
tcmay@got.net (Timothy C. May) writes:
Filtering is not "wrong," Cerridwyn, it is a rational response to garbage being spewed constantly. I filter lots of items. I read "Scientific American" and "The Economist" because they filter (or "censor," in the sense some are objecting to here) nonsense about "queer rights" and "peircing fashions," to name but a few things I have no interest in hearing about.
Filtering is wonderful. Long live filtering. I used to read "Scientific American" too, back in the days when the table of contents wasn't illustrated with cute little icons. Back then, reputable scientists, as opposed to staff writers and less reputable scientists, actually wrote all the articles, which were about science, and not political screeds mascarading as science. And to conserve bandwidth, please reread the above paragraph substituting "Nova" for "Scientific American" and "watch" for "read." Having offended "Scientific American" and PBS, let us now proceed to the main agenda item, offending homosexuals.
If I had kids, I'd make sure that lots of negative memes were kept away from them until they reached an age where it no longer mattered, where there views are already basically set.
If I had kids, I would be overjoyed that the new technology of the information age permitted them to investigate any topic of their choice in the safety of their own home. Of course, there would be some reasonable limits during their very early years, if only to prevent them from waking up screaming in the middle of the night, but I expect most of these could be eliminated by the time they reached their early teens. If I had kids, I am sure Tim would support my right to give them access to the entire universe of human knowlege and thought as early as possible, and to let them form their own opinions on every conceivable subject, even if those opinions differed from my own. Where I suspect we differ, is that I would not only advocate such an advantage for my kids, but for his as well. The problem with giving parents the absolute right to control their childrens' input of memes until the children are too old and stupid to learn anything new, is that it creates generational propagation of obsolete ideologies. All the Dole children think exactly like Bob. All the Hitler children think exactly like Adolf. Same for the Mengele children, the Nixon children, the Stalin children, the Netanyahu children, etc...
I see nothing wrong in this. Anyone who disagrees is, of course, free to set his filters differently, but not to insist that my filters be changed. And the government is not free to pass any laws about what filter sites can and can't do.
Before the days of home computers and filters, we had things called public libraries. They provided all citizens with unfiltered access to information of their choice, even children. Members of the American Library Association are pretty good at torching paper trails of what people choose to read, and allowing children who have reached the age of reason access to almost everything in the library, as long as they don't talk too loudly or stick gum to the seats. Parents may not like this, but up until now, the librarians have stood their ground. The movement towards accessing information from home PCs, coupled with the new "parents rights" movement and filtering software, creates a situation where no one under the age of 18 can have access to any information their parents don't want them to see. As the Web replaces the library, young people won't even be able to preserve the same anonymous access to controversial information they have always had in the past. This is a step backwards for youth rights.
Unfortunately, I think many on this list are so taken by "liberalistic" notions that they think the State needs to intervene to stop me from filtering my son's access to "The Joys of Queer Sex."
(As a libertarian, I really don't care what sexual practices others practice, so long as I am not forced to either fund or witness their practices. And so long as I am free to filter out their practices as I see fit, including for my minor children and/or members of my household.)
The age of filtering has arrived. You can filter your childrens' access to sex manuals, grandma's access to the elder abuse web page, and your underpaid Ethiopian leaf blower operator's access to anything having to do with laws against sub-minimum wages or slavery.
Some parents simply get tired of spending time each night trying to undo the propaganda taught in many public school, such as books like "I Have Two Mommies." Many of these parents eventually give up and put their kids in religious or private schools (even though they continue to pay taxes for schools their own children are no longer using).
I certainly believe that the education dollar should be in the hands of the education consumer, that the NEA and the AFT should be splintered into a million pieces and scattered to the winds, and that providing educational services should become a competitive business run with the efficiency of Federal Express. Nonetheless, I am not going to panic when the kids come home after having read "Uncle Bruce's Asshole Has Two Uses" or "Grandma Visits the Euthanasia Clinic" in class. The solution to bad speech is more speech. Older kids can make up their own minds about such things after hearing all sides, including their parents', and younger kids generally take what is said at home at face value anyway.
Queers are, as far as I'm concerned, perfectly free to practice their AIDS-spreading practices to any and all receptive anuses they can find, but I eschew this lifestyle and will fight to the death for this right to avoid their practices from being forced on me or my children (if I had any, which I don't).
As an individual who has no desire to engage in gay sex, or watch it being performed while I am eating, I must admit my attitudes towards the "gay community" have undergone a certain evolution in recent years. Back in the '70s, gays supported a wide-ranging platform of human rights issues, and a lot of activists whose work I admired on many issues I supported "happened to be gay." Now that the gay community has narrowed its focus solely to the issue of consensual adult sodomy rights, and shown alarming signs of sucking up to the Radical Religious Right, I really don't have warm feelings towards it anymore. They have marginalized many of their former supporters and seem more interested in pleasing Jesse Helms than in showing anything resembling ideological integrity. I really believe the gay movement of today would sell out almost anyone if they thought it would guarantee the right of homosexual men to join the Republican Party and plug each others assholes in private in the community of their choice. A right I support, of course, as long as I don't have to watch it or pay for it.
I think of AIDS as "evolution in action." Retroviruses which have existed for millenia now find new vectors for spreading in our population. I cry no tears for those dying of AIDS, and work to reduce to tax dollars spent on such things as "AIDS research." Let those who introduced the new vector pay for the research.
I'm not sure this is "evolution in action", as much as the "law of unintended consequences." Kind of like feeding ground up sheep to cows and discovering that the brains of hamburger eaters are turning to swiss cheese. Not a morality issue at all. Homosexual transmission of HIV is not the significant vector in most of the world anyway, with the exception of the US and a few other countries where the virus happened by pure accident to find its way into a high risk population.
What do you call ten million AIDS deaths? You figure it out.
If this is like the lawyer joke, it isn't very nice. In any case, to summarize... 1. Let a thousand filters bloom today. 2. Filtering what you read is good. 3. Filtering what other people read is bad. 4. Choosing your own perversions is good. 5. Making other people watch is bad. -- Mike Duvos $ PGP 2.6 Public Key available $ mpd@netcom.com $ via Finger. $