04-08-2009, 03:50 AM
|
#1
|
“Hypocrisy: prejudice with a halo”
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Savannah, Georgia
Posts: 21,393
|
Porn in the USA
Quote:
Silly politicians. Don't they know the surest way to drum up interest in a porn movie on campus is to ban it? When a state senator threatened to strip funding from the University of Maryland over its plans to show a XXX-rated film in the student center, school officials nixed the event. But fired-up students responded on Monday by holding a free-speech demonstration that drew media coverage from as far away as Thailand and Australia.
The brouhaha is the result of a marketing strategy by porn company Digital Playground, which last summer started offering complimentary copies of Pirates II: Stagnetti's Revenge (a hardcore homage to Disney's Pirates of the Caribbean, animated skeleton pirates and all) to students on 100 college campuses. Many schools have already screened the film in venues ranging from a dorm room at Southern Connecticut State University to an 850-student audience in December at UCLA, where the film's stars responded to questions and criticism about the porn industry. (Read about porn and the iPhone.)
The University of Maryland's College Park campus scheduled a screening in its student center for April 4, and some 150 students purchasing advance tickets at $5 a pop. The student union also invited a Planned Parenthood representative to speak about safe sex, which is presumably not a central plot point in the swashbuckling film. After news broke of the event, administrators said in a statement that they initially viewed the showing as "an opportunity to engage students in a discussion about the national dialogue revolving around pornography."
Not everyone on campus shared that noble perspective, with 23% of students saying porn should never be screened publicly on campus, according to a poll by the student newspaper, The Diamondback. But before undergraduates could settle the debate, State Senator Andrew Harris threatened on April 2 to get the legislature to strip all $400 million in state funding from the campus if Pirates were screened in a non-academic setting. Administrators cancelled the showing that day.
Undeterred, a group of students and rogue professors held a "Pirates Screening/Teach In" Monday night, drawing some 200 attendees. Before a 30-minute excerpt — which included two threesomes and copious shots of corset-clad blondes — students, professors, lawyers and ACLU representatives stood up to defend porn on principle. English professor Martha Nell Smith, who noted that literature from Shakespeare to Dickinson includes pornographic elements, said that it's a student's choice whether to study erotica and "it's our job together to contextualize it."
The event, which was held in a lecture hall and probably won't endanger the university's funding because of its educational components, helped earn the screening's co-organizer, sophomore Malcolm Harris, an endorsement for student body president in The Diamondback. Administrators at College Park called the rebel screening "characteristic of a vibrant educational community." Meanwhile, another University of Maryland campus, in Baltimore County, has scheduled a screening in solidarity.
For now, Senator Harris has withdrawn his amendment, but says he may push for it again in coming weeks if the university doesn't devise a clear policy on when and where it will allow porn. Could tenured positions for porn chaperones be far behind?
|
http://www.time.com/time/nation/arti...889921,00.html
__________________
Anyone but the this most fuked up President in History in 2012!
|
|
|