Commentary
Censorship
by any other name is so much easier
Inside the First Amendment
By Paul K. McMasters, First Amendment Center
There
was a time when Penny Nance was unimpressed with the
Federal Communications Commission's efforts to clean
up television. In a bylined article published by The
Washington Times on May 5, 2003, she criticized then-chairman
Michael Powell's "past indifference" to
"sexual themes and even soft-core pornography"
on TV.
"There are plenty of cases where television content
violates the FCC's standards," she wrote. "But
the FCC hasn't acted on a single complaint."
That was then. Now, the well-known advocate for protecting
children from indecency on television, the Internet
and the movies is working for the FCC.
Nance is serving as a special adviser in the FCC's
Office of Strategic Planning and Policy Analysis,
according to a recent article by Todd Shields in Mediaweek.
Aides in the office of FCC Chairman Kevin Martin couldn't
tell Shields when Nance started to work at the FCC
or much about her actual duties, other than that she
is advising the commission on "broadcast- and
cable-related consumer and social issues," and
that the position "serves as liaison and provides
outreach to Congress, public interest groups and the
industry."
Last year, the FCC proposed $7.9 million in fines
against broadcasters, many times more than in any
other period in the commission's history. Given the
strong views Nance has expressed as an activist and
lobbyist and in congressional testimony, her arrival
at the FCC may signal an invigorated FCC campaign
against allegedly indecent programming.
Campaigns to cleanse popular culture of indecency
are nothing new, of course.
One of the most notorious occurred during the late
19th and early 20th centuries. These efforts were
supported by the public, even the newspapers, and
led by such zealous anti-indecency warriors as Anthony
Comstock, secretary of the New York Society for the
Suppression of Vice.
Comstock was on a self-proclaimed mission from God.
Armed with new federal and state laws and a post office
badge, he roamed New York streets in search of trash
that threatened society. He prowled bookstores and
newsstands, even post offices, arresting vendors and
booksellers and harassing publishers and their customers.
He went after books, newspapers, magazines, even photographs
of French masterpieces.
In an accounting of his work toward the end of his
career, Comstock proudly listed 3,646 prosecutions
and 2,682 convictions, the destruction of 28,425 pounds
of printing plates, 16,900 photographic negatives,
3,984,063 photographs and 50 tons of books. In addition,
he claimed to have caused 15 suicides.
It wasn't just pornography that Comstock and others
were targeting. They also found indecency in many
other kinds of information: sex education, health
and hygiene, birth control, family planning, and marital
advice, to name a few. Material containing such fare
was deemed unfit for the young and the weak of mind
- thus everyone had to forfeit the choice to read
it.
The price for cleaning up culture can be high, especially
when the good gets banned with the bad.
In late 1929, for example, a censorship dragnet in
Boston swept up 68 now-classic books by such prominent
authors as Sherwood Anderson, Bertrand Russell, Upton
Sinclair, Theodore Dreiser, H.G. Wells, Sinclair Lewis,
Ernest Hemingway and Aldous Huxley.
Some would argue that it would be a stretch to compare
the age of comstockery with today's sincere efforts
by good people to clean up popular culture. But surely
that experience suggests that there is a real danger
in trying to sort out the good and bad in popular
culture while immersed in it.
No matter which medium we're dealing with - books,
television, movies, the Internet - the real targets
of indecency campaigns are words and images.
Words and images, of course, are what we use to communicate
ideas, beliefs and imaginings. They provide the means
with which a society builds a community and a nation
carries itself forward.
When we deem certain words or images, or speakers,
offensive or unworthy, we must invent the thought
crime - what we imagine someone might think or do
when provoked by ideas and imaginings. When we do
that, we must submit ourselves to the judgment of
the future. What will our grandchildren and their
children say when they look back on what we have done
in the name of our children? What will we have given
away of their rights as well as their legacy?
The idea of setting more boundaries for speech and
fewer boundaries for censorship should always give
pause.
Decency advocates are so intent on their objective,
so convinced of their rightness and so submerged in
their own time that they always should be aware of
the possibility of mistake. Otherwise, they fall victim
to the sort of hubris that led Comstock to dismiss
the redoubtable George Bernard Shaw as "this
Irish smut-dealer."
Good and smart people differ over what indecency means.
But there are two ways we can respond when dealing
with whatever it is that we determine indecency to
be. The easy way is to get a government official or
agency to ban it or regulate it. The hard way is to
engage it, decry it, discourage it, present a better
alternative.
That is the hard way, but it should be the American
way.
Paul K. McMasters is First Amendment ombudsman
at the First Amendment Center, 1101 Wilson Blvd.,
Arlington ,Va. 22209 . Web: www.firstamendmentcenter.org.
E-mail: pmcmasters@fac.org