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Friday, March 21, 2008
Brent Bozell :: Townhall.com Columnist
Does Profanity Reign Supreme?
by Brent Bozell
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The Supreme Court has taken up the case of FCC vs. Fox Television Stations, the bizarre case in which Fox and other broadcast TV networks have argued that "fleeting" profanities are mere accidents that should not be punished with fines. While it's laudable that the nation's top court would take up the matter, it's beyond outrageous that what Hollywood really wants -- and, in a cowardly way, is refusing to declare publicly -- is the "right" to bombard your living room, and your children, with obscenities.

The high court is taking up a decision last summer by the Manhattan-based Second Circuit Court of Appeals that sided with Hollywood and told the Federal Communications Commission that their profanity rules were "arbitrary and capricious." Solicitor General Paul Clement argued persuasively to the Supreme Court that the FCC has "hundreds of thousands of complaints" from outraged citizens regarding the broadcast of expletives. Clement said it left the agency "accountable for the coarsening of the airwaves while simultaneously denying it effective tools to address the problem."

For their part, Hollywood's paladins of permissiveness are claiming to be delighted that the Supreme Court is taking the case. In a statement, Fox Television said it was happy to have "the opportunity to argue that the FCC's expanded enforcement of the indecency law is unconstitutional in today's diverse media marketplace where parents have access to a variety of tools to monitor their children's television viewing."

They will continue to argue that the concept of obscenity has been abolished by the V-chip, an intellectually dishonest position if ever there was one. Never mind that, as has been proven numerous times already, the V-chip is a useless proposition when it depends on an industry-run ratings system that is at best flawed and at worst deliberately cooked, oftentimes refusing to include the right content descriptors to make the much-ignored device actually do its job. But even if the V-chip worked to perfection, it would still be useless in catching fleeting profanities of the unscripted sort. Hollywood knows this, just as Hollywood knows that if it wanted to avoid the problem altogether, it would simply employ a delay switch to bleep out unscripted obscenities.

The point is: Hollywood wants to air them. To them, it's all a waste of money to spare the benighted rabble in the little villages who haven't learned to stop worrying and love the F-bomb.

Out in America, voters still have the common sense to believe that profanities aren't the kind of speech that you wave the flag over, as if "fleeting" profanity were a cause as American as apple pie. Most Americans think that the quality of entertainment is in steep decline. An AP/Ipsos poll last summer asked if TV shows in general were getting better or worse, and only 22 percent said "better," while 62 percent picked "worse." Politicians in Washington ought to find defending children from televised profanity to be the safest issue imaginable.

It's common sense to suggest that all outbursts of profanity could be construed as "fleeting" in nature. It doesn't matter whether the cursing was unscripted (rock star Bono's Golden Globe victory speech) or scripted (Nicole Richie swearing at the Billboard Music Awards show on Fox right after her Fox "Simple Life" co-star Paris Hilton said "Watch the bad language.") In both cases, dropping an F- or S-bomb is "fleeting." Continued...

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About The Author
Founder and President of the Media Research Center, Brent Bozell runs the largest media watchdog organization in America.
 
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seven stinks
I hope you didn't OBJECT to somebody who believes you're the wrong one here. (Is it the first time that's happened to you ?)

Freedom of speech is in our Constitution and all of us have our own stake in it. I'm for freedom, but within limits. There is such a thing as responsibility.

The FCC is empowered by law (the will of the people) to impose fines for certain offenses; and/or warning violators to cease and desist. If that power weren't in the best interest of the American people, power would NOT have been vested in the authorities.

Think-- Why can't you televise and/or broadcast whatever you wish, at will, without licensing, if it's your inviolable freedom to speak ? YOU MAY; Do speak, but it must be responsibly. Or else pay the fines. This isn't rocket science. We NEED controls. Nor should the necessary controls encroach on our liberties. We have judges to determine the boundaries.

As you can see-- above I spelt your handle "stinks." You surely dislike it ! But then, what about my freedom ? It always depends on whose ox is gored. There you are, I've acted irresponsibly toward you. For which I owe you an apology -- ;^D

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At least I'm honest about saying that I sincerely don't care about children because I really don't. I care about freedom of speech of all kinds, even the ones some of you consider indecent or obscene, because I know that if one form of speech is censored, then all speech is censored.
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