually stuck their penises in the mouths and anuses of the innocent boys in their care.

Was that statement too obscene for you? Funny, because it really happened to real children by real priests (and lots of other people who don’t even know what Manga is). Why on earth would a man like Handley, who merely possessed drawings of things you don’t like, be subjected to more years in prison than the men who perform the acts you cannot bear to read upon REAL CHILDREN? That, not Handley, is what is disgusting in this society and world. Perhaps if Handley suddenly found Jesus he would be treated with real justice in a nation that touts its freedom of thought while failing to practice what it preaches.

Worth reading is the BoingBoing post about Handley’s unfortunate situation. Also some of the comments are right on target, and I’m going to quote a few of my favorites right here:

-verde-

Thought Police at the door sir:

-Have you ever in your head pictured an infant being raped?

-No.

-Not even now that we brought up the subject?

-Well, mmm I guess so.

-Could you come with us?

-spazzm-

And who exactly decides what is artistic or immoral?

Erotica is artistic, porn is immoral, smut is illegal.
Erotica is what excites me, porn is what excites you, smut is what excites them.

-anonymous-

One of the questions I have is why the assumption is that such content serves the sole purpose of titillation or arousal for the reader. Yes, its principle intent may be that, but that doesn’t necessarily mean the reader views it that way. I have books of Toshio Saeki’s work that I have brought back from Europe in the last ten years (and not without concern they would be confiscated at customs or worse). His work is *extremely* difficult to look at, and often incorporates children in sexual situations with adults. I do not find this at all arousing, and in fact, I find it shocking and disturbing. But I find his work incredibly beautiful, challenging and it inspires me to ask questions of myself as I look at it. So, where is that part of it? We must be allowed to examine the work of others that we ourselves may not agree with or even like…And I don’t want to live in a world where we’re not allowed to express even the darkest parts of our psyche…which no one is above. Some just keep it to themselves better than others.

Spare the whole “it inspires others to act”. Pete Townsend has a quote about that.

Then there’s that whole problem of suppressing thoughts and artistic expression. You know. That kinda poses ongoing problems. Telling people what they can / can’t think / express / consider doesn’t really work so great.

And, I highly agree with what was said earlier about cultural misunderstandings related to the taboo depiction of pubic hair making these characters appear to be children.

This is tragic. Very scary, very sad that he pled guilty without proper counsel. (I’m a mid-30’s white female, btw).

-anonymous-

Wow. I guess I better get ready for prison. I drew a picture of myself having sex with a cartoon girl (…after cutting her cartoon head off). By this standard, I’m guilty of sex crimes against children. I didn’t even get to “play doctor” as a kid. :(

If we really wanted to protect children, the US Catholic Church should be (temporarily) shut down and have all the clergy FBI checked and registered (fingerprints and DNA, you pervy bastards). Let’s start with the real criminals. Remember the psychologist in Happiness who was a pedophile? He jerked himself off to a male teen magazine in the back of his car (one of my all-time favorite cringe comedy moments). Those are the PEOPLE you should be worried about having pictures fuel their desire. It won’t be the loli.

I am a victim of child sexual abuse in two ways. I was abused as a teen, and my first attempt at intercourse was destroyed by my adult partner’s sobs of physical and psychological pain. She had been raped as a young girl. I carried that crushing guilt with me for several years after that.

Show me comics/drawings of someone’s fantasy/nightmare of raping and killing children, I may enjoy it. I may abhor it. I might fantasize about killing the person who made it. I might masturbate to it and cry afterward. In the privacy of my home and in my mind, I should be able to do anything I want with it.

Should I go to jail for thoughts?

In the meantime, I’m going to be renaming all of my folders “midget porn.”

-Redsquares-

In other news, millions arrested for owning copies of Gauguin’s works and early sketches.

I’d hate to see what happens to Scheile collectors.

God dammit, under this sort of law, my paper on Bellmer I wrote for art history is enough to throw most of that class in jail. Dude drew bisected nude girls, in a clearly sexualized nature. Damn good drawings, aesthetically and technically: well done, good composition, and were done to fuck with the Nazis to boot, but still… what does that prove?

