Jesus Castillo, Supreme Court, And Free Speech 578
I've been following the Jesus Castillo case for a while. The case itself is an obscenity charge for selling an adult comic to an adult undercover police officer in Dallas. Recently, the US Supreme Court denied his appeal, with the notion that obscenity is a state-level affair, despite the First Amendment being a Federal law. There's also an interview with the head of the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, and some good ruminations from Neil Gaiman on the subject. Bad precedents for free speech - the CBDLF donations and giving to the EFF are Good Things.
Cases like this are rediculous (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Cases like this are rediculous (Score:2, Interesting)
They're the government. Y'see, when a group of humanoids grows to a certain point, they form a goverment that helps them all get along. There's nothing wrong with this--especially since someone who really wants to go against their local gov't can just up and move, or particip
Re:Cases like this are rediculous (Score:2, Insightful)
That's a tautology. Of course banning non-protected speech doesn't "impugn the first ammendment"; "protected" refers to first ammendment protection. It's still legitimate to question WHY so-called "obscene" material isn't deserving of protection when its production doesn't require that a crime have be
Re:Cases like this are rediculous (Score:2, Troll)
As a supplement, it is to allow one to teach one's beliefs and way of life to other people.
So I put it to you that porn is not for either of these purposes; it is merely for pleasure. It stands, therefore, not as a right, but rather as a privelege awarded by the majorit
Re:Cases like this are rediculous (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Cases like this are rediculous (Score:4, Insightful)
The mere 'pursuit of happiness' was one of the reasons America was founded, if you recall.
rbb
'Priveleged ' to be Free? (Score:4, Insightful)
So, if it feels good, it's a "privelege"? Shouldn't this be considered under the "scope of privacy" between two consentual adults.
Conversely, if it make you 'feel bad', it's protected? How does one measure 'bad' -- by the majority or by the individual?
The decision falls to the majority. Will more people be unhappy with it than happy? Then it won't be allowed.
We're at break-neck speed down that slope as ideas and concepts are being reclassified "priveleges" rather than rights, which imply that we are nothing more than border-line disobedient kids who need discipline for 'bad thoughts' rather than as adults in a free society.
Furthermore, there is a fallacy in this even for the 'free speech' parameters. Even in mild discourse, there will be disagreements which will make people happy and unhappy. The 1st Amendment specifically protects the speech (especially the political speech) that makes the majority unhappy.
Re:Cases like this are rediculous (Score:5, Insightful)
Bull. 10 seconds with google would have given you this tidbit:
Amendment IX: The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.
Amendment X: The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people.
How clear can you get? Any right not explicitly given to the government is EXPLICITLY given to the people. People like you have constantly ignored these two amendments, and in the process, slashed away at the rights given to us by our existence. Not by the government, inherent rights.
If a woman wants to express herself by getting nude and getting paid for it, it's her call, and no one else's, except in that we don't have to buy a copy of 'Janet Reno, nude!' if we don't want to.
Oh, regarding: "The decision falls to the majority. Will more people be unhappy with it than happy? Then it won't be allowed."
In case you hadn't noticed, the majority of people do not need to be protected by the majority. The Constitution is set up to make sure that minorities cannot be repressed by the Fed (and the States). A white (non-Yankee) male does not have to be protected to get a job as sheriff in the deep south. A black woman just might. The Constitution protects against the 'Tyranny of the Majority'.
Re:Cases like this are rediculous (Score:3, Insightful)
Amendment XIV: Section 1. All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside. No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to
I disagree. (Score:4, Insightful)
Consider the issue of women's liberation. in the 1800's, even in the 1950's the expectation was that women were meant to stay in the home and have children because that was their lot in life. Sex, issues such as homosexuality, etc were not discussed. As a result the nature of public life, and of politics was different.
If you want a more palpable idea consider the issue of homosexuality. Until recently it was illegal in Texas (and still is in many other areas). Banning homosexuality and the discussion of it allows for homosexuals to be denied access to the public sphere (unless they hide who they are). That in turn changes politics. Even in the early 1980's Man conservatives were able to stymie research into AIDS and public health initiatives dealing with it by arguing that "it was a homosexual disease" and therefore didn't affect "the rest" of us. It was only through the gorwing realization that heterosexuals were contracting it in increasing numbers combined with a growing homosexual lobby that brought it to the forefront.
