Censorship Who gives a F**k!!!
Brad Miska
Period 8 English
My life has been nothing but censorship since the time I
was born. When
I was very young and lived in Chicago there were all sorts of
interesting things
around to play with. My parents physically censored me by putting
me in "baby
prison." They felt that certain things needed to be censored from
me because of
their potential danger. So I was kept out of harms way in the
playpen or crib.
As I grew older and was no longer watched by my parents 24 hours
a day, I
realized that I was censored by others. In school, it was
constantly no to this
and no to that. All that negativity is not good for children,
all day long. It
was always interesting to me as to why we recited the pledge of
allegiance in
school, what if you are not American? I also was not allowed to
watch the news.
My parents felt it was "real violence", and not appropriate for
me, that was
parental censorship. When I was old enough to go out with my
friends I became
confused when my parents said I could see an "PG-13" rated movie
but the
theater wouldn't let me in. When I argued that "my parents said I
could go see
it!!", the theater management always said things like I need to
be 13 or must be
accompanied by a parent and so on. I then proposed this question,
my parents
said I could see it, now why can't I see it? The answer to that
question is the
government doesn't think I am old enough. My mom said live with
it, there is
nothing you can do. I think that made me more inquisitive.
That was just the beginning, I was too young to go on
certain rides and
too young to go into stores like Sharper Image and I was too
young to purchase
the music that I really enjoyed. When I was able to get my hands
on a Compact
Disc I had wanted, it sometimes had a "Explicit Lyrics" warning
sticker on it. I
would go home, listen and enjoy only to get lectured by my
parents. They said
things such as; you can't have anything that contains profanity,
or any type of
objectionable material. "Then again I am only going to encounter
it in the real
world!!!", I would reply. Obviously there are many different
views to take on
this issue, and I knew there was a long and difficult battle
ahead of me until I
was 18.
I contend that censoring music is a necessary evil but,
it should be
allowed to a minimal degree. Instead it is the parents that need
to be the
censor for their children. With proper "tools", such as Advisory
stickers, I
believe parents can effectively control objectional material in
they household.
Also there is much controversy on whether or not the government
is playing the
part of the parent.
A Censor, from the Latin word censere, to judge, is an
official with
the power to examine literature, mail, etc. and remove or
prohibit anything
considered obscene, objectionable, etc to subject to
censorship. What a censor
edits, might violate the First Amendment. The First Amendment to
the
Constitution of the United States of America states that
"Congress shall make no
law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise
thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or
the right of
the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government
for a redress
of grievances." In my opinion and the opinion of countless
others, censorship
is unconstitutional. The general wording in the First Amendment
allows many
different interpretations. Because of these various
interpretations,
ProCensorship and Anticensorship organizations/factions have
formed. One of the
most powerful groups you want on your side for anti-censorship is
the American
Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). From 1925 to the present, the ACLU
"has been on
the forefront of the fight to protect constitutional freedoms
through the court
systems."
Legislation has been proposed for the prevention of
explicit lyrics with
a multitude of bills never passing or if they had, not being
enforced. In the
state of Washington there was a law passed called "The Erotic
Music Bill." This
1992 law stated that store owners had to place an "adult only"
label on certain
recordings. It was also stated that it was a crime for anyone to
sell a CD or
tape that had an "adult only" label on it to a person under the
age of
eighteen." The law was passed but was never put into effect
because the State
Court declared it Unconstitutional, violating the First Amendment
to The
Constitution of the United States. That is just an example of
why restricting
the sale of controversial music or video will never work!
Pro-censorship groups
are lobbying for legislation to attempt to censor music right
now. In Montana,
lawmakers are trying make some money on so-called obscene
music/art by fining up
to $50,000 and 10 years in prison for purchasing and selling
music that has the
"sticker" on it. In Pennsylvania, they want you to be at least 18
years old to
purchase a CD with explicit lyrics and being caught could get you
up to 25 hours
of community service. In South Carolina, the retailer would get
fined for a
third offense which is considered a felony which is up to $2000
and five years
in jail.
The Parent's Music Resource Center (P.M.R.C.) does not
want recordings
that include topics of sexuality, violence, drug or alcohol
abuse, and suicide
to be produced. They also want store owners to be punished if
they produce or
sell any music that contains these previous topics. Many people
think it
objectionable to have unlabeled CDs available to parents and
children. Tipper
Gore is the leader of the P.M.R.C and is working non-stop to get
censorship into
effect in conjunction with the RIAA (Recording Industry
Association of America).