It’s obvious you are a sick fuck, no matter what the hell you do. Someone, somewhere, is against it for the pure purpose of being against it, the only question is: can they convince others to be against it too?

-blueelm-

What a strange situation. It was my understanding that the posession of photographic child pornography was illegal because it encouraged the assault and mistreatment of the children in the picture. In other words it is documentation of abuse.

It is a strange and tough argument about manga and I don’t know exactly how I feel, but while our children are fetishised to a large degree in the US there is a distinction between a predatory pedophile, your nasty uncle, and people who collect drawings of little girls being split in half by squid with hardware. I’m not sure that the latter influences the former, as the person molesting one’s child is more likely to be a good friend or spouse than a sexually-frustrated comic collector.

I think the Gacey clown of pain model sticks in people’s heads, but remember that he actually interacted with kids… not drawings of them. Secondly while we may be stigmatizing our kids by putting them in beauty pageants and American Apparel ads, the objective of some one who compulsively rapes small children is not to worship the adult-like beauty of a little girl but rather to have sex with her because it fufuls a compulsive need. As far as sympathy for them, I’m not sure about these teach-a-lesson type laws, but I see no problem with confining a serious enough offender from the rest of society, but some one with some drawings? Really?

By the same token it makes me sad that there is probably some one who has actually raped a little girl who will serve less jailtime than this guy will for having some troubling drawings. As far as the drawings, as an artist, I can’t help but think that these things must be tolerated.

Okay, that’s enough for now. Check out the BoingBoing comment thread and KOS for a lot more on both sides of the issue.

If you have some extra money, donate it to CBLDF. If you know someone who is about to get in trouble for possessing cartoons (or a book, etc.), refer the person to CBLDF and the ACLU.

  1. “Comics and print cartoons (sometimes also called komikku コミック), in the Japanese language and conforming to the style developed in Japan in the late 20th century.” http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manga [<]
  2. Here’s a link via Wired of his actual plea agreement. I think he screwed himself. [<]
  3. I’m sure that statement will get some unwanted Google hits to my blog. [<]
  4. If you missed it, the argument was about Lisa Simpson, the cartoon character, being depicted in sexual situations, and a law in Australia was being applied. My earlier article also referred to the U.S. Protect Act and related laws that have arisen in the Handley case. [<]
  5. No, I’m not taking credit for it, but I did post it in December, damnit! [<]

More Fucking Anti-Profanity Bill Bullshit

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

What the fuck is profanity, and why do elected officials keep pushing to have “it” banned? Same officials, no doubt, that push for the banning of various books they don’t like, as well.

BoingBoing brought to my attention the newest farce: South Carolina state Senator (and fucking coward) Robert Ford tries to pass a law there to outlaw profanity. Unknown what he means by profanity, but I’m sure it will come down either to a list of the top seven or so words, or some subjective standard passed off to resemble a generally objective standard, like “reasonably interpreted to be offensive or perverse.” Up to five years in jail or fines up to $5,000 for a mere utterance, because, apparently “…the First Amendment is not absolute… You cannot say whatever you want whenever you want to.”

I call him coward because he’s afraid of words. By fearing words, those words become empowered. Many used to fear the word “damn” because it was thought to be the curse prohibited in the bible (yes, most of this puritan bullshit has origins in religious scripture — surprise!), and supposedly before that, the mere use of the word “God” (as in “God damn”) was considered the curse (using God’s name in vain). Look through television history. I remember a time where “God damn” wasn’t bleeped. Then they bleeped only “damn.” Now they bleep only “God.” I wonder how many innocent souls were forever psychologically scarred (and damned to eternal hell) by our obvious mis-bleeping early on.

On a similar note, Greta Christina asks why our society and world is obsessed with putting restrictions on various manifestations of sexuality. I personally think it’s because the shitheads who come up with such restrictions are closeted homosexuals, BDSMs, pedophiles, or are just plain sexless. And they carry that down generation to generation by claiming that their God watches all the perverted little things they do, and the threat of hell is just too much for them. Moreso, though, it follows the tradition of religious hypocrisy and totalitarianism. It’s just a very effective way to control others through fear and intimidation. We really need to purge our world of this.

(Love you, Greta!)

