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Re: SPECIAL REPORT: Censorware in the StacksRe: SPECIAL REPORT: Censorware in the Stacks
- To: [email protected]@vorlon.mit.edu
- Subject: Re: SPECIAL REPORT: Censorware in the Stacks
- Subject: Re: SPECIAL REPORT: Censorware in the Stacks
- From: [email protected] (Anonymous)
- Date: Tue, 23 Dec 1997 18:46:07 +0100 (MET)
- Organization: Replay and Company UnLimited
- Sender: [email protected]
Colin Rafferty writes:
>
> Tim May writes:
> > When the state-as-sovereign sets up libraries that don't carry Everything
> > (hint: and not even the LOC carries everything), then the choices it makes
> > can be seen by some to be First Amendment violations.
>
> This is not a First Amendment violation.
>
> The government is not required to promote all speech, but only to not
> restrict it. Selection of books for a library does not abdridge freedom
> of speech, since the act of not selecting does not reduce speech.
>
> Modifying the content of the selected books would be an infriging act,
> since that is a reduction.
>
> They cannot subscribe to Playboy and then put pasties on the nipples.
> Nor can they subscribe to the Internet and then filter it.
And the difference between `selecting' which books to acquire for
the library and `selecting' which web pages to receive is what?
Those pages `not selected' by the Internet filter are not `reduced'
any more than the `not selected' books. There is no consistent
application of principle in your arguments.
> > A better solution is to get Government out of the business of running
> > libraries or providing Net access.
>
> I fail to see how this will solve anything.
Then rub a couple of neurons together and see if you can generate
a spark. If the government isn't in the business of either `selecting'
books or internet pages, then there is no `selecting' to be done in
either case and therefore nothing to be solved.
-Frondeur