To take a non-sex issue, consider the muslim religion. For many muslims wearing beards and turbans is part of their religion or at least their culture. Should we ban those, as well as the public call to prayer because they remind many people (uncomfortably) of 9/11? After all the freedom of religion still stands, we are merely banning something that gives them "pleasure".
I say no, the right to dress as such and walk freely without hiding who you are is a necessary part of this country. It is also very very political. To deny people the right to dress as they want for fear of offending others is to deny them the right (again as with homosexuals) to access the public (and thus political) sphere on their own terms. To do so would skew the public debate in this country by making it possible for one group to oust another or at least limit their public presence (and thus influence) on the most subjective of grounds, that of comfort.
With regards to your comments about children. We have laws to protect them. The constitutional definition of obscenity is very narrow and should remain that way. In the case of Jesus, he sold the materials to an adult. If they wound up in the hands of a child then the adult who bought them would have been the one giving them. Moreover the supreme court has held (correctly in my view) that the function of laws to protect children cannot be to force adults to act like them. If we have the right to ban things that may reach children then adults can never yhave a public conversation about adult issues such as sex, AIDS, WAR, and so on.
There are a great deal of things that make me uncomfortable including LEgend of the Overfiend (the comic book that Jesus was arrested for selling) but I am willing to give up my ability to ban them in echange for the agreement that they not ban me.
As easy as the nee-jerk answer feels I believe that it is the wrong one.
I couldn't agree more. (Score:3, Funny)
Ask someone who knows. I've been speaking and hearing speech for close to my entire life, and nothing dismays me more than a bit of speech that endangers all of humanity.
Re:Cases like this are rediculous (Score:2)
what right does anybody else have to tell them what they can and cannot say, do, smoke, eat, drink when it does affect other people.
With the DO bit you seem to say that people should be free to kill, rape, mutilate other people since no one should be allowed to say they shouldn't.
So I really really hope you meant to say "what right does anybody else have to tell them what they can and cann
Re:Cases like this are rediculous (Score:2)
The community does. If 99% of the population says 1% can't do something they like that does effect the rest, even in a very minor way, that 1% loses out.
Obviously the community felt this was justified, or the community would be rallying against it. Having an adult comic book store does influence the community. You cannot be a part
Re:Cases like this are rediculous (Score:5, Funny)
So if 99% of the population are cannibals, and they decide to eat you, part of the 1% of the population that isn't...? Is it okay that you are now lunch?
populist thinking (Score:3, Insightful)
Selling pornography doesn't violate anyone's rights. In fact, you can't make a reasonable case for it harming anyone, since no-one has to buy it or look at it. That's a different matter from walking down a public street naked, something that it's unavoidable to look
Ridiculous but not isolated (Score:2)
Besides, who determines what "morals" are the norm? I have friends
Re:Cases like this are rediculous (Score:5, Insightful)
Similarly but not at all identically, outlawing the sales (or at least the display of pornographic publications at a newsstand is reasonable, because it's in the public eye, but outlawing the sales or display of pornographic publications inside of a shop is just plain stupid and clearly a violation of the first amendment. If you don't like it, don't shop there.
Re:Cases like this are rediculous (Score:5, Insightful)
Similarlly, labor laws that disallow running machines in dangerous ways likely to injure and kill workers are ridiculous. People can simply choose to work for non-employee mangling establishments. The same with laws that prohibit sexually harassment my employers, those chicks can find themselves a non-ass groping establishment. Don't like my unsanitary kitchen? Let people chose between sanitary and unsanitary restaurants.
Personally, I'd rather live in a country where sometimes a community (be it a township or the entire nation) decides that certain activities cost society too much. These restrictions need to be made very carefully, the risk of overregulation is very serious. You definately need an emergency valve to protect essential freedoms (the Bill of Rights does an okay job at this).
