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DavidMehlFirstPaper 15 - 12 May 2010 - Main.EbenMoglen
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Virtual Child Pornography and The Constitution | | Real child pornography has been recognized by the courts as the repulsive tool of child molestation it is. Although Congress has attempted to equate VCP with real child pornography, the Supreme Court has thwarted Congress’ attempts. Although debatable whether or not VCP is as damaging as real child pornography, VCP is by its very nature obscene. Because VCP passes the Miller test, it ought not to be afforded First Amendment Protection.
-- DavidMehl - 15 Apr 2010 | |
> > | I don't understand what
the point of this argument is. Miller requires fact-finding,
presumably by a jury, before speech can be punished as obscene:
that's the point, precisely to avoid a test that treats obscenity as
purely a matter of law, in which case the US Supreme Court is going
to have to be the final determiner of obscenity in every case, as the
Court found it was in the era of "Redrupping." Yet here you are
trying to turn Miller into the very thing it was designed not to
be: a standard of obscenity that can be decided for an entire
category of works as a matter of law.
Your particular way of doing that is also legally faulty. You assume
a category of "VCP," which is "created and traded with pedophiles'
interests in mind." On this basis, you determine the work can have
no value, and will be patently offensive, because these really turn
out to be proxies for dislike of the motive of someone who is
motivated by sexual attraction to people you consider to be children.
But the problem with which you are supposedly trying to deal occurs
in the space of First Amendment analysis, where the motive behind
speech is an invalid basis for regulation. It is all right to
advocate, or render beautiful, any crime. And the cases of
importance are the ones at the edge, because of overbreadth. So the
real question is presented, for example, by an animated _Romeo and
Juliet_ in which the characters are depicted at the age Shakespeare
specifies (which makes Juliet a child by our contemporary definition)
and in which, as it happens, they are depicted in a non-obscene but
sexual love scene, much as in Franco Zefferelli's film. Do you mean
to argue that can be held obscene as a matter of law? You need
better reasons than the ones advanced here.
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