The issue of censorship was pushed constantly by PMRC so that the
RIAA, as a
compromise, made up a sticker in 1990, that warned of
obscenities in musician's
lyrics. The "Parental Advisory-Explicit Lyrics" sticker also
known as "Tipper
Stickers", was introduced but that still wasn't good enough for
Tipper Gore and
her P.M.R.C. It is also the belief that the stickers make
children more curious
and then they want them more, but there is no evidence supporting
that yet. The
P.M.R.C. seem to think that parents can't do the job of
parenting, They want
more than the "Tipper Sticker", they want all obscenities
vanquished from the
face of the planet. They think that if they continue to push,
they will win.
The government obviously doesn't think it will work, even if a
law does pass, it
would be repealed because it would be unconstitutional. The FCC
(Federal
Communications Committee), created in 1934 to regulate
communication by radio,
wire and cable, has fined many bands and radio stations for
profanity used on
the air. They are being hassled by groups such as the P.M.R.C.
who feel a much
larger fine would decrease the use of profanity.
Not everyone believed in the P.M.R.C. In 1989, ROC (Rock
Out Censorship)
was founded and they began to set up booths, with the approval of
the band
management, at concerts to educate the music fans about what is
going on with
all of the censorship battles. In 1992, they gathered more than
35,000
signatures in a bold attempt to remove the warning labels, and
now have well
over 50,000 signatures. They have sent numerous letters to MTV
and radio
stations in hopes of getting support for their cause. Here is a
great quote from
a letter to MTV from ROC-" The Government Subcommittee basically
told the
industry that "either you clean up your industry, or we'll [the
Government]
clean it up for you". This is hardly the language of a voluntary
system. It is
the language of censorship. It is not voluntary when you are put
under the
barrel of a gun Today the censors target violence and sex,
tomorrow it will
be opposing political thoughts." ROC contends that the First
Amendment states
there is freedom of speech, so it's wrong to censor. They will
continue to
fight the "Tipper Sticker" and censorship. They will go as far as
the P.M.R.C.
will go, but in the other direction.
The ROC members are not the only ones who are against
censorship and the
P.M.R.C., bands such as Megadeth write songs showing their view.
They wrote a
song against censorship called "Hook in Mouth" on their CD called
So Far So Good
So What. Here are some lines from the song, "Hook in Mouth", "A
little man with
a big eraser, changing history Altering facts and figures,
events and every
issue Rewrites every story, every poem that ever
was Replacing rights with
wrongs You say you've got the answers, well who asked you
anyway? Ever think
it was meant to be this way?" These lines show they are against
Censorship. The
next lines which are the chorus are really interesting, "F, is
for fighting, R
is red, ancestor's blood in battles they've shed. E, we elect
them, E, we eject
them, in the land of the free, and the home of the brave. D, is
for your dying,
O, your overture, M is for money and you know what that cures.
This spells out
FREEDOM, it means nothing to me, as long as there is a
P.M.R.C IM not a fish,
IM a man, Hook in mouth!!!!!!!" They believe that the P.M.R.C.
takes away our
freedom and we are caught on their "Hook". I really like this
song. Soundgarden
had things to say as well. Soundgarden's Matt Cameron
interviewed by Angie
Beardslee in the Rock Out Censorship Website in 1996 said he
feels censorship is
un-American. He also was very clear on his opinion that "Every
kind of music is
art. Music is art!" Kids have been put right in the middle of
this mess.
Who are their parents? Most children were raised by their
parents, who
fed them, clothed them and took them to the park. So who bought
the kids their
CD's before they were old enough to buy them themselves? Their
parents did. That
is why kids feel that if something is going to be censored from
them, it should
be done by their parents. They say that the Government gave us
the freedom, now
they shouldn't try and take it back. The kids are always hit
with the thought
that they buy CD's for the Lyrics. They say that they don't
purchase the music
for the lyrics, they buy it for the music, but when they mess
with the words it
messes with the full version of the song, it is considered art
and should not be
tampered with. When a authority figure censors something, not
only does it
affect the "art" but it affects the enjoyment of the music as
well. The
government is acting as the parent of all of the children out
there. Is it
necessary to tell the parents that they aren't doing a good job
raising their
children? There are parents on both sides of this issue. Is it
true that many
parents can't control their children and need help by government?
Kids say that
it should be the parents job. It is proven that the way a child
will act as an
adult is not only because of the way they were brought up, but
also by the
environment in which they were raised. Music, wel
. various
interpretations,
ProCensorship and Anticensorship organizations/factions have
formed. One of the
most powerful groups you want on your side for anti -censorship. Censorship Who gives a F**k!!!
Brad Miska
Period 8 English
My life has been nothing but censorship since the time I
was