State of Protest

The Trend of Obama Doubt

Thursday, December 18th, 2008

Is he merely catering to the small minority of Christian fundamentalist fanatics whom he threatens to depose by his mere accession to the presidential seat? Is he secretly homophobic? Is this subtle humor to show us what life would have been like under a McCain/Palin administration? Did all the hundreds of other potential choices have something scheduled on January 20th? Or was Obama just not thinking straight when he decided to invite the notorious fundamentalist homophobe Rick Warren to offer an inaugural prayer next month?

Yes, this is what everyone is jabbering about right now. Oh my God, you picked Rick Warren!?!?! Out of all the people! Well, I was jabbering, among a few others, about Obama’s pro-Christian, to the point of making me nervous about him, attitude way back in July, when I wrote “Thank God Obama Worships the “Right” God.” I mentioned that in light of rumors that Obama was Muslim, because he had attended a Muslim school for a short time as a child, Obama’s “Factcheck” web page, devoted to quelling such rumors, spent an inordinate amount of space not only just simply denying Obama’s Muslimhood, but also wildly exaggerating Obama’s Christianity. I was worried that what appeared to be wild exaggeration was actually a sign that Obama was a closet fundamentalist, or at least has a strong preference for the Christian religion and beliefs. My examination of the statements he’s made to that effect in the past, coupled with his selection of Rick Warren, have solidified my doubts about his demeanor with regard to Christian partisanship.

Regarding Warren, vjack at Atheist Revolution sums the pastor up nicely:

-Warren supported the ban on gay marriage in California.
-Warren opposes reproductive rights.
-Warren is clearly outside mainstream America and has been compared, fairly I believe, to James Dobson. Hell, he’s compared himself to Dobson!1

Now, we probably shouldn’t jump on the guilt by association bandwagon (as Obama’s opponents were wont to do during the election), but there are significantly safer, more neutral, and more politically correct (forgive me) selections for an inaugural companion. And this news of the Warren selection is right on the heels of other questionable behavior by Obama — notably, his cabinet choices. Having a cabinet and set of advisors that even Cheney agrees with should send up little red flags all over America.

Someone should ask Obama about what part of “change” we must have misunderstood. Is this country about to be run by the old administration in sheep’s clothing? Instead, how about… A bit of change away from the status quo of treating Christians and most other mainstream religions with preference; a change away from the Bush Doctrine; a change away from civil rights destruction (including the Patriot Act and its relatives); a change away from arbitrary discrimination in the guise of morality, promoted and perpetuated by religious groups; a change from the useless war on drugs (that ends up leaving the U.S. with the highest ratio of inmates in the entire world); a change from sexual discrimination in every form; a change away from criminalization of that which does not hurt, but is criminalized solely because of puritan influence; a change from pointless wars or wars fought for oil, or dominance, or whatever; a change from homophobia and the perpetuation of tradition that used to sit comfortably next to slavery and treating women as chattel. This isn’t change for the sake of change. It’s a change to improve our lives, get us out from under the foot of oppression, and help make this entire world more livable and, gods forbid, lovable.

Where’s that change, Obama? I don’t see it. I see, again, falling in line.

-Procrustes (pissed)

Who else has something to say about this issue?

Christopher Hitchens, at Slate, says we can do much better than Warren. If we must have an officiating priest.

Rob Boston at the AU Blog says that although Warren poses as a moderate, he’s really just another Falwell wannabee.

Vjack, as mentioned above, has a few things to say, including the wise advice to not sweep this one under the rug. He’s also indirectly supplied me with a few of these links to other articles, as well as bringing to my attention the contact information for Obama’s team.

The Atheist Experience is calling this Obama’s first big screwup.

Pam Spaulding, at Pam’s House Blend, suggests that although it’s a good idea to let the Obama camp know how we feel about this issue, it’s unlikely to be reversed.

Dave Silverman, at American Atheists, reminds Obama that he’s supposed to be a Democrat. (however, I say, look at the behavior of the rest of the self-proclaimed Democrats in Congress)

Bligbi nails the point in that by choosing Warren, Obama is making the pastor his representative. And, better yet, calls Obama out on his claim to be a fierce advocate of the LGBT community.

CNN has an interview of Rick Warren by Kiran Chetry.