Re:Cases like this are rediculous (Score:3, Funny)
Smoking in the workplace is physically and psychologically harming to anyone who doesn't smoke. There's no reasonable way the ability to withstand smoke (ie, not be bothered by it) can be consided a neccesary condition of working.
Certainly saying that "they can always work somewhere else" is moronic, unless you WANT someone to call you on it.
Here's a question for you: If I wanted to masturbate in your bar, would you mind? Would you throw me out? H
Re:Cases like this are rediculous (Score:3, Informative)
That's because the situations are analogous, and your position is hypocritical. Sexual harassment (note: big difference from sexual "assault" - I chose harassment because it closely parallels your second-hand smoke example) is harmful to others, as you state. However, SO IS SECONDHAND SMOKE!
Here in Ottawa, Ontario, we have a blanket smoking ban on all restaurants and bars, and I think it's great.
Re:Cases like this are rediculous (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Cases like this are rediculous (Score:3, Interesting)
Troll Alarm! (Score:2, Flamebait)
Re:Cases like this are rediculous (Score:3, Insightful)
We all know that smoking is highly addictive and if second hand smoke is so prevalent, why aren't there millions of people addicted to second hand smoke? There aren't.
I'll admit, I'm a smoker. I find second hand smoke annoying as all hell. If I'm around non-smokers, I make a concious effort to smoke down wind so my smoke doesn't blow in their face, to smoke elsewhere, or not to smoke at all. But the second anyone makes an smartassed comment like "smoking kills" or one
Re:Cases like this are rediculous (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Cases like this are rediculous (Score:3, Insightful)
California has has a smoking ban for a while now, and when I visited there I was a smoker. You know how bars got around it? They have patios, and everyone masses on the patio to smoke. Inside is supposed to be smoke free. What is so bad about this? If you want to kill yourself, go do it outside where there
Re:Cases like this are rediculous (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Cases like this are rediculous (Score:2, Informative)
"Section 1. All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside. No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without d
Suggestion: link to the case! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Suggestion: link to the case! (Score:3, Informative)
But you can find all the links at The Comic Book Legal Defense Fund. [cbldf.org]
Texas (Score:4, Funny)
Am I missing something? (Score:5, Insightful)
The case itself is an obscenity charge for selling an adult comic to an adult undercover police officer in Dallas.
At the risk of getting myself modded down for being a little clueless... Why is selling adult materials to adults in Dallas a problem? Is adult content illegal there? Or did he violate some ordinance? If it's a local thing, this should not be a big deal at all and is way out of proportion...
(if he thought said police officer was a minor, well, then I think I can understand the issue.)
Flame away...
Re:Am I missing something? (Score:2)
This is comical because my big memory of my visits to Dallas for training were the abundance of "Gentleman's clubs".
Re: Am I missing something? (Score:2)
> This is comical because my big memory of my visits to Dallas for training were the abundance of "Gentleman's clubs".
Yeah, I found it funny a few years ago when the Texas legislature was pushing some kind of anti-naughty law or other and I drove through Austin on I-35 and saw huge billboards for "gentlemen's clubs" while also within sight of the capitol building.
Re:Am I missing something? (Score:5, Informative)
Re: Am I missing something? (Score:5, Funny)
> The Texas Penal Code isn't generally thought of as a laugh-out-loud read, but Section 43.23 is an exception: "A person commits an offense if he
Ah, the Five Dildo Limit. Remember that when packing for a trip to Texas.
Sorry! (Score:3, Funny)
> > The Texas Penal Code isn't generally thought of as a laugh-out-loud read, but Section 43.23 is an exception: "A person commits an offense if he ... possesses with intent to wholesale promote any obscene material or obscene device. A person who possesses six or more obscene devices ... is presumed to possess them with intent to promote the same."
> Ah, the Five Dildo Limit. Remember that when packing for a trip to Texas.
Ehrm, maybe "packing" wasn't the best choice of words in that context.
Re:Am I missing something? (Score:2)
Re:Am I missing something? (Score:4, Funny)
There is probably a little known ordinance against the Son of God selling smutty comics.
