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LETTERS
STARS, BARS AND SKIN
(Response to Newsweek Magazine Blog)
I definitely agree with Congressman Paul
Brown's efforts to stop the sale of pornography on military
bases. First,
it violates the express law, that of selling explicit sex
magazines. Second,
it is not right for citizens to help pay for the gratification
of the lusts of military people. Third,
the selling of pornography definitely demoralizes the military
men. And, finally,
pornography (whether on military bases or in the civilian
context) violates the will of God, our Creator. He
says that sex is beautiful--but only within the confines
of a God-approved marriage. Sexual
expression apart from His will is demeaning to woman, destructive
to men, a bad influence on families, and a perversion of
what God wants in society. Let's
uplift this nation--not destroy it! (Posted
by...Promoting the good and right way!)
http://www.newsweek.com/id/134035?GT1=43002
This
was the Original Article:
THE MILITARY
Stars, Bars and Skin
A congressman
cracks down on soft porn at the PX.
Apr 25, 2008
You know something's wrong when the word . . . . appears in a bill circulating
on Capitol Hill.
Republican Congressman
Paul Broun, the representative from Georgia's 10th District, wants
to stop the sale of Playboy and Penthouse at military bases around the world,
invoking an argument that at the very least is scientifically questionable:
that consuming even soft pornography makes men more prone to committing sex
crimes. A doctor by profession, Broun says he began drafting the bill after
a constituent described her distress at having watched, along with her young
children, an officer buy a nudie magazine at a military exchange store. "The
military teaches to respect officers, and her little kids were seeing this
military officer … there in uniform, buying pornography at the PX," Broun
told NEWSWEEK.
Congress already has a law from 1996 banning the sale of "sexually explicit" material
on military bases. But deciding what qualifies as sexually
explicit was left to a Department of Defense review board,
which gathers periodically to examine a range of magazines
and DVDs. In its review two years ago the board banned
such titles as Bootylicious and Juggs but decided that
Penthouse has enough nonsexual content to be acceptable
(Playboy had already been allowed). Lt. Col. Les Melnyk,
a Pentagon spokesman, said the board members are kept anonymous
in order not to expose them to outside pressure but have
included active, reserve and retired members of the military,
military spouses, members of dual-military couples and
DoD civilians. "The board is very disciplined in adhering
to the definitions described in the Instruction [from Congress],
and has access to legal counsel to assist members in interpreting
the law and the Instruction," Melnyk said in an e-mail.
Broun, who is 61, wants to take away the board's discretion by inserting
into the old law some new language delineating terms like "sexually
explicit." His bill gets (readers be warned) blush-inducingly
specific. It defines nudity, for instance, as the display
of [We choose
to omit the explicit description in the original document].
Even for people who support the congressman from Georgia (he has attracted
16 co-sponsors since introducing the bill April 16), it
must be hard not to conclude that he's fighting yesterday's
war. Judd Anstey, the public relations manager for the
Army & Air Force Exchange Service (AAFES), says the
combined sales of Playboy and Penthouse at bases around
the world last year amounted to less than 3 percent of
AAFES's total magazine sales. (Magazines generally make
up only a small part of sales by AAFES stores, which stock
everything from candy bars to plasma TVs.) For Broun's
generation the pictures in Playboy and Penthouse were probably
the dirtiest things around. In the Internet age GIs with
laptops are never more than a couple of clicks away from
much raunchier porn.
Broun says the point is pornography shouldn't be subsidized by taxpayers.
And he insists nudie magazines have taken a toll on the
armed services. "Sexual assault is going up within
the military, and I certainly think there's a very high
likelihood the pornography being sold in military PXs is
contributing to that," he says. Both points are off
the mark. Anstey says 98 percent of AAFES's budget comes
from income generated at its stores—not from the government.
And most studies have shown no link between the kind of
pictures featured in Playboy and sexual violence.
Where a link does often exist is between a politician's rising rhetoric and
his quest for re-election. Broun has been in Congress since
last year, when he was elected to replace the 10th District
representative, who died of cancer. This July he faces
a primary vote against a conservative member of the state's
House of Representatives, Barry Fleming, in a district
Broun describes as very Republican. But Broun denies the
bill is linked to the election. "The purpose is just
to get DoD to uphold the law," he says.
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