Greta Christina (recently featured at BoingBoing) worries that Obama just wants everyone to like him, and in his attempt to eschew intolerance, he will become too tolerant.

Daily Kos acknowledges that there may be a silver lining in all this — that Obama will now be forced to continue to affirm his stance of equality with regard to LGBT rights.

Olbermann on Warren:



Rachel Maddow:



More to follow soon, as the theatrics roll.

StOP

  1. http://www.atheistrev.com/2008/12/obamas-inaugural-blunder-rick-warren.html [<]

Dark Chambers: The Escalating War on Photography

Monday, August 25th, 2008

As I mentioned in my last post, Cory Doctorow1 has been bringing my attention to this “War on Photography” that has plagued many an innocent photographer recently. I decided to create a poll on the Atheist Think Tank forum asking how people would handle a situation similar to that of many photographers who get ambushed by “security” in public. Here’s the poll, and some follow-up questions. How would you answer?

For your last birthday, you received a decent, professional-looking SLR camera2 that kinda looks like this:3

SLR

The next morning, you try it out. Being fond of the architecture and layout of the downtown area, you head there (not many people are out yet), and you start taking photos of buildings, trees, other people, the nearby bridge, and the iconic capitol building.

You’ve been there a good 20 minutes, and have taken quite a few shots, excited about the prospect of going home to review them on your computer. As you begin heading back, you are stopped by a police officer who asks you for your camera license. Oh no, you don’t have one! You tell the officer that you don’t have a camera license, and the officer says that you will either have to forfeit your camera for inspection or delete all of your photographs while the officer watches, lest you be cited for taking pictures of official buildings without a camera license, and possibly arrested upon suspicion of terrorist activities.

What do you do?

1. Delete your photographs while the officer watches.

2. Hand over your camera.

3. Run away.

4. Insist that you have the right to take photographs in public places, and refuse to hand over your camera or delete your photos.

5. Something else.

Follow-up questions. (with hints and answers from ATT in the footnotes, if you’d like ‘em)

A. Based on your choice, what do you think would happen next?4

B. What do you think would happen as a result of the choices you didn’t make?5

C. Is there such thing as a camera license in your country?6

D. Do you think I just came up with this scenario off the top of my head, or do you think it has any basis in reality?7

E. Is it an effective terrorist deterrent to treat all people who take pictures in public places as a potential terrorist?8

F. Have you ever been told that you cannot take photographs somewhere? Where was it? Do you think you did have the right to take photos there? Did you take photos anyway, or did you comply? If you took photos anyway, what happened? If you complied, what do you think would have happened if you had taken photos?

G. Have you ever taken photos covertly, in public — with the intent that others won’t see you taking them? Are you allowed to do so, as far as you know?

H. Would you report to the police an unaccompanied adult male apparently taking photographs of children in a playground? Why or why not?9

I. What, in your mind, is a good example of the kind of suspicious activity that should be reported to the police? What’s the bare minimum?

J. Have you ever reported suspicious activity? Do you think there are people more prone to do so? Why?

K. Do you think it’s appropriate for the government to install and use video cameras on its buildings, roads, etc.?

L. If you were running the government, would you make use of video surveillance of public places? Would you implement a national identification card? Would you require citizens to have camera licenses to take pictures of government buildings?10

Here’s some follow-up reading you might enjoy (or that might scare the wits out of you):

Latest from Boing Boing: Writer who photographed HP Lovecraft’s headstone ordered to delete her photo, heaped with abuse

Two ferry riders sought by FBI last summer were just tourists

Almost Arrested for Taking Photos at Union Station

Our Transportation Facilities Are Being Watched
Two FBI agents just showed up at my door… (I think I’m being investigated)
Orwellian Los Angeles

Taking picture of pylon lands man in police cell

At MARC, a Snapshot of Post-9/11 Excess

The War on Photography

Legal Rights Card for Photographers

Man Arrested For Unlawful Photography

Father-of-three branded a ‘pervert’ – for photographing his own children in public park

Photographing thugs ‘is assault’, police tell householder snapping proof of anti-social behaviour

My pool picture ban over paedophile fears

Simon Blint, Director of Visitor Relations at the SF MOMA, Yeah You Jerk, Photography is Not a Crime