Re:Am I missing something? (Score:2)
Re:Am I missing something? (Score:2)
What's really weird is that some of the clubs (and restaurants are the same way) are in 'dry' areas, so you can't buy beer, but you can bring it.
A, uh... friend, told me about an odd night sitting in a strip club where you couldn't buy a beer, but could bring in a big cooler of 'em and enjoy all you like. weirdness.
(offtopic)
Also in a dry county, sans the nud
Re:Am I missing something? (Score:5, Insightful)
This is exacerbated by the fact that, as we all know, comic book stores are populated solely by eight year olds who are really only interested in the adventures of Richie Rich, and might have their fragile minds corrupted by the mere presence of such materials.
Re:Am I missing something? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Am I missing something? (Score:5, Informative)
I apologize in advance to all those readers who have ties to the Lone Star State, but only in Texas would a woman get busted for possession of sex toys. Not possession of narcotics, or an open container of alcohol or even an illegal alien. Instead, Kathleen Elizabeth "Kathy" Grubbs of Longview, Texas was charged with obscenity for intent to promote "objects defined in a dictionary as having the shape and often the appearance of the male genitalia, used in sexual stimulation."
According to a Nov. 21 article in the Longview News-Journal, Grubbs, having been pulled over for driving erratically, had 17 "obscene materials and obscene devices" in her car, a felony under Texas state law. The law states that anyone possessing more than six "obscene" items at a time has intent to promote said items. This is apparently a big no-no in Texas, where there have been raids on various adult bookstores in recent months.
Grubbs, a distributor for Slumber Parties Inc., called the charges "kind of ridiculous."
Only in Texas? Not true.... (Score:4, Informative)
It ain't just Texas.
this is normal (Score:2)
Re: this is normal (Score:5, Insightful)
> the precedent has always been that the locale of the alleged offense has the right to determine what is "patently obscene" free speech is guaranteed, but if everyone around decides that what you say is obscene you can be shut down.
IOW, there isn't really any free speech.
> I for one, believe in personal responsibility. Your right to extend your fist ends when it hits my nose
And personal responsibility suggests that you shouldn't buy naughty comic books if you don't want to see them.
This may be "normal" in the USA, but it isn't "liberty and justice for all".
Re:Oh my god (Score:3, Insightful)
No, Bill O'Reilly Brownshirt. We won't shut up. And you can't shut off our microphone. Or threaten us with violence if we don't get out.
And Bush is a bigger threat than Al Qaeda. He invaded the wrong two countries, turned the entire Islamic world against us, humiliated and alienated everyone else, and let all the bad guys get away. He's deactivated at least four amendments to the Bill of Rights. He's established that he is not subject to any court. He can make any of us disappear at any
Re:this is normal (Score:2)
Re:this is normal (Score:2)
First amendment (Score:5, Informative)
Larry
Re:First amendment (Score:3, Informative)
Well, technically,
So in that sense it is a law. But of course it's
Obscenity rulings (Score:5, Informative)
Free speech is a federal issue, however the USSC decided in 1973 that the determination of obscentiy is a test in part based on community standards. [wikipedia.org]
The court does not seem to be ignoring this issue as much as they are referring back to their previous ruling.
Community Standards (Score:4, Informative)
The judgement seems to me to be entirely obsecene. I mean, "AND no drawing for his own personal use... his home was subject to unannounced searches by local police to make sure he was complying."
Sounds more like something people experienced during the Chinese Revolution than SHOUL BE the case in modern America (or any civilized society.)
Re:Community Standards (Score:2)
Re:Obscenity rulings (Score:2)
Thanks to the Miller ruling , the raunchiest community (the internet) now has the raunchiest pr0n available, without ever having the fear of being sued for obscenity.
go bless the internet
Is this a 1st amendment issue? (Score:3, Interesting)
In People -vs- Larry Flynt it was an issue because Larry was the one making the obscene stuff. This guy was charged with selling the obscene stuff...not really a speach issue, and I agree with the courts that this is probably something that is decided at a state level.
That being said, I think I'll stay far away from Texas. It's like looking back in time 100 years.
