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Wednesday, September 06, 2006
Kathleen Parker :: Townhall.com Columnist
A time to cuss
by Kathleen Parker
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The five-year anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks has produced a peculiar concern -- whether rescuers used proper language in the midst of mind-numbing horror and chaos.

Apparently, firefighters were prompted to use profanity, a fact that some Americans now find too offensive for prime time.

The American Family Association -- a Tupelo, Miss.-based organization that boasts 3 million members and describes itself as promoting the biblical ethic of decency -- has promised to flood the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) with complaints if CBS stations air the real-time 9/11 documentary, called ``9/11,'' which contains objectionable language.

Randy Sharp, director of special projects for the group, says that 198,000 people already have notified the FCC that they want CBS to be punished if it runs the documentary.

This is no small threat under new FCC rules, which allow fines of up to $325,000 under the Broadcast Decency Enforcement Act of 2005. Several CBS affiliate stations have taken heed, either declining to air the documentary or planning to run it later in the evening when standards relax.

Usually, I'm in favor of strict enforcement of decency standards. Any parent trying to raise polite children in our Age of Perpetual Adolescence knows that challenge to be daunting. However, there's a clear difference between gratuitous profanity contrived by unimaginative writers and the spontaneous language of real-life horror.

Surely the American Family Association's biblical ethics leave some wiggle room for common sense and context. Besides, children too young to hear raw language are far too young to watch something as horrifying as the mass murder that took place on 9/11.

Otherwise, Americans have a right -- perhaps even a duty -- to watch an unedited, unscripted account of what happened. The film, which already aired on the six-month and one-year anniversaries of 9/11, was an accident of serendipity.

Two French filmmakers had set out to document an ordinary day in the life of a rookie fireman. What they captured was the chaos and carnage of the attacks, including footage of the plane hitting the first tower.

Can anyone really imagine seeing what those firefighters saw -- first one plane, then another -- and saying, ``Goodness gracious, what rare deed is this?'' When ``What the ---" more accurately captures the moment?

Here's a new word to teach the kiddies: verisimilitude. That is, depicting realism, or having the appearance of truth. In real life, people seeing others plunge 100 stories are going to say things they wouldn't customarily say. Continued...

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About The Author
Kathleen Parker is a syndicated columnist with the Washington Post Writers Group.
 
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Where's The Problem?
Air the documentary at 10 p.m. If the little kids aren't in bed, they should be. Adults who prefer not to watch have that right.

If the documentary is unedited, will it open the door to excuses for including any profanity or culturally bad language a producer wishes to present on any program?

I don't know, but I have witnessed plenty of "unacceptable" language when watching various TV programs.

For those who want to view this documentary as it was recorded, they should have the whole truth. We're big men and women and we will not be transformed into foul-mouthed, profane people if we hear the expressions of shock from those on the scene of the 9/ll attack.

Free & Cyne
Ok, It just seems like a bit of a double standard here. If you can turn on your tube EVERY evening and need to censor the sex, violence, gay agenda, and profanity ridden crap you see for the "little darlings", and thats all fiction and sit-coms (and some cartoons!)...

If the networks can show that, then why censor reality? Especially 9-11?
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