Re: violent porn



"Alex Heney" <me8@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:dr8of2h56vi2i7ibk1pqcgoh9d8be021sg@xxxxxxxxxx

It is arguable that any realistic depiction of an act which is itself
illegal, should be illegal.

OK, so that's the whole of the western literary canon in the bin.

I can see plenty of flaws in that argument, but it is certainly an
argument which could be made.

In the sense that imbecile arguments can be made then, yes, it is an
argument that could be made.

And I think the main reason for including simulations is to make it so
that it doesn't have to be proved that the violence was real.

No doubt. But it just shows how idiotic this proposed law is

I don't agree.

I can see why they *need* that aspect if the law is to be workable at
all.

But that's the point. To be 'workable' it must be made unjust. That is not
a respectable argument.

And I can see arguments for why the law is wanted in the first place.

I can see why the law is 'wanted' alright. It is to be seen to be 'doing
something' after a high profile murder enquiry. I can see no reason why it
is needed.

I'm not at all sure I *agree* with those arguments, but I can
understand them, and I don't think this law is any worse than (or even
as bad as) existing child porn laws.

Yet the UK is the only 'advanced' western democracy that is contemplating
such a law. If it were as reasonable as you assert then surely we would see
other countries preparing similar laws. There is certainly no chnace that
the US would implement such a law as it would violate the first amendment.

Because people are harmed in the making of it, if it *is* real.

Then the best way of policing that is at the point of production not at
the
point of consumption.

If that were feasible, I would agree.

It is feasible. The laws exist in this country and what happens in other
countries is the business of those countries, not the UK.

But it isn't, particularly when a lot of it is produced outside the
jurisdiction of UK courts.

The 'damage' if there is damage - which is not proven - happens outside the
UK so is of no business of the UK courts. What is the business of the
courts would be if the consumption of this material caused harm in the UK.
Again there is no evidence of this harm.

Define 'serious' violence

In the original consultation document, it was violence at the level
that causes GBH. As I mentioned before, well beyond the ABH level at
which the act becomes illegal regardless of consent.

The government response to that initial consultation can be found here
<http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/documents/cons-extreme-porn-3008051/Gvt-response-extreme-porn2.pdf?view=Binary>

They have altered the criteria somewhat, to make it only even more
extreme acts that will be covered:

--------------------------------------------------------------------
14. We have considered the violence threshold, which was originally
proposed at GBH level, and concluded that the test was not
sufficiently precise, would be difficult to apply and would draw in
material which would not pass the obscenity threshold. We have
concluded that the offence should apply to images of acts that appear
to be life threatening or are likely to result in serious, disabling
injury. Again, it would be for the prosecution to show that the
material fell into this category. We would consider giving
non-statutory guidance on the type of injury which we consider would
fall within this category.
--------------------------------------------------------------------

And how the hell is someone browsing a web site supposed to make such a
judgement on the spur of a moment? Does the presence of a prop 'gun' in the
scene constitute 'life threatening' violence?



and how someone accessing a legal S&M web site in
the US would be able to be certain that any images he views are or are not
in violation of the law. A key principle of justice is framing laws in a
way that the citizen can reasonably tell whether or not he is breaking
that
law.

Agreed.

I think the above suggestion does that.

It plainly does nothing of the sort. Over a hundred words of explanation
with 'non statutory' guidance to follow. That might be reasonable for a
publisher to weigh if considering whether such material could be published;
it is not reasonable or appropriate for a consumer of the material to have
make that determination over a split second.

Some bondage techniques might come under that description; others
might not. Obviously the extremes (e.g nailing a penis to a board) are
pretty unambiguous but there will be a huge amount of material in the grey
area. We can be pretty sure that there will be many speculative
prosecutions with unwarranted destruction of reputation as a result.

Nailing a penis to a board almost certainly would not come under the
above categorisation, as it would not cause "severe, disabling
injury".

I think you have seriously underestimated the level of violence that
is meant by these proposals.

But an obviously mock hanging would. I think that such anomalies underline
the absurdity of this proposed law.

Very little, if any, "normal" BDSM material would be covered.

I think you are being very complacent. The effect of such legislation will
be to create a prenumbra of dread, where people will avoid whole categories
of porn in order not to risk prosecution. That might suit the moralisers
and the authoritarians but it represents an attack on privacy that is
disproportionate.

I suggest you misread what I said.

My apologies.

I think if an animal is being abused, it will show signs of not liking
what is happening.

Is that accepted as a defence in child porn cases? If not, why in
bestiality cases?


.



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