Amen. (Score:5, Funny)
100 is a number the figures prominently here in Texas. The temperatures always seem to be above it, while the locals' IQs average well below it.
This is probably one of the back-asswardest states in the Union and since you appear to have half a brain, I'd recommend staying the hell away from it and let it degenerate into the backwards, inbred garbage dump it is rapidly becoming.
Interesting because it's from Texas (Score:3, Insightful)
Not so fast (Score:2, Interesting)
Now don't get me wrong, I know they assist with many cases, but they're in it more or less for the publicity. As for
Re:Not so fast (Score:2)
When you can point to your eighty-year history [aclu.org] of defending civil liberties, then, maybe, you can get away with calling the ACLU "whores" in a public forum. But since you can't, you're just another stone moron with an ill-designed weblog calling his betters names on slashdot.
Idiot.
CBDLF and EFF (Score:3, Interesting)
Okay. I can see how the CBDLF is relevant to this. But what possible connection does the EFF have to a case about comic books?
Strange... (Score:2, Insightful)
basically upholds the right of a state to determine what it considers "obscene" right after they overturn a Texas sodomy law due to the "right to privacy"?
Re:Strange... (Score:2)
The first amendment does not apply here. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:The first amendment does not apply here. (Score:2)
That's funny, I don't see any exceptions to the First Amendment listed in the Constitution.
First Amendment and state courts (Score:3, Insightful)
The First Amendment is not a "Federal law", nor is it a law at all. It defines rights guaranteed to citizens which cannot be abrogated by the federal government, nor the states, nor local governments.
Except in Texas. Don't mess with Texas.
Re:First Amendment and state courts (Score:2)
Re:First Amendment and state courts (Score:2)
"Welcome to Texas. Don't fuck up!"
Re:First Amendment and state courts (Score:2)
The First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States is a law. Perhaps you mean it is not a statute.
Laws are everything in the collection of rules about governing. Statutes are laws. Bills made into law are laws even if not codified as statutes. Treaties are laws. Court decisions are laws. Regulations are laws. The Constitution is a law, or several laws. They have different force and effect and jurisdictions, but they
youth culture killed my dog (Score:3, Interesting)
I think there are two reasons that comics seem to always be under attack. (Wasn't there a whole big thing in the 50's about censoring comics?) The first of course is that children read a lot of them. Parents are probably suprised when The Invisibles in no way resembles Superman.
The second reason is that comics tend to touch on subjects that more maintstream mediums won't. You will never see a TV version of The Invisibles on CBS. I think that's the reason there's a market for adult comic books, it's really one of few places you can go to see unconventional stories.
Should Grant Morisson be thrown in jail for writing stories about attacking the US government? IMO, no. Should he be surprised when someone wants to throw him in jail? Not really. Alas, in this day and age, if you are in the public eye at all, you need a good attorney. Probably why Mr. Morisson chose invisibility as his theme.
Re:youth culture killed my dog (Score:2)
Well, it was more of an uber-organization controlled by the Archons that had its fingers in most of the world's governing bodies and militaries. The heros in were fighting these subverted segments of the government and military. I know people in the military who quite liked The Invisibles.
Personally, I think HBO or Showtime could very easily do a series based on Morrison's work. You ju
As Much as I Love the First Amendment... (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm going to apologize in advance for being picky.
So SCOTUS has now made a million itty-bitty divisions within the First Amendment. You can go to jail for burning a draft card, but it's ok to wear a jacket saying "Fuck the Draft."
The Supreme Court is busy. Very very busy. Don't think that they're the only ones who could have helped this guy, though. For his case to have gotten this far, it must have wound its way through a handful of courts and a dozen different judges.
The First Amendment is complicated. Don't get me wrong, I'm as much a foe of obscenity law as Larry Flynt; this post isn't about the underlying case, more about the way that it's been presented here. Want to make things better? Petition your state legislator to change the laws of your state. State legislators have a thankless job and would probably look forward to some feedback from one of their constituents.
And no, I'm not a legislator or a guy who knows one. I'm just a student.
Sheesh....
