my thoughts on government-mandated web filtering in public libraries
It almost goes without saying that I think that this decision is wrong. Another example of the US Supreme Court being split down the middle with Justice OConnor being the swing vote that gave the conservatives another thin majority. I hope that history judges the Rehnquist Supreme Court as harshly as it judges Dredd Scott.
That said, I do think that this is a difficult issue. I dont want weird people viewing porn and wanking over the keyboards where I work! It horrifies me how the most innocuous search term in a search engine -- or mistyped URL can lead to some very nasty results. This may sound like heresy to some librarians, but I dont think the status quo was working well. Something needed to be done, but I think CIPA went way too far. Its wrong to make everybody (meaning the less privileged teens & adults on the other side of the digital divide who cant afford their own internet access) view the internet through the filter of whats appropriate for a child. Even the Supreme Court admits this, but says that its sufficient that an adult can request to have the filters temporarily turned off. A commentator on todays FutureTense (I must give a link to this Minnesota production) was correct when he mentioned how people will be very reluctant to ask library staff to have the porn filters turned off.
So I call on all adult library patrons to thwart this paternalistic Supreme Court decision to demand that filters be turned off when they visit their public library. Not so you can look at porn, but just so that you can use the internet that hasnt been filtered or dumbed-down or bowdlerized (now thats a word thats due for a revival!). Any librarian worth her or his salt would be happy to turn off the filters for this reason. Dont expect such a positive reaction if you actually are planning on looking at porn in a public library.
Whenever I get a minute, I should reread some jurisprudence. The law is only one means (the very official and blunt tool) for governing peoples behaviour. There are also personal ethics and social mores. I would hazard to guess that although most librarians would fight for your legal right to read anything you want, they would not be thrilled about somebody viewing porn in a their library or any other public place. Generally, social restraints are more pervasive but less enforceable than legal rules. That is why there is a danger when conservatives want all their social mores embodied in the law. There is a place for socially disapproved but legal behaviour. It is a murky area which is both a nasty cesspool and a helpful compost heap which is fertile for humour, self-analysis and new ideas. Furthermore, there is something about the smell of this cesspool/compost heap which keeps the Borg of Conformity & Tyranny at bay. Because as soon as you want the law to mirror social mores the first issue is whos mores get chosen. Because thats the thing, although a lot of social mores are held in common, they are not uniform. And although in a democracy, the majority has the right to do what it wants according to its constitutional powers, it would be very dangerous for a majority to use the its power to impose all of its social mores on everyone else whether that majority happens to been in Parliament / Congress or the Supreme court.
9:05:34 PM
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