[Much thanks to Cory Doctorow for citing many of these on Boing Boing]

  1. If you haven’t already, you should read Cory’s book “Little Brother,” which is right on-point with regard to the super-surveillance topic. You can even download it for free at: http://craphound.com/littlebrother/download/ [<]
  2. If you haven’t figured out why the title of this piece is “Dark Chambers,” it’s because the translation of the Latin ‘camera obscura,’ the foundation of what we call today a “camera.” Check out the Wikipedia entry: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camera_obscura [<]
  3. n.b., I actually have a D200 [<]
  4. About 76% of those I polled on ATT answered that they’d invoke their rights (choice #4). The remainder chose to delete their photographs (choice #1). Answers to the follow-up question varied — some thought they might be detained if they didn’t comply with the officer; others thought the officer would leave them alone if they deleted the photos. [<]
  5. Answers varied here, of course, depending on the initial choice. The main worry among those polled was losing their photographs and possibly some civil rights. One even suggested that refusing to comply might end up with the photographer arrested, but it would be worth it, because the photographer was in the right. [<]
  6. The most common answer to this question: “I don’t know.” As far as I’ve been able to tell, the U.K. and the U.S. do not have camera licenses. I think there are press and photography badges/IDs that one can acquire to gain access to otherwise private events or secure locations, but if you want to go take your camera on a tripod and take a picture of a prominent bridge in your town (while you stood in a public place), there shouldn’t be any legal restrictions for doing so. [<]
  7. Take a look at the links following the questions to see that this isn’t just some hypothetical, and it could very well happen to anyone at any time, any place. [<]
  8. How many of the 9/11 hijackers or co-conspirators stood outside the WTC with cameras, taking pictures of the buildings? [<]
  9. A few of the links above refer to situations just like this. [<]
  10. What’s a National ID Card? A potentially future result of the REAL ID Act of 2005. Read about it, and, if you like, protest about it, at http://epic.org/privacy/id-cards/ [<]

Who is Cory Doctorow?

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

Besides having a unique, but cool name, Cory Doctorow is an icon of mixing rational activism, technophilia, and fun. What more could you ask?

I was first “introduced” to Cory (no, he and I are not acquaintances, but calling him Mr. Doctorow would seem odd, considering we’re the same age) through Boing Boing. If you’re reading this, and you haven’t ever visited Boing Boing, it should be your very next stop on the Internet train, and it should also supplement your daily reading routine. Cory is a 30-something native Canadian technology advocate and author who blogs for Boing Boing, often discussing copyright, technology, and privacy issues. Criticizing government overreaching with regard to copyright and other law, and working with digital rights activist organizations such as the Electronic Frontier Foundation,1 Cory has consistently advocated for “a balanced approach to copyright that [doesn't] trammel the public’s fundamental rights to privacy, free speech, and due process.” 2

Cory is also a published author, having written a handful of excellent reads, among them:

Little Brother
Overclocked
Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom
Eastern Standard Tribe
The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Publishing Science Fiction

One set of contributions to Boing Boing that I particularly like is Cory’s criticism of the apparent war on photography taking place primarily in the U.S. and the U.K. Cory has brought to attention a number of instances of governmental and private attacks on photography in various public and private (but “common”) places. Being a photographer, I find such paranoia against photography to be insulting and a breach of responsibility on the part of the oppressors, especially considering that in most cases, the oppressors have an array of surveillance equipment constantly monitoring everyone in the area. I can’t even take a step outside my office on the street without being seen by multiple cameras, civilian and government.

Have a look at the CivLib tag on Boing Boing to see a lot of good (and scary) posts from Cory (and others) about the oft-irrational world in which we live.

Cory Doctorow certainly fits the mold of the active rationalist. Learn more about him!

Cory’s Website
Cory’s Wikipedia Entry
Books on Amazon by Cory
Cory Doctorow’s Boing Boing posts (via an awful Google search that I made)
Cory’s Profile on Boing Boing

[Cory Doctorow doesn't in any way endorse State of Protest, as far as I know, and all statements and opinions regarding Cory Doctorow represented on this website are from State of Protest's point of view.]

  1. http://www.eff.org/ [<]
  2. About Cory Doctorow. http://craphound.com/bio.php [<]