Whoa, There, Cowboy! Local Obscenity Laws == Good (Score:5, Insightful)
Lookit, laws re obscenity and speed limits and such are made on the state and local levels Because That Makes Sense! The people in downtown Tulsa don't want L.A.-style porn shops opening in their area, and the people in L.A. don't want to live in a Tulsa-esque climate. Fine! Great! Makes perfect sense! If the Fed comes in to determine what is "universally" obscene or not, folks in both Oklahoma and California aren't going to be happy by the compromise.
Hey, this is America, Land of Opportunity, and if I want to get rich with a chain of Car Washes, I can go for it. But if I try to open one next to your suburban golf course or grammar school, I'm going to be denied. Why? Cuz of the local zoning laws. So I go elsewhere to pursue my "opportunity." Makes sense to me, and the people with the kids in the local school. Some guy selling some explicit tentacle-sex manga is cuffed in Dallas. That makes sense too.
How refreshing that the Supreme Court is repsecting state statute on this one. I really do not want the Federal Goverment involving themselves with local lifestyle laws. There's a Big Big World West of the Beltway and East of Hollywood.
Re:Whoa, There, Cowboy! Local Obscenity Laws == Go (Score:3, Interesting)
> Lookit, laws re obscenity and speed limits and such are made on the state and local levels Because That Makes Sense! The people in downtown Tulsa don't want L.A.-style porn shops opening in their area, and the people in L.A. don't want to live in a Tulsa-esque climate. Fine! Great! Makes perfect sense!
Of course, if the fine folk in Tulsa don't want that stuff they won't buy it, and the shops will fold due to lack of business.
There's a reason this stuff was being sold in Dallas, and it ain't that no
Re:Whoa, There, Cowboy! Local Obscenity Laws == Go (Score:2)
Re:Whoa, There, Cowboy! Local Obscenity Laws == Go (Score:2)
Re:Whoa, There, Cowboy! Local Obscenity Laws == Go (Score:2)
Re:Whoa, There, Cowboy! Local Obscenity Laws == Go (Score:2)
Zoning laws are for appearance, logic and other subjctive concepts. Thus, they are local only.
FYI: Texas has no zoning laws. Houston has strip bars next to elementary schools.
Obscenity and Free Speech (Score:2, Insightful)
The law, as seen on tv (Score:2)
I know this because
A) My sister works in a porn shop (yes, we are all proud she.. then again at least she is finally working)
B) Playboy repeadetly writes about people who get taken to jail for having porno in their car...
Recently they have been cracking down on both pornography and drug associated products (EG Pipes).. Evidently terrorist do nothing but get stoned and watch porn.
Isn't this a LITTLE ironic? (Score:2)
(Have I made my point?)
I wonder... (Score:5, Funny)
Equal Protection . . . (Score:3, Informative)
. . . with the notion that obscenity is a state-level affair, despite the First Amendment being a Federal law.
Well, the Amendment is a Constitutional Law, not 'Federal,' but that's not my point. I thought the 14th Amendment gave equal protection, which (as I understand it, and IANALY) means that if it would be unconstitutional as a Federal Law, then it would be for a state law as well. This was the view taken to stop Texas from enforcing its Sodemy law recently.
Hemos Should Get His Fact Right (Score:3, Insightful)
The First Amendment is part of the U.S. Constitution. It isn't a state law or a federal law; it's part of the framework which gives Congress the power to legislate and the Supreme Court te power to judge.
God knows what this has to do with computing, but it is certainly indicative of the kind of audience Slashdot draws: Adults Who Read Comic Books. Now, there's something that can threaten the republic.
Why the hell isn't the Bible challenged? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Why the hell isn't the Bible challenged? (Score:2)
Nobody knows why the Court refused to hear case. (Score:4, Informative)
Recently, the US Supreme Court denied his appeal, with the notion that obscenity is a state-level affair, despite the First Amendment being a Federal law.
