Okay, one more shot.
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Originally Posted by kathykd2005
(Post 1471280)
How is the comparison to Terry Schiavo silly? I think it illustrates beautifully just how many mundane ways our country's politicians waste time.
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Whether you think politicians acted like idiots during the whole thing (which I do), it was at least a matter of life and death. Literally. It was also a matter closely tied to the pro-life/culture of life/right-to-die debate. Regardless of what side of that one happens to be on, it's hard to deny the political importance of that particular debate in this country.
How Greek life is portrayed on a cable network show doesn't quite carry the same political cachet, I don't think.
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However you want to look at it, tv ratings and channel blocks are censorship. I will cite you a specific example, which actually DID happen to me when I was living in VA. Whether you want to believe it or not, there are A LOT more places that don't sell certain products to teenagers than you would think. I was turned away from buying a certain cd, also from attending a certain movie, and once even prohibited from buying a lighter. Again, all of these instances happened when I was under-aged, but they still occurred, whether you want to admit it or not.
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I'll admit they happened, sure. I will not admit these were examples of censorship because they weren't. There was nothing illegal about selling you that CD or letting you into that movie. (A lighter might have been covered under a ban on selling tobacco and related products to minors, but since that doesn't involve what you are allowed to see, read or hear, it certainly cannot be considered "censorship.") Those were business decisions that some stores and theaters made because they think overall it's good for business. I can assure you that for every store or theater that turned you down, there were others that would have been glad to take your money. You would have faced no threat of punishment for owning the CD or seeing the movie, and the store or theater would have faced no threat of punishment or retaliation for selling to you or admitting you.
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Again, agree to disagree. If you want to believe that there is NO CENSORSHIP in America, go ahead and do so.
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Read my posts carefully. I never said that there was no censorship in America. There is.
I disagreed with your statement that "ratings are censorship" because they're not. Nothing more.
Ironically, calling on someone in the government to put pressure on ABC Family to pull the show is much closer to censorship than TV, movie or CD ratings.
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I think your citation of Humpty Dumpty is fitting, because some people prefer to live in a nursery-rhyme world. In case you didn't know, nursery rhymes also have hidden meanings, just like fairy tales. Humpty Dumpty, as it seems, was actually a cannon and alludes to the conflict between Puritans and Cavaliers in England.
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I know that quite well. My reference to Humpty Dumpty was to Lewis Carroll's
Through the Looking Glass, however, not to the nursery rhyme.
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Interestingly, Puritans are also where Americans got the idea for censorship, for which we are so often criticized by Europeans.
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You do know that the word "censor" comes from the officials in the Roman Empire who had authority over public morals? You do know that the first list of "forbidden books" was published by Pope Innocent I in AD 405? You do know that when the Puritans came here, nothing could be published in England without permission from the decidedly non-Puritan Crown? The English way of doing things was pretty standard for Europe at the time, in that regard.
It was Americans, not Europeans, who first extensively curtailed the extent of censorship by constitutionally guaranteeing freedom of speech and freedom of the press.
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Originally Posted by kathykd2005
(Post 1471297)
Ok, this whole discussion is now way off topic, and I'm ashamed to say that I contributed to that.
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No need to be ashamed. There's nothing wrong with healthy off-topic discussion, and this isn't
that far off-topic. I've seen much worse detours on GC. ;)
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Still hate the stupid idea for the show, still think it contributes to the negative view people already have about the Greek community. :(
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Me too. The problem is, if we whine about it (because that's how the "take it off the air" demands will be perceived by the general public), we're just re-enforcing the negative view. We're much better off ignoring it/not drawing attention to it and behaving in ways that counter the negative stereotype.