But the Supreme Court didn't actually say that, or anything of the kind. Read the linked article [icv2.com]. Castillo thinks the Supreme Court refused to hear his case because Castillo thinks the Court thinks it's a question for the states. But the Court itself didn't say one word about why it refused to hear Castillo's case, so we have no way to know whether his belief about their reasons is an accurate belief or not. The Court gets asked to hear thousands of cases every year and actually hears fewer than a hundred of them. The Court generally doesn't offer any explanation of why it takes, or fails to take, any particular case -- and its order denying Castillo's petition [supremecourtus.gov] says nothing about why they decided not to hear it.
For christ's sake (Score:2)
how the supreme court thinks: (Score:2)
The Supreme Court's charge is "to ensure the uniformity of judgments". It is not to correct individual cases that may ha
Constitution and Federal Laws (Score:2)
Lessons (Score:2)
When I have children, I will teach them to look both ways before crossing the street, to not talk to strangers and to stay the hell out of Texas.
Some Background (Score:5, Informative)
Basically, during the month September 1999, an undercover police officer purchased a collection of adult comics [dallasobserver.com] from a store called "Keith's Comics" in Dallas. He then looked through them to try and determine comics that would be considered obscene by community standards. (This is a normal part of vice operations anywhere.)
The comics chosen where Demon Beast Invasion: The Fallen [google.com] and Legend of the Overfiend [google.com] (links to Google searches). At trial the second one was dropped and only "Demon Beast Invasion" was considered as being an obscene book sold to the officer. (Funny quote from the Dallas Observer article: "There was no test here to show the clerk knew what was in there. You can't judge a book by its cover." (Said by Castillo's attorney, working for the CBLDF [cbldf.org].) Look at the Demon Beast Invasion cover. I think you probably can judge that book by its cover. Just look at the Google links above. Enough editorializing...)
The defense basically argued that the books were not legally obscene because they did not "taken as a whole, lacks any serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value." Scott McCloud (OT: one of my father's childhood friends was his older brother) testified about the artistic values, and Susan Napier, an associate professor in UT-Austin's Department of Asian Studies, testified about the cultural value in relation to Japanese culture.
Castillo was found guilty, and both appeals in the Texas legal system failed to overturn the verdict. The Supreme Court was the last resort, and they have declined the case. He has already paid his $4000 fine and began his 180-day probation.
Curious (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm wondering as to the particulars of this law, as selling an X-rated comic book (which I'm assuming didn't touch the fringes of underage-looking characters or whatever) to an adult is not a crime in most areas, and certainly not here in Canada. How can the US uphold such a law, or is it just Texas?
What really gets me is that the store doesn't get busted for carrying the material, but the clerk does. The cop that pulled this bust should be ashamed of himself, railroading an unsuspecting clerk like that.
Re:You missed one (Score:3, Insightful)
Meta Modders? (Score:2)
Why is this currently modded 0, Offtopic?
Whether you agree with the posters statement that the ACLU is an equivalent to the EFF or CBDLF, it certainly is germane to a discussion in which donations are suggested to the two organizations mentioned. Just because you disagree with a poster doesn't make the post offtopic. Instead, reply with a rebuttal, please.
Re:Court doc (Score:2)
a felon in possession of a firearm under CPC S 12021(a) con-
stitutes an aggravated felony "as an offense described in" 18
U.S.C. S 922(g)(1), pursuant to U.S.S.G. S 2L1.2(b)(1)(A)
and 8 U.S.C. S 1101(a)(43)(E)(ii). We also deny his Apprendi
challenge to the sentence enhancement imposed.
Yeah, I know the document is offtopic, I was definitely not paying attention. Whatever, it's almost Friday
Re: News for Nerds?? (Score:2, Funny)
> ok, so it's a pet issue of Hemos' but does this really merit a story on slashdot?
Jesus arrested for selling pr0n, and you don't think it's news!
Re:You are NOT to look upon the human body! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:You Rights --Online--??? (Score:2)
Again, its all a matter of preference. You don't prefer it, while I do.
If we're going the 'modern society' route - let's do away with religion too, since all people of a 'modern society' would surely realize that an invisible man living in the sky who controls the fate of each and every one of us would be quite assinine to believe in.
And yet, we still have religion - despite the fact that believing in such things goes against an evolved, m